Edgardo Sogno Explained

Edgardo Sogno del Vallino di Ponzone
Order:Member of the National Council
Term Start:25 September 1945
Term End:24 June 1946
Parliamentarygroup:Italian Liberal Party
Birth Date:29 December 1915
Birth Place:Camandona, Piedmont, Italy
Death Place:Turin, Piedmont, Italy
Nationality:Italian
Residence:Tourin, Italy
Profession:Diplomat
Military
Party:PLI (19461956)
Independent (19561996)
AN (19962000)
Spouse:Anna Arborio Mella
Children:Sofia, Nanina
Signature:Edgardo Sogno Signature.jpg
Signature Alt:Cursive signature in ink
Serviceyears:19331945
Branch: Royal Italian Army
Nickname:Franco Franchi, "Eddy"
Rank: Leutnant
Unit:3rd Cavalry Division Amedeo Duca d'Aosta

Count Edgardo Pietro Andrea Sogno Rata del Vallino di Ponzone [1] (29 December 1915  - 5 August 2000) was an Italian diplomat, partisan and political figure. He was born in an aristocratic family from Piedmont.

Under Fascism

Sogno was born in Piedmont. He joined the Italian Army at 18 and became sublieutenant in the "Nizza Cavalleria" regiment. After graduating in law, in 1938 he volunteered to fight in the Spanish Civil War on the Nationalist side with Italian troops sent by Benito Mussolini. In 1940, he entered the Italian diplomatic service. During this time, he also started frequenting some antifascist circles, which included Benedetto Croce and Giaime Pintor.

In 1942, he was called back into military service and deployed in Vichy France. A year later he was arrested on charges of high treason for having publicly hoped for the victory of the United States. A monarchist, he was then close to the Italian Liberal Party (PLI), and after the armistice of Cassibile became representative of the PLI at the National Liberation Committee, the umbrella organization of the Italian resistance movement. He established the liberal-leaning partisan group "Organizzazione Franchi" and was awarded the Gold Medal of Military Valor for his wartime acts. During the war he also helped hundreds of Italian Jews and others seek safe haven in Switzerland.[2]

After the war

After the Liberation, he founded the Corriere Lombardo newspaper as well as Costume. In September 1945 he was named by the PLI as one of the deputies to the National Council, a provisional legislative body. He contested the June 2, 1946 referendum creating the Republic of Italy, submitting without success numerous appeals before the Corte di Cassazione in the aim of reversing the results of the vote and restoring the monarchy. He joined the diplomatic service, serving in Buenos Aires, where Juan Peron was head of state, then in Paris, London, Washington DC and, last, as ambassador in Rangoon.[3] While posted to Budapest, Hungary, in 1956, he helped people flee the country after the Soviet Union invaded Hungary and crushed the Hungarian Revolution.[4]

He returned to Italy in 1971, where he founded the Comitati di Resistenza Democratica (Committee of Democratic Resistance), an anti-communist organization of the political center. Three years later, he was accused by the communist magistrate Luciano Violante of having planned, along with Luigi Cavallo and Randolfo Pacciardi, the Golpe bianco ("white coup d'etat"), a supposed coup. Following a year and a half of prison, he was freed in 1978, the investigative magistrate declaring that he was unable to proceed in the trial. He was later completely exonerated for attempting to plot a coup.[2] [5] [6]

Liberal, monarchist, then admirer of Charles de Gaulle, Edgardo Sogno returned to politics only in 1996, as a candidate to the Italian Senate, in Cuneo, for the National Alliance (Alleanza Nazionale) party founded by Gianfranco Fini. Failing to be elected, he retired to private life.

In his 1998 memoirs, Sogno revealed how he had visited the CIA station chief in Rome in July 1974 to inform him of his plans for an anti-communist coup. He wrote: "I told him that I was informing him as an ally in the struggle for the freedom of the west and asked him what the attitude of the American government would be," and then: "He answered what I already knew: the United States would have supported any initiative tending to keep the communists out of government."[7]

Honors

Publications

La spada appesa al filo Bietti (1997)

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Le onorificenze della Repubblica Italiana . 24 October 2022 . quirinale.it.
  2. News: Edgardo Sogno, Italian resistance fighter and fierce anti-communist, dies . Associated Press . 2000-08-06.
  3. [Stefano Baldi]
  4. News: Diplomat battled Italian communism . The Globe and Mail . 2000-08-09.
  5. News: Italian plot never existed . The Times . 1978-09-14.
  6. A Second Italian Republic? . Angelo Codevilla . Foreign Affairs . 1992 . 73 . 3 . 146–164.
  7. Philip Willan, The Guardian, March 26, 2001 Terrorists 'helped by CIA' to stop rise of left in Italy