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Guido Crosetto
Guido Crosetto
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Guido Crosetto (born 19 September 1963) is an Italian politician and businessman who is the Minister of Defence since 22 October 2022. Crosetto began his political career in Christian Democracy (DC). He was mainly involved in the local politics of Piedmont. From 1990 to 2004, he was mayor of Marene. In 2000, he joined Forza Italia (FI). His rise in national politics began with his election to the Chamber of Deputies in 2001, a position he held until 2013 and from 2018 to 2019.

Key Information

In 2009, Crosetto joined The People of Freedom (PdL) and served as an undersecretary at the Ministry of Defence in the fourth Berlusconi government from 2008 to 2011. In 2012, Crosetto was among the founders (alongside Giorgia Meloni and Ignazio La Russa) of Brothers of Italy (FdI), of which he served as national coordinator from 2013 to 2014 and from 2018 to 2019, representing its moderate wing. In 2022, he became Minister of Defence in the Meloni government.

Early life

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Family and business

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Crosetto was born into a family of entrepreneurs in Cuneo,[1] in the Italian region of Piedmont,[2] on 19 September 1963.[3][4][5] In addition to Cuneo, he grew up in Alba, calling himself "a children of the province of Granda",[6][7] and Marene.[8] At a young age, Crosetto took over the family business, which produced agricultural machinery, later expanding his business to other sectors, including real estate and tourism.[4][9] The business was known as Agrimec, before it was renamed to Crosetto as a private limited company, and produced agricultural trailers since 1937, before its expansion to other sectors.[10] Of his childhood and his father, Crosetto recalled: "Anyone who knows the Po Valley knows that raising pigs and cows fills the air with the smell of manure. When I told my father, 'It stinks,' he replied, 'Shut up, because this smell will feed you.' We produced agricultural machinery, including manure spreaders, so it was doubly true for us."[8]

In the office of his father, who instead of studying law as he would have liked, began working in the family business at 15, there hung a quote from the liberal Luigi Einaudi, who said: "Thousands, millions of individuals work, produce, and save despite everything we can invent to harass them, hinder them, and discourage them. It's their natural calling that drives them, not just the thirst for money. The joy and pride of seeing their company prosper, gain credit, inspire trust in an ever-growing customer base, expand their facilities, and beautify their offices—these are a driving force for progress just as powerful as profit. If this were not the case, it would be inexplicable how there are entrepreneurs who pour all their energy and capital into their businesses, often to achieve profits far more modest than those they could certainly and comfortably obtain with other endeavors."[9]

In interview with Gianni Pittella and his wife, Agata Pittella, Crosetto recalled of his early life and family business, stating: "I feel gratified by what life has given me, even though I must say I had to earn it tooth and nail, starting at a young age after my father's death, having to climb ever higher mountains alone. However, I did it without even realising the difficulty of what I was doing, and I did it because I always thought I was following a path that wouldn't just benefit me, but could also improve everything around me: be it a municipality, a province, a region, or a nation."[9] He added: "I don't feel capable of teaching anything or imparting messages; I can only tell you how I lived my life. Life. I lived it without fear: without fear of working, without fear of sacrificing myself, without fear of taking risks, without fear of showing my weaknesses and without fear of even sometimes showing my incompetence."[9]

Education

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After finishing high school in Savigliano,[11] Crosetto attended the Faculty of Economics and Commerce at the University of Turin between 1982 and 1987 but never graduated following his father's death, and could not finish his studies in Economics and Business at the University of Turin.[1][12] He decided to left university to start a political career and joined the youth wing of the DC.[2] During his time at the University of Turin, Crosetto met future politician Paolo Rosso.[13] In the past, the official website of the Chamber of Deputies and the Italian Wikipedia wrongly reported that Crosetto had completed his studies and had a degree (laurea).[1][12] In 2013, he said that he had been silly for having told a "little, innocent lie".[14]

Political career

[edit]

Mayor of Marene

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Crosetto began his political career as a member and regional secretary of the youth wing of the DC,[4][5] and in 1988, at age 25, he became the economic advisor to Giovanni Goria,[15] who at that time was Prime Minister of Italy.[4] He was a member of the DC's left-wing like fellow Piedmontese Fabrizio Palenzona.[16] Crosetto was elected by the city council in 1990 as an independent candidate within the civic list Together for Marene, which he founded.[2] and re-elected in 1995 and 1999 with the support of the centre-right coalition, Crosetto served for three terms as mayor of Marene, a small village near Cuneo where he lives, from 28 May 1990 to 14 June 2004.[17][18][b] Crosetto's civic list proved successful in the following years, electing as mayors Edoardo Pelissero and Roberta Barbero.[19]

During the 1990s, with the fall of the First Italian Republic and its ruling parties, including the DC in 1994, Crosetto was a critic of the Mani pulite judges in the Tangentopoli scandal.[20] In his 2025 autobiography, Crosetto recalled that "the rift between law and jurisprudence began: it doesn't matter what the code provides, what the law says, but what a judge thinks and how he decides to interpret the law at his own discretion. This extremely dangerous trend still leads to convictions for invented crimes ... A true disgrace to the law. The fact remains that, at that time, the judiciary also became a key player in the selection of the Italian business class."[20]

When Berlusconi entered politics in 1994, Crosetto recalled in a March 2025 interview on Un giorno da pecora broadcast on Rai Radio 1 that he felt disorientation, stating: "I watched Berlusconi on television, his songs, his flags, his blue backgrounds: it's no secret, I felt contempt, I was almost offended, outraged. That was because for me, politics wasn't about the little song or the badge, but about content and ideas."[8] Around 1994, Crosetto was also one of the founders of the cultural cooperative called Zabum in Cuneo, where notable artists grew up, including Africa Unite, Antonio Albanese, Claudio Bisio, Marlene Kuntz, Mau Mau, and Subsonica.[8] He joked that he was the only one to never smoke a joint.[8]

In 1999, Crosetto ran for the presidency of the province of Cuneo as an independent candidate close to the centre-right coalition but lost to the centre-left coalition fellow former DC member Giovanni Quaglia.[21][22] He was provincial councilor of Cuneo from 1999 to 2009,[23] serving as group leader of FI,[4][5] the centre-right political party founded by the billionaire and media tycoon Silvio Berlusconi and member of European People's Party (EPP).[24] He had joined FI in 2000,[2][25] and also chaired the Conference of Mayors of the Savigliano-Saluzzo-Fossano ASL from 1993 to 1997.[23]

Chamber of Deputies

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Crosetto as a member of the Chamber of Deputies in 2001

In the 2001 Italian general election, Crosetto was elected to the Chamber of Deputies under FI for the single-member district of Alba, Piedmont, gaining 49% of votes, and was re-elected in subsequent years.[4][5] From 2001 to 2006, he served on a series of parliamentary committees, including the Permanent Committee on Budget, Treasury, and Planning, the Committee of Inquiry into the Serbian Telekom Affair, the Committee for the General Direction and Oversight of Radio and Television Services, and the Committee for the Oversight of Deposits and Loans Fund.[5]

Crosetto was first re-elected in the 2006 Italian general election.[4] From 2003 to 2009, he was the Piedmont regional coordinator for FI and the party's national director for credit and industry until the founding of the PdL.[26] For the 2008 Italian general election, Crosetto joined Berlusconi's new party, the PdL, with which he was elected again to the Chamber of Deputies.[4][5] He served as Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Defence in the fourth and final Berlusconi government from 2008 to 2011.[4][5] After completing his term as undersecretary, Crosetto was appointed to the Committee on Foreign and European Affairs and subsequently to the Committee on Budget, Treasury, and Planning.[5] In October 2012, due to incompatibility with his parliamentarian role, he resigned as president of GEAC, the company managing the Cuneo International Airport.[27] On 14 November 2012, he was awarded the Gold Medal of Merit of the Italian Red Cross.[5]

Following Berlusconi's resignation in November 2011, Crosetto criticised the formation of the technical government led by pro-austerity economist Mario Monti.[28][29] Starting in July 2011, he had already begun to strongly challenge the decisions of the then economy minister Giulio Tremonti and the Berlusconi government, including Claudio Scajola,[30][31][32] and distinguished himself for his outspokenness and independence.[23] During 2012, he became increasingly critical of the PdL, disagreeing with Berlusconi's return to the political scene and the PdL's position toward the Monti government.[23] On 19 July 2012, Crosetto was among the few members of the Italian Parliament to vote against the ratification of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM).[33][34][35] The other members to vote against were a fellow PdL member (also against the party line) and Northern League (LN) members in the Chambers of Deputies, while the LN senators and two other senators, one from the PdL and one from Italy of Values (IdV), voted against the treaty in the Senate of the Republic.[36]

Brothers of Italy

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In December 2012, Crosetto left the PdL and co-founded FdI,[4][5] a national conservative party, originally named Brothers of Italy – National Centre-Right (Fratelli d'Italia – Centrodestra Nazionale),[23] in opposition to the PdL and the Monti government, with Meloni and La Russa.[37][38] Upon its founding, FdI was referred to as representative of the anti-Monti right-wing.[28] From 20 December 2012 until 4 April 2013, when he was succeeded by La Russa, Crosetto served as president of FdI,[citation needed] and acted as national coordinator of the party,[4][5] which remained an ally but alternative of Berlusconi and the PdL.[39] Despite the split, Berlusconi continued to express esteem towards Crosetto, who recalled that he had hoped Crosetto would have joined him in the new Forza Italia (FI) following the end of the PdL.[18] As the leading candidate for the Senate of the Republic in Piedmont,[23] Crosetto strongly criticised the candidates of the PdL.[40] He failed to be elected in the 2013 Italian general election because FdI votes did not exceed the electoral threshold,[9] which was set at 3% by the electoral law known as Porcellum, and only elected candidates in the first-past-the-post voting.[41][42] In November 2013, he said that he would not be electoral allies with Berlusconi and Angelino Alfano.[43]

