Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05ROME3631
2005-10-28 17:44:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Rome
Cable title:  

IRAN: ITALY SENDS TOUGH MESSAGE

Tags:  PREL PTER PHUM IR IT ITALIAN POLITICS 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ROME 003631 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/27/2015
TAGS: PREL PTER PHUM IR IT ITALIAN POLITICS
SUBJECT: IRAN: ITALY SENDS TOUGH MESSAGE

REF: STATE 199225

Classified By: Pol M/C David Pearce for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ROME 003631

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/27/2015
TAGS: PREL PTER PHUM IR IT ITALIAN POLITICS
SUBJECT: IRAN: ITALY SENDS TOUGH MESSAGE

REF: STATE 199225

Classified By: Pol M/C David Pearce for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)


1. (C) Summary. Prime Minister Berlusconi publicly condemned
the statements made by Iranian President Ahmadinejad. The
MFA also immediately phoned the Iranian Ambassador in Rome to
protest upon hearing Ahmadinejad's remarks, following up with
a short public statement on its web site. The Mayor of Rome
called the Iranian President's statements an insult to
civilization. Initial press reaction was notably absent,
though Ahmadinejad's remarks made headlines two days later.
End summary.


2. (C) PM Berlusconi, at a press conference concluding the
special EU Summit in Hampton Court on October 27, called
Ahmadinejad's statements "unacceptable," adding that they
confirm the international community's concern over Tehran's
nuclear agenda. The MFA reacted immediately to Ahmadinejad's
statements by having Director General for the Middle East
Riccardo Sessa (NEA A/S Welch equivalent) phone the Iranian
Ambassador in Rome to protest. On October 27 the MFA posted
a short statement on its web site but did not identify at
what level the call had been made and qualified its initial
condemnation by saying "if correctly reported" (text provided
in para. 6 below). Pol MC followed up with Sessa's Deputy,
Luca del Balzo, to assure him that Ahmadinejad had indeed
made the statements and to stress the importance of official,
public condemnation of those statements. Noting that the new
Italian Ambassador to Washington Castellaneta was scheduled
to meet with Secretary Rice later that day, Pol MC said he
wanted to make sure that Washington had a full picture of
Italy's reaction. Del Balzo said that the MFA's condemnation
had been issued immediately, picked up by the news agencies,
and that Italy was informing its EU partners of its
condemnation as well.


4. (C) Pol MC followed up with two of PM Berlusconi's
Diplomatic Advisors, Francesco Talo and Marco Carnelos. Talo
told Pol MC that Italy was "concerned and stupefied" by the
remarks. He apparently then informed Carnelos, who was
traveling with Berlusconi for the EU Summit in the UK, of our
concerns, as Carnelos later called Pol MC to say that he
would check with his UK colleagues to see if FM Straw would
make a statement on behalf of the EU. Talo later told us the
issue was raised with PM Berlusconi, who then issued the
condemnation cited above.


5. (C) Comment. The high-level and public condemnation by
Iran's largest EU trading partner is significant. Despite
its important trade relationship, the Government of Italy
recognizes the egregious nature of Ahmadinejad's statements
and spoke out in an unusually high-level and powerful way.
End comment.


6. (U) Begin text of October 27 MFA statement. The Ministry
of Foreign Affairs firmly condemns the statements made by
Iranian President Ahmadinejad against the State of Israel
(should they have been correctly reported),and has expressed
perturbation and concern to the Iranian Ambassador in Rome.
It also emphasized to the diplomatic representative that the
tenor of such unacceptable affirmations fortifies concerns as
regards the policies being pursued by the new Iranian
leadership, in particular as far as the nuclear dossier is
concerned. End text.


7. (U) Begin text of statement by Rome Mayor Walter Veltroni.
The Iranian President's very serious statements against
Israel are an intolerable insult not only to the State of
Israel, but to the entire international community. Whoever,
in whatever part of the world, believes in the values of
civilization, community living, and peace cannot but feel
offended and worried with the fact that statements that are
so intolerant and violent come from a man who has very high
political responsibilities and who leads a country that
already causes concern because of its nuclear energy
policies. It is also all the more serious that those
statements followed by one day a new and bloody terrorist
attack that -- for the umpteenth time -- caused innocent
victims in Israel, while alarming displays of anti-Semitism
grow in several countries. At this moment in time and in the
name of a city that prides itself on representing the values
of civilization and of dialogue among nations, a city that
hosted on several occasions meetings for peace in the Middle
East, I express the fullest and most affectionate solidarity
to the representatives of Israel and to the Jewish community.
End text.

SPOGLI