Propaganda 2  Lodge - Historic Networks of Freemasonry

Freemasonry - P2 (Propaganda 2) Lodge

 

 

Freemasonry and the P2  resurrected - A judge seems to have uncovered a covert power structure almost identical to the secret freemasonry lodge P2.


The Irish times reported on November 10, 1992, in their CITY EDITION (Pg. 11), that 
the spectre of the P2 network had resurfaced in Italy. 


P2, stands for "Propaganda 2" Masonic Lodge. The reporter noted that the secret freemasonry lodge which formed an occult power base in the late l970s and early 1980s and which was accused of links with right-wing terrorist violence such as the bombing of Bologna train station in August, 1980, which killed 85 people.

Last week, an investigation led by a magistrate, Mr Agostino Cordova, led to the sequestration (isolation) of membership lists of freemasonry lodges in almost every corner of Italy, including major cities such as Rome, Milan, Genoa and Florence.

Mr Cordova also informed the readers of the newspaper, that an unknown number of freemasons, perhaps as many as 200, have received judicial notice that their freemasonry activities are under investigation. 

For the time being, - the Italian Magistrate - Mr Cordova had refused to comment on his findings. However, widespread media speculation suggests that he unveiled a hidden network of Italian power which involves judges, politicians, senior military' figures, journalists and, last but not least, the Mafia.

In short, it seems that Mr Cordova has unveiled a covert power structure almost identical to the shadow power network known in Masonic circles as P2.

In March, 1981, police raided the Arezzo office of Mr Lucio GelIi, the "Grand Master" of P2. As a result of the raid, Italian police discovered a lodge membership list which included four cabinet ministers, three under-secretaries, 38 MPs or senators, 195 military officers, politicians from every party except the Communists and Radicals, as well as industrialists, bankers, diplomats, civil servants, judges, journalists, secret service officers and police officials.

Mr GelIi - the official Grandmaster of the P2 Masonic Lodge (and a millionaire) - did not hang around. Instead, he went on the run. Gelli's contacts included friendships with people as diverse as the former US president, Mr Ronald Reagan, the Argentine dictator, Mr Juan Peron, and the Sicilian banker, Michele Sindona, who was convicted of murder and who allegedly bought Exocet missiles for Argentina to use in the Falklands (Malvinas) war against Britain.

Mr GelIi fled to Switzerland. For a number of reasons, the authorities did not act neutrally toward him, and Gelli was eventually arrested - after which he then escaped to Latin America. Seven years later, he returned to Italy under a controversial extradition agreement with Switzerland which virtually guaranteed him exemption from any serious criminal prosecution.

An Italian parliamentary commission into P2, although largely inconclusive (because of the politics and the backdoor dealings), did find that Mr Gelli's lodge had contacts with terrorism and that Mr Gelli was prepared to stage a coup d'etat in Italy, should the Communist Party win an overall majority.

Other intriguing accusations made against Mr Gelli and P2, such as involvement with the Mafia, with the CIA, in international arms dealing and, above all, in the downfall of the Banco Ambrosiano and the death of its president, Mr Roberto Calvi, in 1982, all remained unpioven, if albeit supported by a large body of evidence.

MR GELLI, too, appears to be the key figure in the current investigation. Last year, Mr Cordova sequestered documents from Mr GelIi's Arezzo home after coming across his name in the course of investigations into the Calabrian Mafia, the "N'drangheta".(That alone raised questions about the supposed demise of the P2 Network).

Furthermore, Italian judiciary circles for some time have been rife with rumours of renewed activity by Mr GelIi. Ms Tina Anselmi, the Christian Democrat who headed the parliamentary commission into P2, confirmed she had received reports of renewed P2 activity.

According to the Italian daily, La, Repubblica Ms Anselmi said : "This summer, I was alerted. People told me that something along the lines of P2 was re-emerging, that secret groups were being reconstituted ... you have to remember that, originally, P2 was a bona fide masonic lodge and few people knew of its covert dimension. However, when it was discovered just what P2 was and what a danger it represented, no serious political initiative was taken to make sure that it could not happen all over again."

