The Rapture of Moro

It’s been 48 years. Lights and shadows. Neither history nor justice have given us a completely acceptable truth about what happened in the tragic spring of 1978.

On March 16th at 9:00 a.m., a commando of the Red Brigades entered via Fani, the Trionfale district of Rome. Take two machines by tightening them into a deadly trap before a traffic light and then targeting them with dozens and dozens of shots of miter. They kidnap Aldo Moro and kill the five escort members: Giulio Rivera, Oreste Leonardi, Raffaele Iozzino, Domenico Ricci, Francesco Zizzi.

To them and to all men and women of the forces of order that every day are at the forefront to defend our security, to all the servants of the state who defend our institutions, went the first thought of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.

Of the various surveys I have dedicated to the Moro case in one of the programs that I consider most important in my long history in Mediaset, or Top Secret, one I have shot it entirely in via Fani.

Not only because it was a tragedy in itself and the beginning of a terrible tragedy that then involved a whole country and not only, but precisely to pay homage to those five innocent lives that we always talk about and at the same time always too little.

The leader of the DC was then held prisoner for 55 days and after a long and extensive negotiation full of twists of scene and mysteries, of unknown and far-known coves, of spiritual sessions and hunts for useless and misleading man, was executed by the Red Brigades. So at least they say the regretted terrorists that would shoot.

Of course, that poor defenseless and snugged body in the trunk of a red Renault in Via Caetani in the center of the capital marked, on May 9, 1978, a watershed in the history of the Republic.

That sacrifice, and I use this word not by chance, of which Moro was perfectly aware in his letters (whose disappearance and reappearance are a mystery in the mystery) allowed the defeat of that extremist organization and forever removed what was called “historical compromise” (Dc + Pci).

Could Moro be saved? Sure. But he wasn’t saved.

The so-called American advisor of the then Minister of Interior Cossiga, Steve Pieczenik, in an extraordinary interview released in New York to my Top Secret in May 2008 (was the special for 30 years after death) clearly said the political reasons of that sacrifice without obviously making names or pushing us into the hall of the Ennism, almost useless, process with the Latin numeration.

We will deepen at the right time, but in advance that for my sources the official version of the death of the President of the DC does not hold, as does not hold the official version of what happened in via Fani. That morning shooting there were more people and more experienced with the automatic weapons of four ideological intellectuals.

Have you ever wondered why 5 escort agents were killed in a few seconds without even having time to react and Moro remained “miraculously” unharmed? To the prox bet….

L’articolo Moro’s abduction proviene da IlNewyorkese.