Crosetto and Giorgia Meloni at a FdI rally in 2014

Crosetto ran in the 2014 European Parliament election in Italy but was not elected because once again FdI votes did not exceed the threshold set at 4% for European elections in Italy.[44][45] On the same day, Crosetto ran in the 2014 Piedmontese regional election as the FdI candidate for president of Piedmont,[46] and ran alone outside the centre-right coalition led by Berlusconi's FI, stating that Piedmont had been "sacrificed to Berlusconi's troubles".[47] The regionalist LN led by Matteo Salvini was allied with FI against FdI, supporting Gilberto Pichetto Fratin's candidacy.[48] In the election, which was won by Sergio Chiamparino of the centre-left coalition, Crosetto finished in fourth place, gaining 5.2% of votes.[48] Following these electoral defeats, Crosetto retired from politics in September 2014,[44] also leaving his role as national coordinator of FdI.[2] Without Crosetto, FdI was led by Meloni, who moved the party further to the right and built closer ties to Salvini's party, which eventually became the right-wing populist League (Lega) as part of a more right-wing-led and oriented centre-right coalition.[49][50][51]

Crosetto returned to politics when the deputy and fellow Cuneo native Daniela Santanchè, a right-wing businesswoman and former member of the PdL and FI in Lombardy, joined Meloni's FdI in December 2017.[52] Crosetto and Santanchè represented the small and medium-sized enterprises of northern Italy, where they ran as FdI's candidates in the 2018 Italian general election.[53] They became respectively members of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate of the Republic because the party's electoral support increased,[54][55][56] with FdI candidates being elected across multiple regions,[57][58] and were among the four members from Cuneo to be elected (the others were Emma Bonino and Laura Ravetto).[59] surpassing 4.3% of votes at the national level for the first time.[60][61] The party won around 16% of the votes in the constituency of Marene, Crosetto's hometown.[62]

Crosetto in 2018

After his election as deputy, Crosetto was again FdI's national coordinator,[2] and was a member of the Budget, Treasury, and Programming Commission.[5] He was also rumoured as a possible Minister of Defence in the Government of Change between Lega and the Five Star Movement (M5S), with Crosetto appreciating the positive views both parties held of him but stating that his candidacy would have only made sense in a clear political alliance.[63] In December 2018, Crosetto's speech to the Chamber of Deputies during the approval of the 2019 budget law was applauded and went viral,[64] even earning the "comrade" (compagno) label by La Repubblica. Crosetto later commented: "You've heard speeches like the one in the Chamber before; when I lambasted Berlusconi, when I clashed with Tremonti or Scajola, when I voted against the fiscal compact. The paths are varied, but one tries to maintain consistency."[32]

On 15 March 2019, Crosetto's seat was taken by the first candidate on the list of non-elected at the 2018 general election, the businesswoman and FdI member Lucrezia Mantovani. This was because he had resigned on 13 March 2019 to continue his business career,[3][4] although the resignation process proved difficult and it was only accepted after a third attempt.[65][66] Crosetto said that he would not leave politics.[67] In April and May 2019, as non-candidate spokesman of the party, Crosetto helped Meloni in the campaign for the 2019 European Parliament election in Italy.[68] FdI, which joined the European Parliament as a member of European Conservatives and Reformists Group (ECR),[24] increased its electoral support, surpassing 6.4% of national level votes for the first time.[60][61]

In the 2022 Italian presidential election, which was held in January, Crosetto was the second most voted candidate with 114 votes,[9] the double of FdI's 63 grand electors,[69] in the third ballot.[70][71] La Russa said that originally they had proposed Carlo Nordio but ultimately chose Crosetto out of respect and to reflect FdI's political power within the centre-right coalition.[72] In July 2022, a snap election was called after the 2022 Italian government crisis, which brought to the fall of the national unity government of Mario Draghi opposed by FdI, stating before the call for a snap election that he was not afraid of the ballot box.[73] Crosetto said that this was as a result of Draghi's political inexperience, which negatively affected him, and that the governing coalition was torn up.[74] He said that if FdI was to become the largest party of the centre-right coalition, it would remain faithful and would not affect regional governments, explicitly citing as example the regional government of Alberto Cirio of FI in Piedmont.[75]

In a record-low voter turnout election in September 2022,[76] FdI became the largest party in the country, gaining more than 26% of votes and the centre-right coalition won a clear majority in both houses of the Italian Parliament.[77][78] In ten years, the party he helped to found had started from 2% and reached 26% to became the most voted party.[79] Although he did not run in the 2022 Italian general election, Crosetto campaigned for FdI and Meloni,[80][81][82] who became the first woman to serve as Prime Minister of Italy, especially to politically convince fellow entrepreneurs in northern Italy.[83] He was among the first to comment on the results, stating: "The data speaks for itself: Italians have decided to put their trust in Giorgia Meloni. Not all of them, but a large portion."[84] He added that he was not worried about Lega and FI being under 10%, stating the coalition had "held up and is a coalition legitimised by the result and this is no time for political games".[84] He also said that he would not be part of the new government, which he expected to be the government of the best of the centre-right coalition.[85] He was rumoured to be appointed Minister of Economic Development.[86]

Minister of Defence

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Crosetto during the swear-in ceremony of the Meloni government

On 22 October 2022, Crosetto was appointed Minister of Defence in the Meloni government.[26][87] As a result, he was also appointed Chancellor and Treasurer of the Military Order of Italy.[5] At the same time, in response to concerns about any possible conflict of interest, he announced he had "already resigned as director of every private company (I don't hold any public ones) that I (legitimately) owned. I will liquidate all my companies (all legitimate). I am giving up 90% of my current income."[83][86] As defence minister, amid divisions within the centre-right coalition and in contrast to the pro-Russian views of Salvini and Lega,[88] Among the issues Crosetto found upon his appointment as defence minister were the Russo-Ukrainian war, the commitments made to increase the defence sector's GDP share to 2%, and the modernisation of equipment.[9]

Crosetto became one of the most vocal supporters of Ukraine.[89] In February 2023, he stated that the Ukrainian resistance was "a battle for freedom, a battle for international law, a battle for Europe".[90] Moreover, he added that the NATO military support to Volodymyr Zelenskyy's government prevented the break out of World War III, which would have been inevitable if "Russian tanks reached Kyiv".[91] Due to his statements, Crosetto became the target of attacks from members of the Russian government and elite.[92] Former president Dmitry Medvedev labeled him as "foolish", while Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of the Wagner Group, heavily insulted him.[93] On 15 March 2023, the Italian newspaper Il Foglio reported that the Wagner Group put a €15 million bounty on Crosetto.[94] In June 2023, Crosetto reiterated Italy's support for Ukraine amid further bombing from Russia while calling for a diplomatic solution.[95]

Crosetto with Italian President Sergio Mattarella in 2023

In August 2023, Crosetto spoke of "personal ravings" in relation to Roberto Vannacci's book, which was widely described as containing homophobic and racist statements,[96] while many members of the Meloni government defended or downplayed Vannacci and his controversial statements.[97] Vannacci, a general of the Italian Army, was dismissed by Crosetto, who said that in relation to the Vannacci affair he acted as minister rather than politician.[98] Crosetto said that he would do what he did again, referring to defending the institutions.[99] Crosetto also defended himself from criticism across the political spectrum, and added that there were rules that must be respected and that he would have done the same had Vannacci wrote a book arguing opposing theses.[100] In a note in December 2023, he said that Vannacci had been replaced, and not dismissed, by an explicit decision of the Chief of Staff of the Italian Army.[101] In February 2024, Vannacci's attorney said that Crosetto had ordered an 11-month disciplinary suspension for Vannacci.[102] In April 2024, Crosetto criticised the candidacy of Vannacci to the European Parliament.[103]

In January 2024, Crosetto condemned the commemorations of the Acca Larentia killings, which included fascist salutes, stating that he always condemnded fascist salutes and was politically distant from "any manifestation that recalls past regimes".[104] Following Russian propaganda taking advantage of this by widely sharing the images of the fascist salutes, which went viral worldwide, and the fact that FdI is the heir of the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI), Crosetto and the opposition attacked each other by claiming that the other was promoting or favouring Russia's propaganda.[105] The Union of Italian Jewish Communities president Noemi Di Segni called for new and stronger laws to contain neo-fascism and nostalgic neo-fascist apologists.[106]

During his ministry, Crosetto often criticised the migration policies promoted by Germany and its chancellor Olaf Scholz,[107][108][109] saying that he would have expected from Germany more "assistance and solidarity" with Italy in its "moment of difficulty" as it coped with the rise of immigrants within the country.[110] In May 2024, he criticised Israel's actions during the Rafah offensive in the Gaza Strip.[111] After a few days, he expressed opposition to the use of Western-supplied weapons for attacks inside Russia and stressed the need to "leave open the possibility of negotiating an immediate truce and initiating peace talks in the coming months".[112] On 10 October 2024, Israeli troops opened fire at three UNIFIL positions in South Lebanon, including UNIFIL's main base at Naqoura, in the area of responsibility of the Italian contingent.[113] The attack damaged communication systems between the base and the UNIFIL command in Naqoura.[114][115] Crosetto described the attack as a "possible war crime" and urgently summoned the Israeli ambassador to Italy over the events that occurred at the UNIFIL bases, where Italian personnel operate.[116][117][118] He also contacted Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for a discussion and a formal protest asking for guarantees on the safety of Italian personnel and UNIFIL bases.[119][120]

Crosetto with Lloyd Austin in 2025

On 31 May 2025, Crosetto said like "all Italian governments, we are friends of Israel" but that Israeli raids in Gaza City were unjustified and that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "must stop them: this is how the spiral of hatred grows".[121] In October 2025, Crosetto was denounced by the Jurists and Lawyers for Palestine group to the International Criminal Court for alleged complicity in war crimes and the Gaza genocide, such as by providing the supply of armaments and military and technological cooperation that aided the Israeli military offensives, while another denounce was related to ascertain whether the Meloni government had responsibility for not protecting the Global Sumud Flotilla from the Israeli blockade.[122][123] Among the other Meloni government figures cited were Meloni as the prime minister and Antonio Tajani as the foreign minister, alongside the Leonardo defence company and its CEO Roberto Cingolani.[124] In response, Crosetto said in December 2025 that he had sued "all the disgusting people who connect us to the genocide".[125]