Confirmation, too, that Italian freemasonry has always had links with the Mafia emerged this week from Antonino Calderone, a prominent Mafia godfather turned state's witness.

Speaking in a Rome courtroom where, Calderone said "The Mafia has always had contacts with freemasonry ... I remember, for example, that Giacomo Vitale, brother in law of Stefano Bontade (Mafia boss) ... was not a man of honour (mafioso) but rather a Freemason.


This was said in the context of a hearing - ( in Palermo ) into a series of politically significant Mafia killings from 1979 to 1982 was sitting, 

"We in Catania, when we had a problem with the judiciary, we would turn to the local masonic head. We knew that many magistrates were lodge members and that, thanks to the local chief, we could even interfere with ongoing criminal proceedings", said Calderone.

This evidence carries all the 'more weight since Calderone was one of the first mafiosi to break the infamous "omerta", or code of silence, providing vital information that helped Judge Giovanni Falcone prepare the state's case in the famous 1986-1987 "maxiprocesso", or super trial, which ended with prison sentences for more than 300 Mafia members.

Subsequent Mafia "grasses" have confirmed much of Calderone's evidence, thus suggesting that his observations about Mafia links to freemasonry are to be taken seriously.

Furthermore, Judge Falcone, who was killed by the Mafia last May (1992), also investigated Mafia-freemasonry links, compiling two lengthy reports which have since mysteriously "disappeared".

However, the current investigation into freemasonry, like the P2 affair itself, is provoking more questions than answers. Judge Cordova has a lot of work in front of him.

Based on various reports including those cited / Used under Fair Use Provisions

 

 

 

Scandal in Rome has buffeted the [Roman Catholic] church - Italian political corruption purges
 Peter Hebblethwaite


NCR - Mar 26/93 - OXFORD, England - You won't find Tangentopoli on any map of Italy.

It is a city of the mind, a new word for an old reality. Tangenti are the kick-backs that Italian politicians routinely pocket on all public works. "Bribesville" is the best translation for the system that has ruled Italian political life since the 1980s.

It came to light thanks to the determined efforts of a Milan judge, Antonio Di Pietro. A computer buff capable of tracking down the most recondite transactions, Di Pietro has almost single-handedly uncovered the web of favors, kick-backs and rake-offs that accompanied all public works in Italy. He has become a national hero. Small boys now dream of becoming prosecutors.

The statistics are staggering: 830 businessmen and politicians have been arrested since February 1992; 1,000 others are under suspicion. More than 50 members of Parliament are under investigation, four ministers and two party leaders have resigned, and there have been half a dozen suicides.

If everyone involved were charged, about 60,000 people would have to pass through the courts. Hence the hastily devised March 5 decree declaring that those who confess will be given only suspended sentences, provided they restitute the money and retire from public life. That, it is claimed, is not an amnesty, merely a way of coping with judicial overload. But the president has refused to sign it. Impasse for the moment.


It was hardly likely that scandals so deeply embedded in Italian society would leave the church unscathed. The brother of Cardinal Angelo Sodano, secretary of state, was arrested in Turin. That does not impute any guilt, but it indicates proximity.

The level of church involvement depends on how rigorously one can draw the distinction between "Catholics" and "the church." So far, with one notable exception, it is holding up relatively well.

"The suspicions of yesterday," said Rosminian Clemente Riva, auxiliary bishop of Rome, with wide-eyed astonishment, "have become the realities of today."

Rome has been badly buffeted by the storm of accusations. Riva has proposed a collective Lenten penitential liturgy for the concluding phase of the Synod of the Rome Diocese.

The new Catechism of the Catholic Church, already a best-seller in Italy, has been pressed into service. "Thou shalt not steal" has acquired a topicality its authors probably never intended.

But Riva's potential penitents would be largely absent from the liturgy of reconciliation - and in jail. Already arrested are many members of the Communion and Liberation movement, especially its political arm, the Movimento Popolare, which was supposed to act as a ginger group within the Christian Democratic Party.

