Years of Lead (Italy)

Years of Lead
Part of the Cold War

A bomb at Bologna railway station planted by the neo-fascist terrorist group known as the Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari in August 1980 killed 85 people; it was the deadliest attack during the Years of Lead.
Date1 March 1968 – 23 October 1988
Location
Result

Government victory

  • Most militant and terrorist groups disbanded
Belligerents

Italian government

Supported by:

Far-left terrorists:

Supported by:

Far-right terrorists:

Supported by:

Commanders and leaders
Units involved
Armed Forces: +90,000 soldiers (1973)
Gladio: 622 members
BR: Several thousand active members
PL: 1,072 members and collaborators
O22: 25 members
PAC: 60 militants
AO: 200 members
Ordine Nuovo: 10,000
National Vanguard: 600–2,000 members at varying times
NAR: 53 members
Terza Posizione: 42
Casualties and losses

 Italy: 14 civil servants murdered
Armed Forces:

Carabinieri:

  • 15 killed
  • 3 injured

State Police:

  • 32 killed
  • 1 wounded

Penitentiary Police:

  • 4 killed

 Italy: 67 killed in total

 U.S.:

 United States: 1 killed in total

BR:

  • 12,000 far-left militants arrested
  • 600 fled the country
  • at least 2 killed
  • 1 injured

PL:

  • at least 5 killed
  • 1 arrested

O22: 8 arrested
PAC:

  • 1 injured in friendly fire incident
  • 60 arrested
  • several tortured

CS:

AO:

  • 3 killed
  • 200 exiled
Ordine Nuovo: At least 3 arrested
NAR: 53 arrested
Terza Posizione: 42 indicted
Total deaths (including civilians): 428, c. 2,000 physical and psychological injuries

The Years of Lead (Italian: Anni di piombo) were a period of political violence and social upheaval in Italy that lasted from the late 1960s until the late 1980s, marked by a wave of both far-left and far-right incidents of political terrorism and violent clashes.

The Years of Lead are sometimes considered to have begun with the 1968 movement in Italy and the Hot Autumn strikes starting in 1969; the death of the policeman Antonio Annarumma in November 1969; the Piazza Fontana bombing in December of that year, which killed 17 and was perpetrated by right-wing terrorists in Milan; and the death shortly after of anarchist worker Giuseppe Pinelli while in police custody under suspicion of being responsible for the attack, which he was ultimately deemed as not having committed.

A far-left group, the Red Brigades, eventually became notorious as a terrorist organization during the period; in 1978, they kidnapped and assassinated former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro. Another major crime associated with the Italian Years of Lead was the 1980 bombing of the Bologna railway station, which killed 85 people and for which several members of the far-right, neo-fascist terrorist group known as the Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari were convicted. Far-right terrorist organizations were also involved in various other bombings that resulted in the killings of multiple civilians, including the Piazza della Loggia bombing in 1974 which killed eight people and wounded 102 others. The terrorist organizations gradually disbanded, and police arrested their members throughout the 1980s. Sporadic political violence continued in Italy until the late 1980s, resurfacing to a lesser extent in the late 1990s and continuing until the mid-2000s.