Red Brigades
Red Brigades (Brigate Rosse) is a terrorist group located in Italy.
Description
Formed in 1969, the Marxist-Leninist BR seeks to create a revolutionary state through armed struggle and to separate Italy from the Western Alliance. In 1984 they split into two factions: the Communist Combatant Party (BR-PCC) and the Union of Combatant Communists (BR-UCC). Other offshots are believed to include the N.A.P. ("Nuclei Armati Proletari") and "Prima Linea".
Activities
The original group concentrated on assassination and kidnapping of Italian government and business leaders; it kidnapped and murdered former Prime Minister Aldo Moro (leader of Democrazia Cristiana) on the day he was set to return to power in 1978, kidnapped US Army Brigadier General James Dozier in 1981, and claimed responsibility for murdering Leamon Hunt, US chief of the Sinai Multinational Force and Observer Group in 1984. The group has been largely inactive since Italian and French authorities arrested many of its members in 1989. With limited resources and followers to carry out major terrorist acts, the group is mostly out of business. Its latest known actions were the 1999 murder of Massimo D'Antona, an advisor to the cabinet of near-left Prime Minister Massimo D'Alema. In March 20, 2002 the same gun that was used to kill D'Antona was used to kill Professor Marco Biagi, an economic advisor to the right-wing current Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and a key figure in the neo-liberalization of Italian labour policies. The Brigades again claimed responsibility.
Strength
Probably fewer than 50, plus an unknown number of supporters.
Location/Area of Operation
Based and operates in Italy. Some members probably live clandestinely in other European countries.
External Aid
Currently unknown; original group apparently was self-sustaining but probably received weapons from other Western European terrorist groups and from the PLO.
Original source: Terrorist Group Profiles, Dudley Knox Library, Naval Postgraduate School
External link
Referenced By
18 April | 18th April | 1978 | 1982 | 28 January | 28th January | Aldo Moro | April 18 | April 18, 2002 | April 18th | Democrazia Cristiana | Enrico Berlinguer | Francesco Cossiga | Franco Maria Malfatti | Gianni Agnelli | Giovanni Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini | Giovanni Montini | Historical anniversaries/January 28 | History of Italy | Italian History | Italy/History | January 28 | January 28th | Kingdom of Italy | Left-wing terrorism | List of terrorist groups | March 2002 | Paul VI | Pentiti | Pope Paul VI | Propaganda Due | Sixties | Squamish Five | Terrorism | Terrorist | Terrorist group | Terrorist groups | Terrorist organisations in Asia | Terrorist organization | Terrorist organizations | The Sixties | Vancouver Five
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