On 9 October 2025, Crosetto expressed his willingness to send armed forces as part of an Italian peace mission in Gaza,[126] stating: "The Armed Forces are ready to play their part, as they have always demonstrated, in all the international missions in which they participate. Italy is there and always will be there when it comes to helping and supporting peace processes."[127] As European countries, such as France and Germany, re-introduced the military service or strengthened the military, while other countries kept an obligatory military service,[128] Crosetto said in November 2025 that he would present a draft bill reintroducing military service in Italy, clarifying that it would be on a voluntary basis.[129] In January 2026, amid increased international tensions, Crosetto presented seven new spending programmes for the Italian Armed Forces, bringing the total number of armament projects to 74.[130] The proposed total military and defence investments would exceed €60 billion, with costs rising for some projects.[130] This came following the package of measures presented at the beginning of December 2025, which included multi-year financial commitments of €4.3 billion.[130]

Public image

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Image

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Crosetto with Mattarella on National Unity and Armed Forces Day in 2022

Due to his height and size, reported to be 1.96 m (6 ft 5+14 in) and around 110 kilograms (240 pounds; 17 stone 5 pounds),[16] Crosetto entered Italian popular culture through Internet memes about comparisons with the Marvel Comics character Kingpin, the Giant character in The Iron Giant, and Lemuel Gulliver,[9] and was referred to as "The Giant of Marene" (il gigante di Marene),[15] "The Good Giant" (il gigante buono),[131] and "The Friendly Giant" (il gigante amico).[9] A 2012 photo of him ("The Giant of Marene") holding Meloni ("The Child of the Oppian Hill") in his arms, known as "The Giant and the Child",[132] became a classic of the iconography of the Melonian refoundation.[133][134]

A "larger-than-life" figure,[9] Crosetto's fellow party members began to call him the "sky blue Shrek" (Shrek azzurro),[2] as he was described as a middle way between Roberto Benigni and Shrek, a comparison that Crosetto himself played up as he was not bothered or offended by it,[9] and often joked about it, stating: "When President Meloni hugs me, she never goes above my waist."[8] He also recalled Buraco plays with Meloni, who he joked "gets really angry when she loses at Buraco. It's happened a few times when we travel together: the last time we played, it was a huge satisfaction because I crushed her!"[8] Of him, Aldo Grasso wrote: "The drama of the Friendly Giant is the same drama experienced by Gulliver: realising he's gigantic only because others are Lilliputians, short-tempered, dwarfs."[9]

Crosetto is seen as a moderate and mediator,[135][136] outspoken but not aggressive, and partisan but also bipartisan,[133] who did not grow up in far-right politics like other FdI members and co-founders,[86] earning him some support on the left.[137] Crosetto said that he engages with everyone, citing Luigi Di Maio of the M5S, Lorenzo Guerini and Enrico Letta of the Democratic Party (PD), Giancarlo Giorgetti of Lega, and Berlusconi of FI.[18] As a result, his name is often mentioned when a technical "government of the best" (governo dei migliori) and national unity government is needed, such as during the 2021 Italian government crisis.[18] Owing to his criticism of the Monti government, he refused on the grounds that he prefers serving in a political government with a stable majority and clear politics.[18]

Political profile

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Crosetto is seen as a great expert in political strategies and was described as a "child prodigy" (enfant prodige) of the DC in the province of Cuneo and the Piedmont region.[18] Reflecting his broad and cross-party appeal, when he attempted to resign as deputy in October 2018, his resignation were rejected twice and only accepted in March 2019, as many deputies attempt to dissuade Crosetto, who thanked his colleagues "for the respect you have given me, from all parties".[66] Enrico Costa of FI said he would vote against Crosetto's resignation because "this Chamber will be impoverished by losing him", recalling his "great mediation skills".[66] By January 2021, Crosetto had earned an entry in the historical Italian encyclopedia Treccani.[18] Although he was no longer a member of Parliament since 2019, and had resigned as the party coordinator with no substitute, he was considered the eminence grise of FdI.[18] As an example of his political style and attitude, when asked about French president Emmanuel Macron, who is not much liked by some of his government allies, he calmly replied that "Macron is the president-elect of a great nation in the world, he has a remarkable resume, and he is certainly an intelligent person."[8]

As a trusted advisor to Meloni, Crosetto said that she often let him explain the party positions to the business world, negotiate with political allies, debate with rivals, and be interviewed by journalists.[9] He also said that when he is around Meloni, she would introduce his as her defence minister "who doesn't understand much, but it's a weapon of mass deterrence".[8] Crosetto said that he appreciated the indtruction, which made him memorable rather than just another defence minister, recalling that in a NATO summit with the then United States president Joe Biden often gave him a high five.[8] He is also highly regarded among the Transatlantic journalists and in the words of Fabrizio Roncone as "one of the few who doesn't foist poisoned meatballs on you, he never reneged on a statement, and he never cut anyone any slack: not even his then-boss, Berlusconi, who he often bludgeoned—politically—with regularity."[9] Crosetto defined himself as "conservative by birth, respectful by choice".[138]

Within a context that saw FdI rise from 4.3% to 6.5%, overtaking FI in late 2019 polls with 10% to become the second party of the centre-right coalition,[60] and some polls showing support as high as 15% in July 2020, Crosetto described FdI as "a boring party, it always says the same things" but did not use it as a negative, elaborating: "Parties today are faltering. Those who vote for Brothers of Italy must make a greater effort because they don't follow trends. They can't say 'I like their position on this issue,' but it will always be a position they have today, had yesterday, and had five years ago."[61] In contrast to those who saw FdI as a return of the right or argued that it could represent the true right, Crosetto did not see it entirely that way, stating in 2020 that "Brothers of Italy is the heir of the right, but it's something more. The ideal outcome is a party with those values but with a broader policy, a mass conservative party."[61] In this sense, Crosetto saw FdI more as a conservative mass party akin to the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) rather than a right-wing one like the then National Front (FN) led by Marine Le Pen.[61] Crosetto is a supporter of Meloni's new conservatism, stating in 2020: "The evolution of the historic Italian right has been crucial to ensuring that the centre-right has had the opportunity to move beyond mere testimony. Meloni, in this phase, has the task of reconciling the old values of the right with the new way of being conservative. The term conservative, in the noble sense, applied to Meloni, is something real. On the one hand, the defence of traditional values and on the other the defence of the welfare state. But an efficient welfare state."[139]

Political views and commentary

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Domestic issues

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Social and economic policies

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Crosetto during the 2013 electoral campaign

In 2013, Crosetto criticised a homophobic spot by FdI, going as far as to call the two authors coglioni, stating: "Any manifestation of intolerance is unacceptable."[140] In February 2023, he helped to create a centrist electoral list and support FI for the 2024 European elections and secure the continuation of a stable majority in the Italian government.[141] In October 2024, he said that he has friends among the parliamentary opposition and described the PD secretary Elly Schlein as a good person.[142] Due to his moderate views, Crosetto was said to represent the left-wing of the right, although he responded that left-wing does not really work as a label for him, who still sees himself as a Christian democrat.[142]

Amid the global energy crisis and 2021–2023 inflation surge, Crosetto warned of a civil war if the government did not increase from €12–13 billion to €20 billion in aids, stating in September 2022 that Draghi should not "act offended by the vote of no confidence; take immediate action against high utility bills. If you don't, everything will collapse: businesses and families will be dead by the end of October, beginning of November, when the new government is formed."[143][144] He warned that "either we get out of the crisis by helping each other, or we will fail".[144] Amid calls within Lega, particularly in Veneto, for further regional autonomy in September 2022, Crosetto said: "The government's primary focus must be on combating the economic crisis and supporting businesses and families during such a difficult time. Autonomy will be achieved alongside presidentialism, already in the first part of the legislature, but not immediately. The economic emergency must be resolved first, and as long as the economic crisis persists, it will be very difficult to talk about anything else. But once the country is secured, then we can truly think about autonomy."[145]

Anti-fascism

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Crosetto with Meloni and Ignazio La Russa in 2014

As a representative of the moderate wing of FdI, Crosetto is open to the possibility of the tricolour flame, which is reminiscent of the party's neo-fascist origins through the MSI, to be removed from the party logo.[146] In January 2019, this caused an uproars among other party members.[146] Owing to his moderate and Christian-democratic origins, Crosetto is an anti-fascist,[142] unlike many FdI members and other members of the centre-right coalition who refuse to use the label because they associate it with the left, so much so that Crosetto himself observed that he is not well liked by the right as a result.[142][147]

In February 2018, in response to Roberto Speranza's comments about the anti-fascist demonstration in Rome and the lack of presence by FdI ("You should have been in the square tomorrow. I'm sorry you're not there; it's a serious mistake"), Crosetto responded from Piedmont, stating: "If I were in Rome, if I weren't in my homeland engaged in a difficult election campaign, I'd be with you. So I authorise you to say that I'm with you, as national coordinator of Brothers of Italy."[148] His comments were criticised from the right,[149] including by fellow party member Pasquale Viespoli.[148]

In January 2024, Crosetto condemned the commemorations of the Acca Larentia killings with fascist salutes.[104] Unlike other Meloni ministers, including Meloni herself, when pressed during an October 2024 interview, Crosetto explicitily said: "I always have been [an anti-fascist]. ... I always have been. ... I'm an anti-fascist."[142] In response to fascist chants heard at the FdI youth headquarters of Parma in November 2025, Crosetto said that they should be "taken and kicked out", and added that they do not represent FdI.[150][151][152]

Referendums

[edit]

Having voted against the reform in the Italian Parliament, Crosetto said that he would vote "no" in the 2020 Italian constitutional referendum, in contrast to the "yes" of FdI,[153] elaborating: "I can accept a reduction within the framework of an institutional reform that changes the powers of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate and perhaps introduces presidentialism. However, always with the intention of giving representation to the local areas. If we do it this way, we have to reduce them because they are ugly and evil and parliament is useless... that doesn't seem like a justification to me."[154] Asked on whether he would vote in the 2025 Italian referendum, as the government parties called for an abstention vote in order not to reach the required 50% turnout quorum, Crosetto expressed his negative view of trade unionist and CGIL secretary Maurizio Landini, stating: "I'll decide whether to vote on 8 June. But I confess to an old prejudice: if Landini says one thing, I feel like doing the opposite. Always."[155]

