Piano Solo


Piano Solo was an envisaged plot for an Italian coup in 1964 requested by then President of the Italian Republic, Antonio Segni. It was prepared by the commander of the Carabinieri Giovanni de Lorenzo in the beginning of 1964 in close collaboration with the Italian secret service SIFAR, CIA secret warfare expert Vernon Walters, then chief of the CIA station in Rome William King Harvey, and Renzo Rocca, director of the Gladio units within the military secret service SID.

Background

The plan was delivered on May 25: it consisted of a set of measures to occupy certain institutions, such as Quirinal Palace in Rome, and essential media infrastructures, as well as the neutralization of the communist and socialist parties, as well as takeover of the premises of the PCI, the Italian Socialist Party, the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity .
It was also planned to deport the political cadres of the PCI to a secret base in Sardinia, the premises also used by the Italian Gladio network at Capo Marrargiu. The list of people to be deported also included intellectuals, such as Pier Paolo Pasolini.
The secret was badly guarded, since as early as summer rumors of a coup were circulating during the difficult negotiations that led to the formation of Aldo Moro's government.

True or fiction?

The coup plans were investigated in 1967, when the journalist Eugenio Scalfari and Lino Jannuzzi uncovered the attempt in the Italian news magazine L'espresso in May 1967. However, the results of the official investigation remained classified until the early 1990s. It was released by premier Giulio Andreotti to the parliamentary investigation into Operation Gladio. L'espresso mentioned that some 20,000 Carabinieri were supposed to be deployed around the country, with 5,000 of them taking over Rome, including publishing outlets and the PCI headquarters.
The Piano Solo was also reputed only a journalistic expedient of L'espresso, and a tentative to arrest the increase of the Italian Social Movement, the party when Giovanni de Lorenzo joined.
The Financial Times posed the possibility that the paper coup was simply used as a way to sway coalition talks between the Christian Democrats and Italian Socialist Party. President Antonio Segni was apparently running out of patience with the demands from Pietro Nenni.