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Ex-Italy leader claims France accidentally shot down passenger jet in 1980 bid to kill Qaddafi

​​​​​​​View Date:2024-12-24 01:13:08

Rome — A former Italian premier, in an interview published on Saturday, contended that a French air force missile accidentally brought down a passenger jet over the Mediterranean Sea in 1980 in a failed bid to assassinate Libya's then leader Muammar Qaddafi.

Former two-time Premier Giuliano Amato appealed to French President Emmanuel Macron to either refute or confirm his assertion about the cause of the crash on June 27, 1980, which killed all 81 persons aboard the Italian domestic flight.

A general view of the Ustica Memorial Museum, dedicated to the 81 people who died on board Itavia Flight 870 on June 27, 1980, when it crashed into the sea near Ustica island, with the wreck of the aircraft and 81 lamps symbolizing the lives lost, June 26, 2020 in Bologna, Italy. Roberto Serra/Iguana Press/Getty

In an interview with Rome daily La Repubblica, Amato said he is convinced that France hit the plane while targeting a Libyan military jet.

While acknowledging he has no hard proof, Amato also contended that Italy tipped off Qaddafi, so the Libyan, who was heading back to Tripoli from a meeting in Yugoslavia, didn't board the Libyan military jet.

What caused the crash is one of modern Italy's most enduring mysteries. Some say a bomb exploded aboard the Itavia jetliner on a flight from Bologna to Sicily, while others say examination of the wreckage, pulled up from the seafloor years later, indicate it was hit by a missile.

Radar traces indicated a flurry of aircraft activity in that part of the skies when the plane went down.

"The most credible version is that of responsibility of the French air force, in complicity with the Americans and who participated in a war in the skies that evening of June 27," Amato was quoted as saying.

President of the Italian Constitutional Court and former Italian Prime Minister Giuliano Amato attends the military parade in the via dei Fori Imperiali during celebrations for Republic Day in Rome, Italy, June 2, 2022 Mondadori Portfolio/Getty

NATO planned to "simulate an exercise, with many planes in action, during which a missile was supposed to be fired" with Qaddafi as the target, Amato said.

In the aftermath of the crash, French, U.S. and NATO officials denied any military activity in the skies that night.

According to Amato, a missile was allegedly fired by a French fighter jet that had taken off from an aircraft carrier, possibly off Corsica's southern coast.

Macron, 45, was a toddler when the Italian passenger jet went down in the sea near the tiny Italian island of Ustica.

"I ask myself why a young president like Macron, while age-wise extraneous to the Ustica tragedy, wouldn't want to remove the shame that weighs on France," Amato told La Repubblica. "And he can remove it in only two ways — either demonstrating that the this thesis is unfounded or, once the (thesis') foundation is verified, by offering the deepest apologies to Italy and to the families of the victims in the name of his government."

 A general view of the Ustica Memorial Museum, dedicated to the 81 people who died on board Itavia Flight 870 on June 27, 1980, when it crashed into the sea near Ustica island, with the wreck of the aircraft and 81 lamps symbolizing the lives lost, June 26, 2020 in Bologna, Italy. Roberto Serra/Iguana Press/Getty

Amato, who is 85, said that in 2000, when he was premier, he wrote to the then presidents of the United States and France, Bill Clinton and Jacques Chirac, respectively, to press them to shed light on what happened. But ultimately, those entreaties yielded "total silence," Amato said.

When queried by The Associated Press, Macron's office said Saturday it wouldn't immediately comment on Amato's remarks.

Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni called on Amato to say if he has concrete elements to back his assertions so that her government could pursue any further investigation.

Amato's words "merit attention,'' Meloni said in a statement issued by her office, while noting that the former premier had specified that his assertions are "fruit of personal deductions."

Assertions of French involvement aren't new. In a 2008 television interview, former Italian President Francesco Cossiga, who was serving as premier when the crash occurred, blamed it on a French missile whose target had been a Libyan military jet and said he learned that Italy's secret services military branch had tipped off Qaddafi.

Qaddafi was killed in Libya's civil war in 2011. The North African nation has been in chaos since then, including violence that erupted in the capital city of Tripoli in mid-August, leaving at least 55 people dead and 146 injured according to the Reuters news agency. That clash was between two prominent military forces which are among the many groups that have vied for power in Libya since Qaddafi's overthrow.

A few weeks after the 1980 crash, the wreckage of a Libyan MiG, with the badly decomposed body of its pilot, was discovered in the remote mountains of southern Calabria.

    In:
  • Plane Crash
  • Italy
  • Muammar Qaddafi
  • Libya
  • Emmanuel Macron
  • France
  • NATO

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