As a supporter of the justice reform approved by the Meloni government and a critic of the National Association of Magistrates (ANM), accusing the ANM of defending their privileges,[156] Crosetto commented on the 2026 Italian referendum to confirm the constitutional reform, stating: "A referendum usually means giving the people the final say, so when you express your opinion, you acknowledge what the people have decided. The challenge is making sure people understand what we're talking about. I don't think this reform contains anything negative."[157][158] Observing that the career separation of public prosecutors and judges (or magistrates) is a commonality among most democratic system and that in this Italy is the exception, Crosetto addressed concerns from critics and the opposition that it was a bad reform and it would cause the judiciary of Italy to be controlled by the executive branch, stating: "In democratic countries—I'm thinking of Spain, France, and Germany—the judicial system is completely different because, for example, public prosecutors in these three countries are subject to the executive branch. This doesn't happen in Italy; they will remain free to practice without any influence from the executive branch."[158]

In December 2025, Crosetto said that the constitutional reform is about ending political factionalism within the High Council of the Judiciary (CSM) and that it is mainly a political issue, stating: "The only thing that's being done is to remove the CSM from the factions, but I don't think this is something that could in any way affect the relationship between the judiciary and its work. I don't think blocking, dividing the judiciary from the investigating judiciary is a problem, given that currently 0.5% of prosecutors defect, so we're talking about an insignificant figure. It's more of a political issue than a real one; no one touches the justice system. In fact, I think they're trying to rebuild the conditions so that justice becomes justice with a capital 'J', that is, capable of protecting everyone."[158] After the postponement decided in the last Council of Ministers of 2025 and despite the lack of an agreed date, among other issues between the government and the opposition,[159] the most likely date for the referendum is March 2026.[160][161]

European Union

[edit]

In May 2014, as a candidate for the European Parliament, Crosetto said in relation to illegal immigration that to seriously address the issue there would need "a Europe that doesn't exist", stating that "Europe must address the unjust fate of entire African peoples. It's clear that Italy alone isn't enough. Thinking that this is an Italian issue and can be resolved by three Italian navy ships is foolish."[162] In September 2022, Crosetto said: "The government does not represent a coalition but a nation; Europe cannot avoid dialogue ... the European Union has internal contradictions, but it can do anything except engage in dialogue with nations."[163] During the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy, while supportive of COVID-19 vaccines, Crosetto was critical of the Green Pass on the grounds that it was discriminatory, stating: "You can't go to restaurants, but you can go on the bus and subway. What's the point?"[164]

Regarding the most controversial points that emerged during the 2022 election campaign, namely the changes to the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) as part of Next Generation EU, Crosetto said that "no one wants to revise the PNRR guidelines, but from the time of the forecast to today, the cost of the works has increased by 20 percent."[163] In relation to the postponement of "the CO2 problem for one or two years", he cited Alessandro Manzoni from The Betrothed ("I think Manzoni's phrase in The Betrothed is valid: 'Adelante, con juicio si puedes' (Go ahead, with judgment you can)", adding that "we can't pretend that nothing has changed" since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the green agenda was "developed with different economic conditions", and that postponing the issue for a few years would not ruin the European Green Deal.[163]

In an interview with the Corriere della Sera on 26 June 2023, Crosetto commented on the Meloni government's hesitation to ratify the reform of the treaty establishing the ESM.[165] Four days earlier, the Chamber of Deputies' Foreign Affairs Committee had approved the basic text of the bill for ratification; the parties supporting the government did not participate in the vote.[165] According to Crosetto, "we need to discuss among ourselves how necessary Europe is as a tool and how we in the centre-right see it as a coalition and as a government. We need to discuss the advantages and disadvantages, without prejudice."[165] He expressed his view that those who have sought help from the ESM "have been crushed".[165] In an interview with La Repubblica on 5 July 2023, Crosetto declined Salvini's proposal of signing a pact between the centre-right coalition parties in favour of a right-wing coalition in the European Parliament between the EPP, ERC, and Identity and Democracy (I&D), stating that his party's European project is to form an alliance between the EPP and ERC, opening the way to a new "Ursula majority".[24] In relation to Le Pen's renamed National Rally (RN), he said: "We belong to another group and we are different, as is well known. And it's a choice we made many years ago."[166]

In March 2025, Crosetto told Geppi Cucciari and Giorgio Lauro that the name ReArm Europe was "one of the stupidest gifts one could give to those who don't believe defence is a relevant issue", elaborating: "My colleagues and I have explained that the issue isn't rearmament but rather the construction of a defence, which are two completely different things. Defend Europe would be better. Rearmament is part of defence. Israel suffered a missile attack in three hours, which it managed to stop 98% of the way: well, my European colleagues and I would like us to be able to stop it the same way if something like that were to happen in our countries. If it were to happen today in Italy, we wouldn't be able to."[8]

Foreign issues

[edit]

Ukraine and Russia

[edit]
Crosetto signing a Pentagon guest book prior to a bilateral exchange in Washington, D.C., on 23 June 2023

As minister of defence, Crosetto expressed pro-Ukrainian views. In January 2023, he said: "World War III would begin the moment Russian tanks arrived in Kiev and at the borders of Europe. Preventing them from arriving is the only way to stop World War III."[167] He also stated: "I am experiencing this period with great personal difficulty. I am seen as the one who supports weapons, the one who wants war. There is this strange idea that there is a country we don't care about, which is bothering us. That by being at peace, it is forcing us to do things we shouldn't do, that it is that country's fault if inflation rises. That country has been invaded."[167] To Russia, he said: "There is no angel or Devil, we are not passing judgment. No one has anything against the Russian people, there is no war between Italy, Europe, NATO, and the Russian people: there is an international coalition that is helping a country that has been attacked. We must do this, and we are doing it to prevent a crisis that began in a crazy way from exploding."[167]

In March 2023, Crosetto said: "It seems to me that we can now say that the exponential increase in migration from the African coast is also, to a considerable extent, part of a clear hybrid warfare strategy that the Wagner Group, mercenaries in the pay of Russia, is implementing, using its considerable influence in some African countries."[168][169] In the 125-page paper "Countering Hybrid Warfare: An Active Strategy" published in November 2025, he condemned the Russian hybrid war and lamented the lack of actions from the European Union (EU) and NATO, writing: "The hybrid war is continual and attacks critical infrastructure, decision-making centers, essential services and the fabric of each country, with daily and growing risks of catastrophic damage. We are under attack and the hybrid bombs continue to fall: The time to act is now."[170]

At the 2025 edition of Atreju, the annual political convention of the youth wing of FdI, Crosetto had a debate with Il Fatto Quotidiano editor Marco Travaglio.[125] Of the Russo-Ukrainian war, he told Travaglio: "I never believed those who said Ukraine would break Russia's back. No one ever believed Ukraine could win the war, but Ukraine won the war when it survived."[125] Crosetto further told Travaglio that "Putin talks about peace, but he fired 1,200 missiles at Ukraine, yesterday and tomorrow. For a thousand days, this brilliant man has been talking about peace and the desire to harm no one, yet he continues to attack schools and hospitals. 93% of the targets are civilian."[125] In response to Travaglio's argument that the expansion of NATO and the bombing or invasion of Russia's allies (Serbia, Iraq, and Libya), which he claimed it showed NATO was not a "solely defensive" alliance as said by Crosetto, were the main causes of the 2022 Russian invasion Ukraine, he cited the example of Sweden,[171] and stated: "It seems true, and it's even nice to say, but I have the problem of being too rational. Sweden, a non-aligned and non-partisan country for 70 years, asked to join NATO. It did so after the Ukrainian invasion, and it took two and a half years. If free and democratic nations decide to join an exclusively defensive alliance, are they encircling someone or are they defending themselves from those they fear?"[125]

China, Europe, and the United States

[edit]

In July 2023, Crosetto criticised the Belt and Road Initiative, stating: "The decision to join the Silk Road was an improvised and ill-advised move by Giuseppe Conte's government, which led to a double negative outcome. We exported a shipment of oranges to China, and they tripled their exports to Italy in three years."[172] In March 2025, said that the 20th century had been "the century of great wars and great dictatorships", which was followed by "the century of great democracies".[8] He expressed his belief that the 21st century would be "the century of great superpowers, but not democratic ones", adding: "I wouldn't be surprised if the next G7 is made up of the US, China, Russia, India, and maybe Saudi Arabia: no longer nations that have represented great democracies but nations that represent great powers. Peace is a balance between forces: what we hope for is that the balance is achieved without weapons, but if only one of the two is super-armed, there is no balance.[8] In August 2025, Crosetto stated that "Italy is a great nation, but we all know it doesn't play in the superpower league" and that the present EU "doesn't exist as a state. ... It has no weight because it can't compare to the US or Russia."[173] As a result, Crosetto suggested that the Italian government should draw the consequences and work towards the federalisation of the EU and make it a state.[174]

On 6 December 2025, Crosetto published a long post on X (formerly Twitter), expressing his views about the second Trump administration's relations with this "small, slow, and old" Europe as President Trump made it clear that he does not need Europe and that they see themselves in competition for supremacy and superpower status with China, stating: "The trajectory of American politics was evident even before the arrival of Trump who only accelerated an irreversible path."[175] He further wrote: "The bad news is that we should (in my opinion, we should) think about what our American allies have provided us, free of charge, up to now: security, defence, and deterrence. I'm not just talking about military ones."[176] As a result, he called for a series of reforms "not to exercise supremacy over anyone but to guarantee our future".[177]

