This groundbreaking review and analysis of relations between the
United States and Italy since the early postwar years is
distinguished by the author's use of a unique combination of
sources: hundreds of reports and analyses published by the author
in U.S. and Italian dailies and magazines as events unfolded; his
frequent interviews with ranking politicians and other leading
figures in the two countries; U.S. and Italian government documents
to which he has been the first outsider to gain access; and reports
and comments by other journalists and students of Italian affairs
and Italo-American relations. The result is the most comprehensive
and balanced study of relations between the two countries published
to date. Demonstrating that the U.S. media has often conveyed a
view of Italian politics that does not correspond with reality, the
author argues that the roots of Italian democracy have proved to be
less fragile than most observers thought. Students of European
politics will find Wollemborg's analysis a welcome counterweight to
those who have frequently forecast impending Communist takeovers,
military coups, political anarchy, and economic collapse in
Italy.
Wollemborg asserts that most U.S. observers have badly
underestimated the resources and resiliency of the Italian economy
as well as the Italian people's capacity to stand up to and defeat
such threats to their democratic institutions as the surge of
terrorism in the mid-1970s. He also shows that at some critical
junctures, the U.S. government's approach was badly out of step
with Italian developments, most notably in the late 1950s when they
opposed the inclusion of Socialists in the ruling coalition. Both
the U.S. and Italian media, Wollemborg shows, have contributed to
strains in the relationship by portraying the other country
unfavorably or by ascribing the wrong motives and beliefs to
political parties and actors. Finally, Wollemborg explores
present-day relations, demonstrating that cooperation between the
United States and Italy is closer now than at any time during the
postwar period--reflecting both the weakening of Communist
influence in Italy and the rise of the Italo-American community in
the United States.
General
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