America at war! (1941–) – Part 3

Allied HQ, Naples (June 5, 1944)

Communiqué

Allied armies in Italy have established their relentless pressure upon the enemy. Troops of the 5th Army on June 4 entered the city limits of Rome, where sporadic resistance is being encountered. They control the whole of the Colli Laziale and have advanced in contact with the enemy toward the Lower Tiber. Our troops now dominate Highways 5, 6 and 7 leading into Rome.

Troops of the 8th Army in contact with enemy rearguards have made considerable progress. The towns of Palestrina, Fiuggi, Genzano, Paliano, Guarcino and Cave are now clear of the enemy.

The total number of prisoners taken since the start of the attack now exceeds 20,000.

Motor transport, railyards and bridges, highways and road bridges were attacked by aircraft of the Tactical Air Force north and west of Rome and in central Italy yesterday.

Medium and fighter-bombers as well as fighters also attacked rail and other military targets and shipping in Yugoslavia.

Strong forces of escorted heavy bombers struck at railyards in northern Italy and important enemy communication lines along the French-Italian border.

From these operations, two enemy aircraft were destroyed and 11 of our aircraft are missing. Seven enemy aircraft were sighted over the battle area yesterday during the daylight hours.

It is now known that one enemy aircraft was destroyed and one of ours is missing from night operations during the night of June 3-4.

The Mediterranean Allied Air Force flew approximately 1,000 sorties. Last night, our bombers attacked objectives in northern Italy.


Communiqué

Troops of the 5th Army occupied Rome on the night of June 4-5. Leading elements have passed through the city and are across the Tiber in some places.


U.S. Navy Department (June 5, 1944)

Communiqué No. 522

Pacific and Far East.
U.S. submarines have reported the sinking of sixteen vessels in operations against the enemy in these waters, as follows:

  • 1 large transport
  • 1 large cargo vessel
  • 7 medium cargo vessels
  • 2 small cargo vessels
  • 4 medium cargo transports
  • 1 small cargo transport

These actions have not been reported in any previous Navy Department communiqué.


Communiqué No. 523

Atlantic.
The escort carrier USS BLOCK ISLAND (CVE-21) was sunk in the Atlantic during May 1944 as the result of enemy action.

The next of kin of casualties, which were light, have been notified.


CINCPAC Press Release No. 433

For Immediate Release
June 5, 1944

Several enemy patrol-type vessels were sighted west of Truk Atoll on June 2 (West Longitude Date) and attacked by a single search plane. One was probably sunk and all were heavily strafed. On June 3, another search plane sighted the disposition and made an attack which resulted in the sinking of one of the auxiliaries and severe damage to another.

Liberators of the 11th Army Air Force bombed Ketoi Island in the Kurils before dawn on June 4. No opposition was encountered. A single search plane of Fleet Air Wing Four bombed Paramushiru Island before dawn on June 4. All of our planes returned from these operations.

The Brooklyn Eagle (June 5, 1944)

Allies occupy Rome, chase Germans north

Nazi forces fleeing toward new lines
By Robert V. Vermillion

Bulletin

The London radio said Pope Pius appeared on the balcony of St. Peter’s today as crowds cheered and Allied troops marched through Rome.

Allied HQ, Naples, Italy (UP) –
The 5th Army completed the occupation of Rome, the first Axis-held capital in Europe to be liberated, and swept on without pause across the Tiber River today in close pursuit of German forces fleeing in disorder toward a new defense line possibly 150 miles to the north.

U.S. tank and infantry vanguards were already streaming north of Rome under orders to annihilate the enemy armies when Allied headquarters announced the triumphant liberation of the religious capital of the world in a special communiqué on the 271st day of the Italian campaign.

The communiqué said:

Troops of the 5th Army occupied Rome on the night of June 4-5. Leading elements have passed through the city and are across the Tiber in some places.

Adolf Hitler was reported, by the official German news agency DNB, to have ordered his forces to withdraw northwest of Rome to avoid drawing the ancient capital into the battle area. The clandestine Radio Atlantic said the Germans were rushing three divisions from southern France and two others from northern Italy in an attempt to stem the Allied tide.

Clark: ‘A stepping stone’

Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark, commander of the 5th Army, called the fall of Rome a “stepping stone toward the complete surrender of Germany” in a message to a savings group committee in London.

Despite the Nazi declaration of Rome as an open city, German tanks, machine gunners and snipers offered sporadic resistance throughout the ancient capital yesterday and last night in an attempt to delay the Allied advance, which covered more than 15 miles in the final 24 hours.

Allied fighters and fighter-bombers swarmed out ahead of the advancing ground forces and rained a steady hail of bullets and bombs on retreating German tanks, trucks and other vehicles clogging roads almost bumper to bumper as far north as Lake Bolsena, 50 miles above Rome. At least 600 tanks and other vehicles were destroyed or damaged yesterday alone.