On 13 December 2025, Crosetto said that he was "disappointed" that it was the United States that intervened "to negotiate a peace in the heart of Europe",[125] and added that "Europe's absence at the negotiating table is the result of Europe's weakness and its inability to speak with one voice. If tomorrow the European states were to say that one person represents the entire negotiation, neither Trump nor Russia would be able to say no."[125] In January 2026, Crosetto did not immediately publicly comment on Operation Absolute Resolve, the United States raids in Venezuela resulting in the capture and extradition of Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores.[178][179] He was reported to have spoken with Meloni and her aides.[178][179] Gianclaudio Torlizzi, one of the advisors to Crosetto, saw the operation as anti-China and within the context of a new Cold War.[178] Reportedly, while Crosetto himself was said to understand the Americans' motives in the raids on Caracas, he would not support the intervention, believing that international law should prevail, to the extent possible.[179]

Israel and Palestine

[edit]

On the issue of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, Crosetto is a supporter of the two-state solution,[180] defending Palestine's right to exist and statehood and Israel's right to live in security, which means that "Hamas terrorism must be eradicated at the same time."[181] On the Gaza war, Crosetto represented the more critical views of Israel's handling of the war within the Meloni government, which was more supportive of Israel, placed caveats to Palestinian statehood,[182] and refrained from criticism and the use of strong words by Crosetto,[183][184] who earned the praise of some parliamentary opposition figures, such as Alessandra Maiorino of the M5S.[185] In May 2024, Crosetto expressed the feeling that "Israel risks sowing hatred that will involve its children. I understand the reaction after the Hamas massacre of 7 October, but Hamas is one thing, the Palestinian people are another."[186] In May 2025, while reiterating that the Italian government remained a friend of Israel, he claimed to have been "the first to distance myself from Netanyahu's actions".[121] He also said that Hamas must be "fought and destroyed", but that it "no longer makes sense to do it with military methods now: we need other methods. The international community can no longer accept the casualties of civilians, women, and children: they are not tolerable collateral damage, Israel must understand this. As for the truce, Hamas is doing this because it is not interested in casualties. It uses bombs and hunger to recruit."[121]

In relation to the 2025 Italian protests for Gaza, particularly the June 2025 demonstration, Crosetto said: "Look, I wouldn't mind going. To demonstrate for every civilian, woman, and child killed in Gaza. If I went, though, you'd see the level of tolerance in the square... Half of them, self-proclaimed pacifists, will be there only to fuel hatred against the government and against certain individuals. Meloni, Tajani, and Crosetto first and foremost."[121] In an interview with La Stampa in August 2025, as reported among others by Adnkronos, Crosetto said that the Israeli government had "lost its sanity and humanity",[187] elaborating: "What is happening in Gaza is unacceptable. We are not facing a military operation with collateral damage, but the pure denial of the law and the founding values of our civilisation. We are committed to humanitarian aid, but beyond condemnation, we must find a way to force Netanyahu to think. It's one thing to free Gaza from Hamas, another from the Palestinians. The former can be called liberation. Expelling a people from their land, however, is quite another."[188][189] In September 2025, in response to the growing criticism,[190] the Meloni government announced a motion to recognise Palestine with the condition that all Israeli hostages are released and that Hamas is excluded from any from of government, and Crosetto announced the dispatch of a frigate, the Virginio Fasan, to support the Global Sumud Flotilla.[191][192] Crosetto explained that "in a democracy, even demonstrations and forms of protest must be protected, when they are conducted in compliance with international law and without resorting to violence."[193]

Personal life

[edit]

Marriage and family

[edit]

In 2005, Crosetto began a relationship with Gaia Saponaro,[194][195] a former volleyball player from Apulia who worked in London, Hong Kong, and Sydney,[196][197] whom he married on 4 July 2015.[198][199] As a result, his wife is also referred to as Gaia Crosetto.[200] Together, they had two children.[201][202] Previously, Crosetto was married to Kamila,[203] a volleyball player from the Czech Republic, with a son born in 1997.[202] In September 2023, Crosetto criticised Novella 2000, which is controlled by Visibilia of Santanchè, for having published photos of him with his wife.[204][205] In 2024, he was reported to be the richest minister of the Meloni government with €895.588.[206] In 2025, he was a victim of false impersonation as scammers, who posed as Crosetto,[207] attempted to defraud at least ten prominent businessmen, and were able to obtain two bank transfers of around €1 million connected to the oil tycoon and former Inter Milan owner Massimo Moratti.[208][209][210]

In 2025, Crosetto published Storie di un ragazzo provinciale (Stories of a Provincial Boy), his autobiography.[4][211][212] In March 2025, Crosetto said that among the worst moments in his life was his return by helicopter from Herat to carry the coffins of people who had died on an international peacekeeping mission, including one who had died knowingly because he threw himself on a land mine when he realised it would explode and he had to defuse it, and threw himself forward to protect the people behind him, an action that Crosetto described as "the opposite of what any human being would do: when you understand the danger, you instinctively move away. Instead, the desire to protect his other colleagues prevailed over the instinct for survival. It's something that deeply struck me; it means that man had a sense of duty, of institutions, of his commitment that was extraordinary."[8] The other moment was when his son asked as Christmas gift that he returned to smile.[8] As Piedmont has a long tradition of wines, and on the fact that Meloni said she was abstaining from wine as a vow, he joked: "I don't make any vows about wine: I'm from Alba, and if I made vows about wine they wouldn't even let me back home."[8]

His nephew Giovanni Crosetto entered politics in 2021 and followed his moderate and anti-fascist politics within FdI.[213][214] For example, in relation to the apology of fascism, his nephew condemned the commemorations of the Acca Larentia killings with the fascist salute,[215][216] as did Crosetto himself,[217] and also criticised FdI members who took part at the presentation of the controversial book of Vannacci,[218] who had been dismissed as a result by Crosetto in his role as defence minister.[219] In the 2024 European Parliament election in Piedmont, Crosetto's nephew was elected to the European Parliament,[220] with around 34,000 preferential votes in the North-East Italy constituency, of which 19,643 in Piedmont, where he was the only elected candidate to the European Parliament.[221] About their relations, his nephew was often quoted as saying: "I'm lucky to have a truly paternal relationship with my uncle, he's a teacher, he gives me advice and shows me the path to follow."[218]

Charity and other businesses

[edit]

Crosetto is involved in CRT Foundation,[222] a charity organisation, being described as a "close friend of the foundation",[223] which he prevented from going into administration.[16] With Carlo Petrini, he was one of the founders of the Pollenzo Agency and the University of Gastronomic Sciences.[23] In September 2014, Crosetto left his political commitment and was appointed for some years president of the Federation of Italian Companies for Aerospace, Defence, and Security (AIAD) of Confindustria,[4][5] and in the same year became Senior Advisor to the Leonardo company.[224][225] In April 2020, he was appointed chairman of Orizzonte Sistemi Navali, a company created as a joint venture between Fincantieri and Leonardo, which operates in the naval engineering and systems sector, designing and building military naval units, in particular corvettes, frigates, and aircraft carriers.[26][226][227] Crosetto was also a shareholder in six Italian companies, including CSC & Partners, which was founded in 2021 in Rome and operated in lobbying services.[22] Since becoming defence minister in 2022, he sold all his companies and left all incompatibility and business-related roles.[83][86]

Health issues

[edit]

On 5 August 2021, Crosetto announced that he healed from the Delta variant of COVID-19, which aggravated his tumor condition, stating: "I had two doses of Pfizer. The second on 11 April. After months, with antibodies, I contracted the Delta variant. I was very ill. Since I have diabetes and a heart condition, they gave me monoclonal antibodies. I recovered."[12] In February 2024, Crosetto was hospitalised due to a suspected pericarditis, sparking unfounded conspiracy theories by anti-vaccine activists.[228] In October 2025, he underwent surgery, which successfully removed three colonic neoplasms.[229][230]

Social media

[edit]

Crosetto is active on social media, where he had amassed over 200,000 followers on Twitter by October 2022,[2] often interacting with his followers and commentators, at times engaging in diatribes with his critics who insult him, in turn referring to them as coglioni, "shitty haters", and "ignorants".[231] As a former heavy smoker, he often shares on social media his struggles with diet and health, and his feelings for his wife and children.[9] In April 2019, Crosetto wrote of his family on Twitter: "I have a 22-year-old son, Alessandro. He attends LUISS. He's a good boy, he studies, and he'll soon finish his undergraduate degree, well and on time. They accepted him into the master's programme. Then I have a 5-and-a-half-year-old daughter and a 4-year-old son. She, Carole, is a real earthquake."[12]

Crosetto is an anti-communist but expressed respect for communists like Marco Rizzo for being open about it, elaborating in a 14 May 2019 post on Twitter: "There's a real communist out there. He wants to leave NATO, he's inspired by Lenin, he promises to expropriate banks, real estate owners, and nationalise everything! Dear Marco Rizzo, you'll never have my vote, but real communists are better than disguised ones."[232] In August 2021, Crosetto defended singer Emma Marrone from death threats as a result of her progressive and left-leaning views and the announcement that she had ovarian cancer and wanted to be a single mom.[12] Crosetto wrote on Twitter: "There are people so ignorant and dangerous that they bother to insult, wish death upon, and exult over a person who confesses to her illness, Emma Marrone, just because they have different political views. Life, health, and death are ABOVE these petty human divisions, damn it."[12] In September 2025, his Twitter account was hacked, with suspicious tweets asking for cryptocurrency donations for Gaza and the funeral of Giorgio Armani.[233][234]

On social media, Crosetto did not exempt from criticism part of the Meloni government's majority, such as Lega senator Claudio Borghi, who is opposed to Italian military aids to Ukraine.[235] In November 2025, in response to Borghi's rhetorical question ("But what if the US were to attack Venezuela? Will we send 12 weapons packages to Maduro?"), Crosetto said: "No, you can rest assured, Claudio, especially because they've never invaded a country to permanently occupy its territory under the pretext that some people spoke English. It's just one of the many differences with Russia."[235] At the same time, he referenced his support for freedom of speech and democracy in contrast to autocracies like Russia under Vladimir Putin, stating: "Another is the fact that posts like yours, made in Russia in dissent from Putin, would be impossible, while in the US, as in Italy, they are welcome even when they say different and even opposing things. Perhaps, as some argue, this allows various autocracies to be more 'efficient' than democracies, but I will stubbornly defend the right of Claudio Borghi, and thousands of others who think differently from me on everything, to say whatever comes to mind, always."[235]

