Clemente Graziani
Clemente 'Lello' Graziani, was an Italian neofascist politician, one of the founders of the far right think tank Centro Studi Ordine Nuovo and leader of its terrorist spin-off, Movimento Politico Ordine Nuovo.
Activity in the FAR
After the war, where he fought within the Nazi puppet state Italian Social Republic, Graziani began his activity in the Fasci di Azione Rivoluzionaria, the earliest Italian extra-parliamentary neofascist organization. Within FAR, he was arrested in Taranto in 1949 along with Biagio Bertucci for the attempted sabotage of the Italian navy ship Colombo, that was to be handed over to the Soviet Union as part of the war reparations demanded by the 1947 Paris Peace Treaty.In the 1950s, Graziani survives doing several menial jobs, including miner, where he learns to use explosives, and he is subsequently involved in a few demonstrative attacks along with Pino Rauti and other neofascist activists. On November 20, 1951, Graziani is sentenced to 1 year and 11 months of jail in the FAR trial.
Leadership of MPON
In 1969, Graziani led the dissidents within Ordine Nuovo who did not accept the decision of Pino Rauti to fold back into the MSI. On December 21, 1969, Graziani and his followers, such as Elio Massagrande, Roberto Besutti, Sandro Saccucci, Mario Tedeschi, Antonio Ragusa and Bruno Esposito, met in Graziani's apartment and found Movimento Politico Ordine Nuovo, of which Graziani became secretary. The date chosen coincides with the winter solstice, a symbolic gesture to indicate the affinities with the thought of Julius Evola. The decision was, however, announced on January 7, 1970, on the pages of the official Ordine Nuovo publication Orientamenti.On January 30, 1971, Graziani's home is searched, along with the MPON headquarters. Few months later, on April 1st, Graziani is arrested with the accusation of attempting to reorganise the dissolved Fascist party, which is forbidden by the Italian constitution. The actual trial begins in 1973; Graziani refused interrogation and instead gives the court a memorial, "Ordine Nuovo on trial: ideas on trial".
Life as a fugitive
Graziani, along with other MPON members, fled Italy in 1973, moving first in Greece, then Spain, London and Bolivia, finally settling in Asunción, Paraguay, where he will spend the rest of his life.However, he does not stop his political activity. From 1973, and more intensely from 1975, Graziani, along with other MPON leaders discusses with Stefano delle Chiaie the possibility of merging Ordine Nuovo and Avanguardia Nazionale. After several clandestine meetings, the project is aborted, mostly because of the opposition of Graziani.
Ideological contribution
In 1963, Graziani wrote The Revolutionary War, a seminal pamphlet in the Italian far right that for the first time within Italian neofascism delineates the concept of a far right counterrevolutionary strategy from a military point of view and a precursor of the strategy of tension. In the writing, Graziani tried to analyze the methods of communist uprisings and guerrilla, for example that of Mao Zedong, and defines the current state of the world as a "non-declared permanent world war" fought by Communists to "Bolshevize the world". According to Graziani, the far right must meet the far left on their own ground: using terrorism and psychological warfare to control the population, exploiting their fears, not excluding the killing of innocent civilians. To do that, Graziani theorized the creation of an élite of revolutionary war experts, with CIA as an organizational and strategic model.In 1969, Graziani addressed the militants of Ordine Nuovo, describing the movement should become a "revolutionary movement, beyond the trite and limiting schemes of parties, an agile formation, suitable to the needs of the current political situation and structured according to the criteria of revolutionary minorities".
However, after the assassination of judge Vittorio Occorsio by MPON member Pierluigi Concutelli, Graziani kept an ambiguous position on political violence; on one hand taking political responsibility for the assassination, but at the same time indicating that the times would not be yet ripe for a proper armed struggle. Graziani reiterated the same position when meeting Sergio Calore in London, on April 25, 1977.