The increasing destruction of the enemy’s transport, his lack of adequate reserves and the overwhelming numerical and armored superiority of the Allies raised hopes here that the 5th Army may be able to overtake and destroy a considerable portion of the retreating forces before they reach their next fortified line hinged on Florence and stretching across the narrowest part of the upper Italian peninsula.

Bomb roads north of Rome

Allied planes also bombed highways and bridges north of Rome in a further effort to stall the enemy retreat. Pilots reported German dead were visible along the roadside beside their wrecked and burning vehicles.

Some elements of the 5th Army bypassed Rome from the east in their race to cut off the German withdrawal, while other forces to the southwest were nearing the mouth of the Tiber River.

All the Colli Laziale – the Alban Hills – between the Via Casilina and the Appian Way southeast of Rome were under Allied “control,” an official spokesman said, with the enemy survivors fleeing toward the Tiber estuary. Northeast of Via Casilina, the Army occupied Palestrina and Cave, five and three miles, respectively, above Valmontone.

Nazis threatened with capture

Thousands of German troops, both southeast and southwest of Rome, appeared in imminent danger of death or capture as a result of the sudden collapse of enemy resistance immediately below the capital. German prisoners captured since the start of the current offensive May 12 already exceed 20,000.

The enemy’s plight was further increased by the supposed severing of the only bridge across the Tiber west of Rome in an RAF raid Saturday night.

The British 8th Army, meanwhile, struck deep into the enemy’s flank in the Sacco River and Liri River valleys, capturing Paliano, eight and a half miles northeast of Valmontone and nearly 13 miles northwest of Ferentino; Fiuggi, eight miles north of Ferentino, and Guarcino, eight miles northeast of Ferentino.

Enter city at two points

U.S. reconnaissance elements of the 5th Army pushing along the Via Casilina first entered the southeastern outskirts of Rome at two points at 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. (local time) respectively yesterday and a few hours later reached the official city limits.

One American force met stiff resistance at the outskirts, principally from the Hermann Göring Division, after an eight-mile advance, but other elements severed Highway 5 at the northeastern entrance to the city and then cleared the outskirts toward the southeast without too much difficulty.

While British elements of the 5th Army on the left flank crossed Riotorto and drove to within six miles of the Tiber, a U.S. column rolling down the hills from the Colli Laziale captured Grottaferrata and Marino, northeast of Lake Albano; Genzano, on the west shore of Lake Nemi, and other points.

Presumably overrun in the advance were Castel Gandolfo. site of the Pope’s Summer home, and Frascati, the former German headquarters town.

U.S. entry announced

The American entry into the Rome city limits was announced by Allied headquarters in a special communiqué shortly after 9:00 (2:00 p.m. EWT) last night, which said sporadic resistance was being encountered from German rearguards.

But it was obvious even then that the complete liberation of the city was only a matter of hours and Gen. Sir Harold R. L. G. Alexander, Allied commander in Italy, joined with Premier Marshal Pietro Badoglio of the Italian government in a plea to the population to facilitate the Allied passage through the capital “in order to continue the destruction of the German armies farther north.”

Clark holds fire

The final battle for Rome was fought in the six miles of suburbs stretching along either side of the Via Casilina to the southeastern rim of the city itself.

The Americans had broken through the enemy’s tough Alban Hill defenses flanking the Via Casilina and had anticipated an easy thrust across the Campagna Plain into Rome, but instead found German tanks, self-propelled guns, machine-gun nests and mortar positions barring their path.

Clark arrived at the scene soon after vanguards entered the and ordered the Allies to hold their fire for three hours to give the enemy a chance to withdraw from the approaches to the Holy City.

When the Germans still held to their positions, Clark gave the order to fire at 11:00 a.m. and artillery and tanks sent a heavy barrage crashing into the outskirts. A tank battle broke out, but the enemy soon wavered and broke, and the triumphal march was on.

Two scribes touring Rome meet storm of kisses

Packards are first snubbed as Nazis until bartender recognizes them
By Reynolds and Eleanor Packard

Scores notable scoop

Reynolds Packard, veteran United Press war correspondent who was interned by the Italians when the United States entered the war, scored a notable beat yesterday by filing the first press dispatch from Rome after the Allies entered the city.

Rome, Italy (UP) – (June 4, delayed)
Just 20 minutes after the last enemy tank had rolled past, we reached the center of Rome tonight and found that the Germans had left the city 95% intact.

A few fires set by the Germans were still burning and railway yards were in ruins as a result of Allied raids, but Rome as a whole was surprisingly little changed from the time we left it for an internment camp two years and 25 days ago following the United States’ entry into the war.

