The Citizen (KZN)

I ended Cold War – Italy’s ex-leader

NEW CLAIM: ‘I CONVINCED BUSH, PUTIN TO SIGN TREATY’ Forget history, it happened in 2002 at my summit, says presidenti­al hopeful.

- Rome

Former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has made many claims in the course of Italy’s rough-and-tumble election campaign, and yesterday he added another: he was the key architect behind the end of the Cold War.

“When I was in government in 2001, I said publicly that I wanted to end the Cold War, which had been going on for 50 years and was a terrible anguish,” the leader of Italy’s centre-right bloc said on a morning television talk show.

That would surprise most historians, who say the Cold War ended between the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, and the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991. But Berlusconi said it ended in May 2002, at a Nato summit he hosted near Rome attended by US President George W Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“And I succeeded in ending the Cold War because here in Rome, at Pratica di Mare [air base] in 2002, I convinced Bush and Putin, using all my talents of friendly relations, to end the Cold War,” he said.

He said this was done with “the signing of a treaty with Nato that foresaw cooperatio­n between the Russian Federation and Nato in many sectors, starting from drug traffickin­g and arms traffickin­g”.

The summit ended with a declaratio­n on Nato-Russia relations that provided mechanisms for consultati­ons and cooperatio­n.

A conservati­ve alliance of Berlusconi’s Forza Italia and its right-wing allies – the Northern League and Brothers of Italy – is expected to win the most seats in the March 4 elections.

But polls say it will probably fall short of an absolute majority.

Berlusconi, 81, who led four government­s between 1994 and 2011, has often claimed that during his administra­tions, Italy was more respected internatio­nally than it had been under centre-left coalitions. –

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