Association football

[edit]
Crosetto in 2013

Like fellow Meloni ministers Elisabetta Casellati and Tajani,[236][237] Crosetto is a supporter of Juventus.[238][239] He is one of the founders of the Juventus Club in the Chamber of Deputies.[9] In his 2025 autobiography, Crosetto wrote that he was a friend of Edoardo Agnelli (formerly groomed to be the heir of the Agnelli family, which also owns Juventus since 1923) and that he did not believe he committed suicide.[20] In July 2006, amid the Calciopoli scandal, he was open to the idea of an amnesty, which polarised Italian politics, with supporters and opponents across the political spectrum.[240] For example, Piero Fassino of The Union, the centre-left coalition that had just defeated Berlusconi's, invoked the clemency of the judges, who had been appointed by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) special commissioner Guido Rossi, and this was not unprecedented as an amnesty was issued under similar conditions in 1982.[240]

Crosetto shared the principle that tifosi should not pay for the mistakes of football directors, commenting: "The law should punish the responsible managers but leave Italians the chance to dream with their champions and their teams."[240] Although many commentators and tifosi saw the scandal more as a result of the widespread anti-Juventus sentiment rather than politics, Crosetto also criticised the Calciopoli decisions by the FIGC on political grounds, arguing that the salvation from relegation for all the other clubs initially involved had been a political decision, particularly that of Fiorentina, and compared the sports proceedings to the Gestapo.[241] Crosetto said: "I wouldn't want only those who have friends in The Union, like Fiorentina, to be acquitted."[241]

In line with the view of most Juventus supporters, many critics and commentators, and the club itself that Juventus received unequal treatment, Crosetto referred to Fiorentina because it was saved from relegation despite being sanctioned with a direct Article 6 violation (warranting relegation) and multiple Article 1 violations (like the other clubs who were ultimately not relegated), while Juventus was controversially relegated to Serie B due to three Article 1 violations (usually warranting fines or penalty points), with the sports decisions explicitly citing the "popular sentiment" (sentimento popolare).[242] In 2010, the controversies prompted a proposal of a parliamentary inquiry commission about the 2003–2006 Italian football years and the role of politics and the media in the 2006 scandal and the Calciopoli bis developments in subsequent years.[242] Although such a proposal was supported by members of various parties across the political spectrum, including among others the centre-left PD, the centrist Italian Radicals (RI), and Crosetto's centre-right party, a parliamentary commission was never established.[242]

Crosetto in 2014

Amid the club's unsuccessful spell in the early 2020s after an unprecedented run of nine Serie A league titles in a row, Crosetto expressed criticism of the squad performances under then head coach Massimiliano Allegri.[243] During the 2022 Italian presidential election, he joked that he would rather be president of the Juventus Club in Parliament.[244] In March 2024, in his role as defence minister, Crosetto issued a complaint,[245] which resulted in an investigation revealing the illegal dossiering and spying of bank accounts of around 740 VIPs and political figures, including not only Crosetto himself among other politicians and entrepreneurs,[246][247] but also Juventus (the only Italian football club to be victim of the alleged illegal spying,[248] with the other football figure being FIGC president Gabriele Gravina),[249][250][251] in particular the figures of Andrea Agnelli, Allegri, and Cristiano Ronaldo dating back to at least 2021.[252][253][254]

Crosetto's complaint and the resulting investigation earned the attention of the Anti-Mafia Commission and the magistrate Raffaele Cantone from Perugia, where Pasquale Striano, the investigated financier who allegedly made over 800 illegal accesses to the files within the scope of approximately 5,000 database accesses carried out since 2018 and claimed to have done so due to legitimate reasons for investigation, worked as an agent (rank of official) of Italy's Judiciary Police (Polizia Giudiziaria).[245] Dating back to 2018, leaks to the media resulted in the Luis Suárez affair and later in 2021 to a financial scandal and criminal investigation involving Juventus, which was acquitted in two sports proceedings and also received threats due to its support for the ultimately failed European Super League project, causing several commentators to wonder whether there was any connection, if there was one or more instigators, and if the goal was to specifically and negatively hit Juventus.[251] The Anti-Mafia Commission public prosecutor Giovanni Melillo described the alleged facts, resulting from Crosetto's complaint, as "hardly compatible with the logic of individual deviation" and spoke of "extreme gravity".[245]

Electoral history

[edit]
Election House Constituency Party Votes Result
2001 Chamber of Deputies Piedmont 2Alba FI 45,225 checkY Elected
2006 Chamber of Deputies Piedmont 1 FI [c] checkY Elected
2008 Chamber of Deputies Piedmont 1 PdL [c] checkY Elected
2013 Senate of the Republic Piedmont FdI [c] ☒N Not elected
2014 European Parliament North-West Italy FdI 29,305 ☒N Not elected
2018 Chamber of Deputies Lombardy 3 FdI [c] checkY Elected

Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Guido Crosetto (born 19 September 1963) is an Italian businessman and serving as Minister of Defence since 22 October 2022. A co-founder of the party in December 2012, where he served as national coordinator until 2014, Crosetto began his political career in the youth movement as regional secretary in and national education officer. He was elected of Marene in 1990, holding office until 2004, and served as a provincial in from 1999 to 2009, leading the Forza Italia group. Elected to the multiple times starting in 2001, he acted as undersecretary of state for defence from 2008 to 2011 and presided over the Parliamentary for the of the from 2013 to 2018. In the defence industry, Crosetto has led the Federation of Italian Aerospace, Defence and Companies (AIAD) as president since 2014, advocating for innovation and security amid geopolitical challenges.

Early life and education

Family background and upbringing

Guido Crosetto was born on 19 September 1963 in , in the region of , into a family of local entrepreneurs rooted in the industrial sector. His father operated as an industrialist specializing in the construction of , a trade continued from his grandfather, embedding Crosetto's early environment in and traditions typical of Piedmontese family businesses. Crosetto's upbringing in this milieu oriented him toward practical involvement in the family enterprise from a young age, reflecting the region's emphasis on industrial self-reliance and entrepreneurial heritage amid post-war economic recovery. The death of his father during his formative years further necessitated his direct engagement with these familial operations, diverting him from completing formal economic studies and fostering a hands-on approach to that characterized his initial career trajectory.

Formal education and early influences

Guido Crosetto completed his with a diploma from a classical in . Between 1982 and 1987, he enrolled in the Faculty of Economics and Commerce at the , pursuing studies in , but did not complete the degree. The premature end to his attendance stemmed from the of his in the mid-1980s, which required Crosetto to forgo further academic pursuits and assume of the in the metalworking and sector. This familial obligation redirected his focus toward practical industrial operations over theoretical education, shaping an empirical approach to economics and enterprise. In , scrutiny revealed that Crosetto had erroneously listed a degree in in his official parliamentary , a claim he subsequently retracted, admitting it as a mistake amid incomplete records showing exams only up to 1991. His early exposure to a entrepreneurial household, rooted in Cuneo's industrial milieu, instilled a preference for hands-on and real-world causal dynamics in decision-making, influencing his later ventures in defense and policy.

Business career

Entry into engineering and industry

Crosetto, born into a family of industrialists in the sector in , , entered the industry by assuming management of the family enterprise specializing in the production of at a young age. This role marked his initial foray into business operations, leveraging the focus of the firm to handle , , and distribution processes. Under his leadership, the company expanded its entrepreneurial scope beyond into additional industrial sectors, building on the foundational expertise inherited from his family background. These early experiences honed his managerial skills in a competitive environment, emphasizing practical innovation and market adaptation without reliance on formal credentials.

Defense sector expertise and ventures

Crosetto entered the defense sector as a senior advisor to Finmeccanica, the predecessor company to Leonardo S.p.A., one of Europe's largest and defense firms, beginning around 2014. In this capacity, he provided strategic consulting on industry matters, accumulating significant expertise in , defense systems, and technologies amid Italy's industrial landscape, where his family had roots in . His advisory role involved navigating complex , international partnerships, and policy advocacy for defense contractors, contributing to his reputation as a key figure bridging political and industrial interests in the sector. From 2014 to 2022, Crosetto served as president of the Italian Industries Federation for Aerospace, Defence and Security (AIAD), a Confindustria-affiliated body representing over 200 companies in the sector, including major players like Leonardo and . In this leadership position, he advocated for increased defense investments, critiqued foreign programs such as the U.S. F-35 fighter jet for unfulfilled industrial offsets—stating in 2017 that the U.S. had "not honored promises" on and workshare—and pushed for European autonomy in armaments production. Under his tenure, AIAD emphasized innovation in drones, cyber defense, and naval systems, aligning with Italy's export-oriented defense industry, which generated approximately €16 billion in value by 2025. In April 2020, Crosetto was appointed chairman of , a joint venture established in 2020 between (51% stake) and Leonardo (49% stake), specializing in the design, construction, and integration of advanced naval combat systems for the and export markets. This role deepened his hands-on involvement in programs, including frigates and destroyers equipped with , , and electronic warfare systems, while he continued consulting for Leonardo, earning €1.8 million between 2018 and 2021, including €619,000 in 2021 alone—payments he described as for prior advisory work rather than active employment. Crosetto resigned from all these positions upon his appointment as Minister of Defence in October 2022, liquidating his to comply with legal requirements, though critics raised concerns over potential conflicts given his deep industry ties.

