The Italian experience concerning the possibility of subjecting the property of foreign states to measures of execution, is of very considerable interest from a comparative point of view. Italy is, in fact, one of the few countries to have adopted, many years ago, legislative measures of a fairly detailed and original nature to regulate this issue (contained in the Executive Order of 30 August 1925 n. 1621 which was subsequently enacted (with various amendments) as the Law of 15 July 1926 n. 1263). This Law is of interest, on the one hand, because of the insights which it gives into the approach which Italy has chosen to adopt in the interpretation of the content of the rules of international law governing the immunity of foreign states from measures of execution (and jurisdiction); and, on the other hand, because it is designed in such a way as to free the Italian judiciary from the need to venture into the quicksands of the principles of international law governing this subject; its ultimate aim, in fact, is to transfer from the judiciary to the Government the responsibility of deciding whether measures of execution against the property of foreign states should be allowed or not.