From 1948 to 1990, NATO countries maintained secret armies across Western Europe. The operation was known by many names — Gladio in Italy, P26 in Switzerland, SDRA8 in Belgium — but the architecture was the same: weapons caches, radio networks, and stay-behind cells intended to resist Soviet occupation. What the files actually reveal is more complicated, more institutional, and more troubling than the conspiracy theories that later surrounded it.
The stay-behind networks represent one of the most extensively documented covert operations of the Cold War — and one of the most poorly understood. What began as a legitimate military contingency plan evolved, in several countries, into something closer to a parallel security structure with ambiguous accountability and troubling connections to domestic political violence.
This episode does not claim that Gladio was responsible for every act of political violence in Italy during the Years of Lead. The record does not support that conclusion. What the record does support — what parliamentary inquiries in Italy, Belgium, and Switzerland have confirmed — is that secret armies existed, that they were armed and trained, and that in at least one case (Italy) elements within the structure became involved in domestic operations that had nothing to do with resisting Soviet invasion.
We proceed slowly, because the file demands it.
The Origin of the Concept
Churchill's auxiliary units and the SOE precedent, 1940–1944
NATO Directive
SHAPE and the stay-behind mandate, 1948–1951
The Italian Architecture
Gladio, SIFAR, and the Piazza Fontana connection
Belgium and the Netherlands
SDRA8, OWP, and the arms caches of Limburg
Switzerland: P26
The hidden army in a neutral country, 1948–1990
Greece and Turkey
LOK and the Counter-Guerrilla, 1952–1980
The Scandinavian Networks
Rocambole, Stella Polaris, and the Danish stay-behind
The 1990 Disclosures
Andréotti's exposure and the European Parliament inquiry
What the Files Actually Show
A forensic reading of the declassified record
The Institutional Aftermath
Parliamentary inquiries, legal proceedings, and the silence
Sources and Documentation
Complete citation list and archive references
The following documents form the evidential basis of this episode. Where possible, we link directly to the archive holding. Where documents are not available online, we provide the archive reference number for independent verification.
NATO's Secret Armies
View document →Resolution on Gladio
View document →Stay-Behind Operations in Western Europe
View document →SOE Auxiliary Units — Historical Report
View document →NATO's Secret Armies: Operation Gladio and Terrorism in Western Europe
View document →The sourcing of this episode was complicated by the uneven declassification record across NATO member states. Italy produced the most complete documentary trail; Switzerland destroyed significant portions of its archive in 1990. Where the record is incomplete, we have said so explicitly. The Belgian parliamentary inquiry of 1991 remains the most authoritative single source on SDRA8.
— Cold Light Editorial
No corrections have been issued for this episode.