Political career

Initial political engagements

Guido Crosetto's political involvement began in the late within the of the Democrazia Cristiana (DC), where he served as Regional Secretary of the party's youth movement in and as National Education Officer, roles that marked his initial organizational experience in center-right politics amid Italy's post-war Christian Democratic dominance. These positions involved coordinating youth activities and training, reflecting an early focus on grassroots mobilization in a party then facing internal fragmentation leading to its dissolution in 1994. In 1990, at age 27, Crosetto was elected mayor of Marene, a small town in the , , serving continuously from May 28, 1990, to June 14, 2004, across three terms that spanned the transition from DC to emerging post-Tangentopoli parties. His mayoral tenure emphasized local in an agricultural area, including and , during a period of national political upheaval following corruption scandals that dismantled traditional alignments. By 1999, Crosetto entered provincial politics as a for the , holding the position until 2009 and leading the Forza Italia group after aligning with Silvio Berlusconi's newly formed party around 2000, which represented a shift toward a more liberal-conservative platform amid DC's collapse. This transition facilitated his broader engagement, culminating in his 2001 election to the for Forza Italia in the Alba-Bra-Langhe e Roero district, securing a parliamentary seat in the center-right coalition's victory under Berlusconi.

Founding and role in Brothers of Italy

Guido Crosetto co-founded in December 2012 alongside and , establishing the party as a national-conservative alternative following their departure from Silvio Berlusconi's People of the Freedom (PdL). The founding marked a break from the broader center-right coalition, emphasizing sovereignty, traditional values, and criticism of the European Union's supranational structures. Upon the party's creation, Crosetto assumed the role of National Coordinator, a key organizational position responsible for coordinating activities and strategy until 2014. In this capacity, he helped shape the party's early platform, focusing on defense policy and economic realism, while the party contested the , achieving 1.96% of the vote and electing two deputies, including Meloni. Crosetto stepped back from active party leadership in 2014 to head the Italian Federation of Aerospace, Defence and Security Industries (AIAD), but maintained ties to Fratelli d'Italia. He re-engaged publicly in 2017 at the party's congress and, in January 2022, served as the party's proposed candidate for , receiving votes in the before the election of for a second term.

Parliamentary service and elections

Guido Crosetto was first elected to the Italian on May 13, 2001, in the XIV Legislature, representing Forza Italia in the single-member constituency of Piemonte 1 - 03 (Alba-Bra-Langhe e Roero). He served until the end of the legislature in April 2006, focusing on defense-related matters during his tenure. Crosetto was re-elected on April 9, 2006, in the XV Legislature, again for Forza Italia in a constituency, proclaimed on April 21, 2006. His service ended prematurely on April 28, 2008, upon re-election in the subsequent legislature. In the XVI Legislature, following elections on April 13-14, 2008, Crosetto secured a seat for the newly formed (PdL) party, serving from April 29, 2008, to March 14, 2013. During this period, he held the position of Undersecretary of State for Defense from May 12, 2008, to November 16, 2011, in the Berlusconi IV government, overseeing procurement and international cooperation initiatives. After a hiatus from national parliamentary roles, Crosetto returned in the XVIII Legislature, elected on March 4, 2018, for in the multi-member constituency of Lombardia 3 - 02. He was appointed to the , , and Programming Committee, contributing to fiscal oversight of defense expenditures. Crosetto did not stand for re-election in the September 25, 2022, general elections but actively campaigned for , after which he transitioned to the role of Minister of Defence.

Appointment as Minister of Defence

Guido Crosetto was appointed Minister of Defence in the government formed by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on 22 October 2022, following the centre-right coalition's victory in the 25 September 2022 Italian general election, which secured 44% of the vote and a parliamentary majority. The cabinet, comprising ministers from Brothers of Italy, Lega, and Forza Italia, was sworn in after President Sergio Mattarella tasked Meloni with government formation on 21 October, marking the first time a woman led Italy's executive. Crosetto's selection stemmed from his longstanding expertise in defence policy and industry, including prior roles as a lobbyist and analyst, as well as his status as a co-founder of alongside Meloni in 2012. Observers noted his appointment signalled continuity in Italy's commitment to and enhanced military spending, amid geopolitical tensions including Russia's invasion of . In conjunction with the defence portfolio, Crosetto was designated Chancellor and Treasurer of the , a ceremonial role tied to the ministry overseeing national honours and military traditions. His initial actions included affirming Italy's alliance obligations, as evidenced by early outreach from U.S. Defence Secretary on 7 November 2022, where Crosetto reiterated Rome's steadfast support for transatlantic security.

Policy positions

Defense and military strategy

As Italy's Minister of Defence since October 2022, Crosetto has advocated a pragmatic, realism-driven approach to , emphasizing adaptation to a multipolar world where threats extend beyond traditional state actors to include cyber domains, , and non-European powers. He has stressed the integration of defense with broader objectives, including economic prosperity and technological sovereignty, as outlined in the for Italy's Strategy presented on November 8, 2024. This framework prioritizes "intelligent defense" through scientific , responsible industrial development, and strategic alliances, reflecting Crosetto's view that must counter evolving risks like those posed by Russia's invasion of and rising Global South influences. Crosetto has repeatedly called for to evolve beyond its structure, arguing that the alliance "as it is" lacks reason to exist in a globalized threat landscape where the U.S. and no longer dominate as the world's center. In June 2025 statements, he urged to adapt to new realities, including multipolarity and the diminished post- focus on mutual defense against the , while maintaining Italy's commitment to the alliance but pushing for greater European interoperability through joint procurement of equipment and materials. Concurrently, he has promoted enhanced transatlantic ties alongside European defense unity, warning against over-reliance on U.S. guarantees and advocating a "continental European military framework" to achieve credible deterrence. Domestically, Crosetto's strategy focuses on bolstering Italy's capabilities amid fiscal pressures, with the 2025-2027 Multi-Annual Programming Document (DPP) allocating resources for modernization despite welfare- spending trade-offs. Key investments include acquiring 115 F-35 aircraft (75 conventional takeoff variants), anti-drone systems, SAMP/T air defenses, and submarines, alongside participation in the GCAP project to sustain national and electronics sectors. He has proposed a flexible conscription model to build reserves and societal resilience, framing defense culture as integral to democratic principles, and prioritized cyber defense by planning an initial "cyber army" of 1,200-1,500 personnel, expandable for operational readiness against digital threats. In and , Crosetto emphasizes coordination among universities, industries, and armed forces to foster , criticizing fragmented national efforts that hinder competitiveness. His vision integrates defense with economic strategy, viewing higher budgets—potentially toward NATO's aspirational targets—as essential for deterrence, though constrained by Italy's debt, with calls for EU-level burden-sharing to avoid unilateral fiscal strain.

Foreign policy realism

Guido Crosetto has articulated a foreign policy stance rooted in realism, prioritizing power dynamics, national interests, and pragmatic assessments of global order over idealistic . In a June 2025 speech, he described international institutions as ineffective without underlying power structures, portraying as "dead" due to the failure of bodies like the UN and WTO to enforce rules amid rising multipolarity. This view frames not as an autonomous normative force but as contingent on state capabilities and alliances, aligning with classical realist tenets that emphasize and in . Crosetto's realism manifests in his cautious approach to the Ukraine conflict, where he has urged a shift from military escalation to following the stalled . Addressing Italy's parliament on January 10, 2024, he stated that the battlefield situation necessitated realistic acknowledgment of limits, advocating negotiations to avoid prolonged attrition that could weaken European security. In an August 2025 interview, he reiterated that must pursue mediation, critiquing Europe's "irrelevance" in driving outcomes dominated by U.S.- dynamics, underscoring his focus on feasible power balances rather than . He warned that a Ukrainian collapse could require European troop deployments, highlighting the need for capability-building grounded in threat realism over rhetorical . Regarding NATO and European defense, Crosetto exhibits skepticism toward supranational ambitions lacking realist foundations. He dismissed a unified as "stupidity" in February 2025, arguing it misaligns with 's proven collective defense model and ignores divergent national priorities. In June 2025, he called for adaptation to "new global realities," questioning its post-Cold War relevance amid U.S. disengagement risks and Russia's absorbing 43% of its budget, while stressing increased capabilities to counter hybrid threats. This reflects a preference for alliance utility tied to mutual deterrence, rather than institutional expansion divorced from . Crosetto's realism extends to broader great-power , emphasizing Italy's Mediterranean positioning and alliances like the U.S. as anchors for stability. He has highlighted Western solidarity's erosion, urging to bolster autonomous defenses amid uncertainties like potential U.S. retrenchment under shifting administrations. In September 2025, he admitted Italy's unreadiness for Russian or other , framing defense investments as essential responses to empirical threats rather than aspirational goals. Overall, his positions prioritize causal assessments of balances and economic interdependencies, cautioning against policies that overestimate diplomacy without coercive backing.

Economic and fiscal views on security spending

Guido Crosetto has consistently argued that Italy's defense spending, currently around 1.5% of GDP, must rise to at least the target of 2% as a minimum baseline, with further increases to 3.5% or potentially 5% of GDP over the coming decade to address evolving threats. He views such expenditures as a non-negotiable "requirement of survival" in a geopolitically unstable environment, criticizing post-Cold War cuts to military budgets that left European nations underprepared. In April 2025, amid Italy's budget maneuvers allocating approximately €31 billion to defense for the following year, Crosetto emphasized that even this figure—representing a €13 billion increase in —was insufficient for long-term needs. On , Crosetto has advocated for exemptions or flexibilities in budgetary constraints to facilitate higher security outlays without triggering immediate measures, given Italy's high public debt levels exceeding 140% of GDP. In June 2025, he proposed that the permit member states to amortize defense-related deficits over 20 to 30 years, arguing against offloading fiscal burdens onto future governments. He has repeatedly called for excluding military spending from the 's calculations, a position reiterated in 2023 and 2024 amid tensions between commitments and ' fiscal oversight. Crosetto insists that defense budgets should incorporate existing government allocations, such as pensions for , to avoid double-counting and inflate reported figures artificially. Crosetto maintains that elevated security spending need not erode welfare programs, asserting in July 2025 that increased military allocations would not "encroach on welfare" but rather represent a distinct priority driven by threats like Russian aggression against allies. This stance reflects his broader economic realism, prioritizing causal security imperatives over short-term fiscal orthodoxy, while navigating domestic opposition and parliamentary approval requirements for any spending hikes beyond initial commitments. Despite no formal agreement on a 5% GDP target as of June 2025, he has signaled willingness to discuss it at summits, framing it as essential for European rather than mere alliance compliance.

