A strategy of tension (Italian: strategia della tensione) is a political policy wherein violent struggle is encouraged rather than suppressed. The purpose is to create a general feeling of insecurity in the population and make people seek security in a strong government.
According to the sociologist Franco Ferraresi, the term "strategy of tension" was first used in an article on the Piazza Fontana bombing in The Observer newspaper, published on 14 December 1969.[12][13]Neal Ascherson, one of those responsible for that article, later clarified that the expression had been suggested to him by the journalists Antonio Gambino and Claudio Risé, both of L'Espresso, who had been in conversation with him in the days immediately following the explosion of the Piazza Fontana bomb.[14]
^Drake, Richard (1999). "Italy in the 1960s: A Legacy of Terrorism and Liberation". South Central Review. 16: 62–76. doi:10.2307/3190077. JSTOR3190077. More than twelve hundred people died or suffered grievous injury from this violence, which from 1969 to 1984 included thousands of terrorist attacks. Dozens of groups on the left and the right were involved.
^Ferraresi, Franco (1997). Threats to Democracy: the Radical Right in Italy after the War. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, p. 87. ISBN9780691044996
^The Observer article deployed the term while describing the alleged efforts of Giuseppe Saragat, then leader of the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI), to undermine the sitting centre-right Christian Democratic government, which had prompted accusations from others that he had "indirectly encouraged the far Right to go over to terrorism." See Neal Ascherson, Michael Davie and Frances Cairncross, 'Italy: Fear of revolt returns,' The Observer, 14 December 1969, p. 2.