Propaganda Due
![Compas-equerre-ap.png][float-right]Propaganda Due (P2), also known as Loggia P2, was a clandestine Masonic lodge operating in Italy primarily during the 1970s and 1980s, under the leadership of Licio Gelli, which aimed to counter communist influence by recruiting prominent figures from politics, finance, military, intelligence, and media to exert undue control over national institutions.[1][2] Originally established in 1877 as a regular lodge affiliated with the Grand Orient of Italy, P2 deviated into secrecy after Gelli assumed control around 1970, functioning independently and in violation of Masonic regularity.[1] Its exposure in March 1981, following a police raid on Gelli's villa in Arezzo that uncovered a membership list of approximately 962 influential individuals—including future Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi—revealed the extent of its infiltration into Italian society.[3][4]
The lodge was implicated in major scandals, including the 1982 collapse of Banco Ambrosiano, a Vatican-linked bank that resulted in over $1 billion in losses tied to unauthorized loans and money laundering operations involving P2 affiliates.[2][5] P2's "Plan for Democratic Rebirth," a blueprint discovered during the raid, outlined authoritarian measures such as media consolidation, suppression of opposition parties, and constitutional suspension to restructure Italy amid perceived threats from leftist forces.[6][7] The Italian Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry, chaired by Tina Anselmi, concluded in 1984 that P2 constituted a secret criminal organization intent on subverting democratic order, leading to its formal dissolution and Gelli's convictions for related crimes.[8][4] Suspected links to NATO's Operation Gladio stay-behind networks underscored P2's role in anti-communist strategies during the Cold War, though mainstream accounts often emphasize domestic destabilization over geopolitical context.[1]
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