Controversies and public statements

Criticisms of allied nations' cooperation

Crosetto has critiqued the structural limitations of that impede effective cooperation among allied nations in addressing global threats beyond the traditional transatlantic focus. In June 2025, during a speech at the , he declared that "as it is" no longer has a reason to exist, arguing that the alliance's origins centered on the Atlantic Ocean whereas contemporary geopolitical dynamics demand a more encompassing global orientation. This assessment underscores perceived shortcomings in the alliance's adaptability, where rigid adherence to its postwar framework hampers coordinated responses to challenges in regions like the or Mediterranean, necessitating reforms to enhance and strategic alignment among members. In the context of support for , Crosetto has highlighted deficiencies in allied nations' translation of commitments into tangible actions. At the January 2023 Ramstein Air Base meeting with defense ministers from over 40 countries, he called on participants to "move from words to deeds," pointing to delays in delivering critical equipment such as anti-missile batteries and ground vehicles amid escalating Russian offensives. These hesitations, he implied, strained and effectiveness, as some allies prioritized domestic political constraints over rapid escalation of military aid, thereby prolonging Ukraine's vulnerabilities despite collective pledges under and bilateral frameworks. Crosetto has also emphasized inequities in burden sharing as a barrier to robust allied cooperation within . Advocating adherence to the 2% GDP defense spending guideline established at the 2014 Wales Summit, he has repeatedly stressed that all member states must fulfill their responsibilities to prevent overreliance on leading contributors like the . In discussions surrounding potential U.S. policy shifts under a second Trump administration, Crosetto noted in early 2025 that European allies would need to increase expenditures—potentially toward 5% of GDP in high-threat scenarios—to achieve fairer load distribution and sustain deterrence without unilateral American dominance. This critique reflects empirical disparities, with only 23 of 32 members meeting the 2% target as of 2024, underscoring how uneven commitments undermine collective operational readiness and .

Remarks on Israel and Middle East conflicts

In August 2025, Italian Defence Minister Guido Crosetto sharply criticized 's military operations in Gaza during an interview with , stating that "the Israeli government has lost its sanity and humanity" amid the scale of , which he described as crossing into the "pure denial of the and the founding values of our civilisation." He argued that fighting terrorists could no longer serve as justification, emphasizing that the occupation of Gaza and certain acts in the represented a "qualitative leap" requiring international action, including potential sanctions to compel Israeli Prime Minister "to think clearly." Crosetto endorsed a , conditioning it on eradicating terrorism while stressing the equal value of Palestinian lives. Earlier, in April 2025, Crosetto expressed anger over Israeli strikes in Gaza during a interview, asserting that "a Palestinian child is worth as much as a Ukrainian child or an Italian child" and urging to halt operations to prevent further escalation. Following the January 2025 -Hamas ceasefire agreement, he described it as "a first step in the direction desired by all," prioritizing durable peace allowing two peoples to coexist and fostering an end to the broader conflict through hostage releases and de-escalation. In October 2025, after the crossing reopened under the , Crosetto authorized resuming Italy's mission in the area and affirmed Italy's role in subsequent Gaza peace steps, including potential troop deployments to support stability. Crosetto also addressed related Middle East tensions, condemning a September 2025 drone attack on an international aid bound for Gaza and deploying an frigate for assistance, highlighting risks to humanitarian efforts amid ongoing hostilities. On , he advocated engagement with the new post-Assad rulers in December 2024 to prevent crisis escalation, while supporting a stricter international stance against Houthi disruptions in the as part of broader regional stabilization efforts. These positions reflect Crosetto's emphasis on pragmatic , though his criticisms of drew domestic backlash within Italy's pro-Israel governing coalition.

Domestic political disputes

Upon his appointment as Minister of Defence on October 22, 2022, Crosetto faced allegations of potential stemming from his prior professional ties to major Italian defense firms. He had served as an advisor to Leonardo, receiving approximately 1.8 million euros in compensation between 2018 and 2021, and held the presidency of Orizzonti Sistemi Navali, a between and Leonardo, until resigning all such roles upon taking office. Critics, including reports in outlets like Domani, argued these connections could influence procurement decisions, though Crosetto maintained he had fully divested and instructed legal action against publications alleging impropriety, emphasizing no legal conflict existed under Italian statutes. In August 2023, Crosetto initiated a disciplinary review of General Roberto Vannacci, a serving under his ministry, following the unauthorized self-publication of Vannacci's Il mondo al contrario, which included statements deeming "not normal" and critiquing gender ideology. Crosetto justified the action as necessary to safeguard the armed forces' institutional neutrality, constitutional values, and Vannacci's own career, noting the content had not been pre-approved by superiors and risked discrediting the military. This decision provoked backlash from coalition allies, including League leader , who expressed support for Vannacci, and segments of Brothers of Italy's base viewing it as undue deference to progressive norms; some right-wing commentators accused Crosetto of "" against a figure espousing conservative positions. Crosetto later denied promoting Vannacci in December 2023 amid ongoing proceedings and, in April 2024, sarcastically questioned the merits of Vannacci's political candidacy, further straining relations with hardline supporters. A 2024 dispute arose between Crosetto and Italy's external (AISE), detailed in a leaked verbal transcript to Raffaele Cantone, where Crosetto claimed AISE had withheld critical operational information from the Defense Ministry and potentially conducted unauthorized on him, possibly at foreign behest. He requested cooperation from AISE director Giovanni Caravelli, expressing frustration over perceived institutional barriers. Undersecretary for Security Alfredo Mantovano, a close Meloni ally, countered by affirming the community's and dismissing suspicions of internal disloyalty, while investigations found no of spying. Crosetto subsequently minimized the episode as lacking conflict, agreeing to testify before the parliamentary oversight committee (Copasir), though opposition figures like PD's Walter Verini highlighted it as casting a "grave shadow" on governmental trust. Reports of frictions within the Meloni cabinet surfaced periodically, including Crosetto's absences from at least ten Council of Ministers meetings in October 2024, attributed by some to disagreements over fiscal maneuvers and defense priorities, though he pledged attendance at the next session. In September 2025, differing tones on intercepting the Global Sumud Flotilla en route to Gaza prompted speculation of discord, with Meloni adopting a firmer public stance against activists while Crosetto emphasized dialogic coordination; he denied any quarrel, citing extensive messaging exchanges with the premier. Earlier, a July 2025 clash over cybersecurity legislation saw Meloni and the Quirinale reportedly block Crosetto's bid to shift AI oversight to Defense, preserving it under the Presidency of the Council. These episodes underscored Crosetto's institutionalist approach occasionally diverging from coalition dynamics, though no formal ruptures materialized.

Legacy and impact

Contributions to Italian conservatism

Guido Crosetto co-founded , a national-conservative political party, on December 27, 2012, alongside and , positioning it as an alternative to Silvio Berlusconi's party and the technocratic government of . The party's formation emphasized Italian sovereignty, opposition to excessive fiscal austerity during the sovereign debt crisis, and a center-right orientation focused on and economic pragmatism, reflecting Crosetto's early criticisms of EU-imposed budget constraints under Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti. As national coordinator of Fratelli d'Italia from its inception until 2014, and briefly as president from December 21, 2012, to April 4, 2013, Crosetto played a pivotal role in structuring the party's conservative framework, including its Atlanticist commitments and Western alignment to distance it from isolationist tendencies. His involvement helped integrate moderate conservative elements, such as pro-NATO stances and fiscal realism, into the party's platform, which prioritized defense spending and national interests over supranational mandates. Crosetto's contributions extended to fostering ideological cohesion within Italian by bridging post-Berlusconi factions, advocating for a that critiqued both leftist policies and internal right-wing fragmentation. Through his leadership, Fratelli d'Italia evolved into a governing force by 2022, influencing conservative discourse on , , and resistance to globalist pressures, as evidenced by the party's electoral success rooted in these foundational principles. He stepped down as national coordinator on March 13, 2019, but his early organizational efforts solidified the party's conservative identity.

Influence on European defense debates

As Italy's Minister of Defence since October 2022, Guido Crosetto has shaped European defense discussions through pragmatic critiques of continental complacency and calls for structural reforms amid geopolitical shifts, including Russia's invasion of and uncertainties in U.S. commitment to . In May 2025, he stressed the necessity of an integrated European defense capability, estimating it would require 7-10 years to develop alongside armaments production to translate rhetoric into operational reality. His advocacy aligns with broader pushes for higher national budgets, as evidenced by his May 2025 emphasis on elevating defense expenditures within a unified framework to counter fragmentation among member states. Crosetto's realism challenges optimistic notions of European detached from transatlantic alliances, framing it instead as complementary to U.S. rather than a substitute. In March 2025, he urged stronger EU-U.S. integration ahead of summits, warning against autonomy pursuits that undermine alliance cohesion. He has rejected visions of a standalone "" as impractical, arguing in February 2025 that effective defense emerges from coordinated national forces, akin to 's model, rather than supranational entities lacking political will. This stance influenced debates on industrial , such as his April 2024 push with for joint land systems development to enhance capabilities without eroding . A pivotal intervention came in June 2025, when Crosetto declared that NATO "as it is" lacks raison d'être and the EU holds negligible global weight, prompting reflections on alliance adaptation to multipolar threats like missile defense gaps and space vulnerabilities. He linked this to fiscal imperatives, advocating in June 2025 for EU rules permitting defense-related deficits amortized over 20-30 years to sustain investments without immediate austerity, countering opposition to centralized spending mechanisms. In August 2024, he endorsed an EU defense commissioner while insisting on revised spending norms, highlighting tensions between supranational ambitions and national fiscal realities. Crosetto's emphasis on Europe's eroded global stature—described in June 2025 as a failure to grasp international transformations—has underscored causal links between underinvestment and vulnerability, influencing dialogues on , such as dual-use innovations and . His July 2025 meetings with and leaders reinforced priorities in coordination and in strategic domains, positioning as a bridge between reliance and EU ambition. These positions, rooted in first-hand assessments of defense shortfalls, have amplified realist voices in , countering idealistic with demands for verifiable capabilities amid declining U.S. presence projections.

References

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