CIA LINKED TO SECRET FILES IN ITALY, FOREIGN STUDENT AID

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP69B00369R000200240022-4
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 16, 2003
Sequence Number: 
22
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 14, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP69B00369R000200240022-4.pdf95.25 KB
Body: 
"IN Approved For Release 2003/11 Jlt- Fj69B00369R000200240022-4 CIA Linked To Secret Files 1n Italy, Foreign Student Aid Italy By THWMAS T. FENTON [Rome Bureau of Tlse Sun] Rome, Oct. 13 - An allegedi 'CIA document published here (today states that the United States agency urged the Italian Government to maintain secret (files on leading Italians. The 1963 document concludes that the fact that the Italian Government- followed Central Intelligence Agency's advice "will amply justify the money ?pent on this affair." Discovery of the existence of the secret files by an Italian magaxlne last April produced a national scandal that resulted in the firing of the Army chief of staff. Government Admitted It The dossiers which the Gov- ernment finally admitted were being maintained by SIFAR, the Italian equivalent of the CIA, contained reports on lead- 'ing political, business, intellec- tual and ecclesiastical figures.; There was even a report on the political activities of Italian President Giuseppe Saragat is. a Socialist, and SIFAR has been (Democratic party since World !journalists. lWar II. When Tambroni, in turn, be- . After the storm broke in Par-. ;came Premier five years later,, liament this spring and an of- the transferred the files to a, ficial inquiry was ordered, the private apartment in downtown, Government clamped a lid of Rome, secrecy on. the affair: "Tambroni intended to use' The allegedly authentic docu- the files against his political' ment published today by the-. adversaries in order to keep' left-wing magazine Lastroleabio ,himself in power," the doe- gives the history of the SIFAR ument states. affair and the CIA intervention. ; The secret files were trans Friendly SIFAR Source (erred to a villa in Sardinia; The magazine published a photostat of the cover of the document, which was labeled "Special Report-Office of Cur- rent Intelligence-The Situation in Italy - Central Intelligence Agency." The document is marked secret and dated July 5, 1963. One of the magazine's editors said tonight the report had been leaked to it by a friendly source within SI)rrdved.For Rel The document states the CIA believed that the secret files, which had been unofficially col- lected and maintained by two former Christian Democratic ministers of the interior, would be used by "unscrupulous per- sons" for political purposes. Conceived By Scelba Instead of urging that the files be destroyed, the CIA ad- vised the Italian Government to take them over and give them to SIFAR "in order to reduce to a minimum the number of per- sons. who could use them." I According to the document, Mario Scelba "conceived the idea of uttin together dossiers on leading (Italian) "personali- ties in the political, business, union and intellectual 'fields" when he was Minister of the Interior, S'celba, who was Interior Mi- nister for more than seven years and Premier from Febru- ary, 1954, to July, 1955, is now one of the leaders of the right; wing of the Christian Demo-' crats, Italy's leading party. The secret files were expand-:. ed by Fernando Tambroni, ac-' cording to the document, whop set up a news agency as a front; for gathering more information' months later. When he died,' ' according to the document, they, were turned over to Scelba again. Uneasiness And Anger The alleged CIA report said the ."case of the Tambroni doc- uments" caused uneasiness and anger "among a large number of Italian politicians, including many of our friends." It was "quite possible," as some Ita- lasep(MI i1 'UG]4d, C#i could fall into `.'unscrupulous" hands. The report says there were "several confidential. exchanges of views with political personali- ties," and "it was suggested it would be highly desirable" to regain possession of the files 6c9 e3619Rl62?1246 section of SIFAR.