Last August, Monsignor Gervasio Gestori, secretary of the Italian bishops' conference, warned the movement at its annual rally in Rimini on the Adriatic coast that it should distance itself from politics and power. With hindsight, this has been regarded as a "prophetic" remark. Did Gestori know something the judges were about to discover? No comment.

More vituperative was Rocco Buttiglione, the philosophy professor who frequently lunches with Pope John Paul II. Formerly CL's leading intellectual, he began to desert the sinking ship last August, alleging that the Movimento Popolare had come to believe that "the end justifies the means." Dazzled by the prospect of power, charged Buttiglione, they were prepared to rob and steal and even kill to achieve their end - a "Christian" presence in the state understood as a permanent place in government for the Christian Democrats.

These warnings came too late anyway. The handcuffs are on Luigi Martinelli, Antonio Simone and Virgilio Sironi, who formed the CL-sponsored terna in the last elections in Lombardy.

The treasurer of the CL movement in Brianza and bead of a series of building cooperatives, Natalino Erba, has been arrested. So has Antonio Brambilla, formerly head of a company called Environmental Services (actually trash collection). But these were relatively small fries. Marco Bucarelli, president of the Movimento Popolare in Rome and Lazio, was taken into custody last week. His was the most distinguished head to roll in Rome.

After that, it was inevitable that his closest associate, Vittorio Sbardella, protector and financier of the CL weekly, Il Sabato, should be arrested. Il Sabato is notoriously even more right-wing than 30 Days, the other CL publication. Instead of attacking "dissident" theologians, 30 Days has started attacking judges.

Sbardella ran the Christian Democrats of Rome. The full extent of his activities is not yet clear. But be used Pietro Pelosi as his agent in the Intermetro project for building the Rome underground: It cost two billion lire per kilometer to dig through Roman remains.

A proportion of that money ended in the pockets of Sbardella and Pelosi. They used it to buy - in the name of their wives - the mega-restaurant Parioli in the fashionable Prati district of Rome.

Though it has kept a lower profile than CL, Opus Dei is also involved. A warrant is out for the arrest of Giuseppe Garofono, formerly delegate-manager of Montedison, one of the biggest names in Catholic finance. Through the group ironically called Ethics and Finance, Garofano has links with Angelo Cailola, president of the board of IOR - the Vatican Bank.

But undoubtedly the main blows of "Operation Clean Hands" have fallen on Communion and Liberation.

Always critical of Italian Catholic Action, which had made "the religious option" and tried to distance itself from party politics, CL was riding high in the pontificate of Pope John Paul II.

Indeed, at the 1987 synod on the laity, CL not only claimed to run the show but was proposed by John Paul as the very model of the "new movements," which expressed the charismatic nature of the church better than the old religious orders.

Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, archbishop of Milan, pointed out how dangerous and divisive they were. Martini is one of the few public figures acknowledged to have "clean hands." From 1984 he has been speaking of one of the "three plagues" of Milan as "political and administrative corruption."

Martini's hostility to CL was often attributed to Jesuit "jealousy" of the new movement. It now appears to be more solidly grounded than that. Three years ago, CL began to move closer to the Socialist Party of Bettino Craxi, now resigned and under investigation.

Though sometimes presented as an audacious "opening to the left," it was nothing of the kind, since Craxi's party was socialist in name only. The alliance may have had more sinister implications.

As prime minister, Craxi signed the revised concordat with the Holy See in 1984. One interpretation now is that it marked a veil drawn over mysterious events such as the death of Roberto Calvi in 1982, the abandoned investigation of Archbishop Paul Marcinkus and the Vatican Bank's alleged involvement in the crash of the Banco Ambrosiano.

On the more political level what has been revealed in Milan is that the kick-backs were not just the result of greedy individuals on the take. Cash regularly went into the party coffers as a way of purchasing political influence. Placemen in state companies allotted contracts on the basis of rigged tenders. The "commission" they expected was usually 5 percent, but it varied from town to town.

http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1141/is_n21_v29/ai_13609894 

 

 

 

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