Italy
denies use of Sicily airbase to US planes carrying weapons for Iran war
Defence
ministry says US failed to request authorisation in time for parliament to give
approval as required by international treaty
Angela
Giuffrida in Rome
Tue 31
Mar 2026 14.17 BST
Italy has
denied the use of an airbase in Sicily to US military planes carrying weapons
for the war in Iran after the US did not follow the required authorisation
procedure.
A source
at the Italian defence ministry confirmed a report in Corriere della Sera that
“some US bombers” had been due to land at Sigonella – one of seven US navy
bases in Italy – before heading to the Middle East, but that use of the base
had been denied because the US sought authorisation to land only while the
aircraft were already en route to Sicily.
The
source said this meant there was not enough time to seek approval in
parliament, as is required for aircraft landing on naval bases with weapons.
According
to treaties established in the late 1950s, the US navy bases can be used for
logistical and training purposes but not as transit hubs for aircraft used to
transport weapons for war unless in an emergency situation.
The
office of Italy’s far-right prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, issued a statement
on Tuesday denying that the move – which comes a day after Spain ramped up its
opposition to the US-Israeli war on Iran by closing its airspace to US aircraft
involved in attacks – had caused “critical issues or frictions” with
international partners, and said relations with the US were “solid and based on
full and loyal cooperation”.
In
another sign of rising tensions between the US and some European countries,
Donald Trump criticised France on Tuesday because it “wouldn’t let planes
headed to Israel, loaded up with military supplies, fly over French territory”,
writing on his Truth Social account that the country had been “VERY UNHELPFUL”.
Regarding
the use of its military bases, the statement from Meloni’s office said Italy
was “acting in full compliance with existing international agreements” and
parliamentary procedures and that each request was “carefully examined on a
case-by-case basis, as has always been the case in the past”.
In Italy,
where there is a deep-rooted anti-war culture, opinion polls consistently show
very strong opposition to the conflict and strong dislike towards Trump. The
unpopularity of Trump in Italy has also started to erode the popularity of
Meloni, who is ideologically in tune with the US president and has established
good working relations with him.
Opposition
parties have for weeks been urging the government to block the US from using
Italy’s bases for involvement in the Middle East conflict.
Giuseppe
Conte, leader of the Five Star Movement, said Italy had “a duty” to deny the US
bombers access to Sigonella and now needed to “take a further step” and deny
the logistical support offered at all the country’s bases since the US-Israeli
conflict in Iran was being carried out “in clear violation of international
law”.
Earlier
this month, Meloni strongly criticised the US-Israeli military strikes, telling
parliament that it was part of a growing and dangerous trend of interventions
“outside the scope of international law”.
At the
same time, she said “we cannot afford a regime of ayatollahs in possession of
nuclear weapons combined with a missile capacity” that could threaten Italy and
Europe. Meloni has said several times that Italy would not enter the war,
although the country has provided defensive assets to Gulf countries.
Anger in
Sicily has been swirling for weeks owing to increased activity at the Sigonella
base since the start of the conflict, and especially after the US navy shared a
photo on its Instagram account earlier this month showing a US military
helicopter landing at the Unesco-listed Madonie natural park close to Palermo
during a training exercise.
“Sicily
does not want and will not contribute to any war,” said Nuccio Di Paola, a Five
Star Movement politician in Sicily. “Sicily is a land of peace and must remain
so … we cannot allow Sicilians to be put at risk because of our country’s
subservience to other countries.”

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