Our jeep was fourth in line in the first Allied column entering Rome at 8:30 p.m. The three tanks ahead of us sped off in pursuit of eight German Mark IV tanks while we headed for the bar at the Grand Hotel for a drink of Italian cognac.

Suspected of being Germans

The Italians at the bar at first thought we were Germans and would not drink with us, but when Peter, the bar man, and the manager of the hotel recognized us the atmosphere changed abruptly.

Five minutes later, the American Stars and Stripes and the British Union Jack were flying from the hotel’s flagstaffs over the doorway – the first Allied flags to fly in Rome since the United States entered the war.

Our trip through the streets of Rome and its suburbs and been in the nature of a triumphant tour. Never before had we been kissed so often or so much. Men and women alike overwhelmed us with their kisses.

Turn back six times

We had a bad case of jitters getting into Rome. At least six times we lost our nerve and turned back, only to talk ourselves into turning around and heading for the capital again.

The sniping and shelling was so bad that sometimes we felt like minesweepers. Once or twice, we got ahead of the tanks leading the column.

Once inside Rome, Italians waded knee-deep through water spilled by a broken water main to greet us. Though well-dressed and neat, the women told us they had been suffering from malnutrition for more than two years and had had no meat for the past four months, no eggs and no gas.

Clapping, cheering Italians threw armfuls of roses on the American tanks and into our jeep as we rumbled through the streets.

Although the bolder Italians sought to kiss or shake hands with us, many seemed only to want to touch us as if it would bring them good luck.


Roper: Jeep starts for Rome, meets some trouble

By James E. Roper

Rome, Italy (UP) – (June 4, delayed)
As we reached the outskirts of Rome today, the word went around that the Germans had pulled out and all we had to do was ride right into the city.

But we found out differently as our jeep rolled down deserted Highway 6 in the lead of three other cars filled with correspondents and photographers – all unarmed. In the jeep were me with Reynolds Packard, United Press war correspondent, and Ed Johnson of the Chicago Sun.

We were passing a road intersection when we realized the word was wrong. There, coming down the crossroads toward us, was a German vehicle. We crossed the intersection and the driver spun the jeep around to retreat. The move brought us directly under the guns of the German vehicle, about 0 yards away.

I looked at the Germans’ machine gun eye-to-eye. But I ducked when I saw the 37mm assault gun. It looked as big as a 250mm howitzer.

We expected the Germans to blaze away, but they began to pile out of the vehicle and dive into a ditch. They were just as scared as we were, although they could have killed all of us.

The jeep moved back to a column of tanks moving down the road and I hopped on the back of a Sherman commanded by Cpl. Fred Lance of Scranton, Pennsylvania. When we reached the crossroads, the German reconnaissance car was gone. A lone German, however, hopped out of a ditch and started zigzagging to escape the small-arms fire from infantrymen clinging to our tank. They included Sgt. Donald Rew of Lynbrook, New York.

As we started again for Rome, we received a radio message that enemy machine guns were on the left. Twice the tanks tried to get over the hill, but both times heavy German artillery shelling made them retreat. The infantrymen and myself then piled off the tanks and carefully walked behind them for maximum protection until we reached a ditch.

Roosevelt expected to warn Axis nations tonight

Will proclaim Rome’s fall in 15-minute broadcast to world

Washington (UP) –
President Roosevelt will proclaim the fall of Rome to the nation and the world tonight in a 15-minute fireside chat expected to warn the Axis satellites, perhaps for the last time, that they must get out of the war now or face the same certain destruction awaiting Germany.

He will speak from 8:30 to 8:45 p.m. EWT. The address will be broadcast by all major networks and shortwaved to Europe and the rest of the world.

A White House announcement, saying simply that the Chief Executive would speak on the fall of Rome, came as members of Congress and other high officials hailed the fall of the first Axis capital to Allied armies aiming at Berlin.

Mr. Roosevelt was expected to express his gratification for preservation of Rome’s historic and religious shrines and to reassure Pope Pius XII that the Allies would observe the sovereignty and sanctity of the Vatican.

Congressional leaders read great significance into the fall of Rome. Senator Joseph C. O’Mahoney (D-WY) said:

It will have a great psychological effect, particularly in the Balkans.

House Republican Leader Joseph W. Martin (R-MA) said America rejoiced “over the confirmation of the capture of the first European objective.”

House Democratic Leader John W. McCormack (D-MA) said the manner in which Rome was captured confirmed his long-standing belief that U.S. forces would do all possible to avoid damaging the ancient shrines of the Eternal City.

Chairman Sol Bloom (D-NY) of the House Foreign Affairs Committee found it “a good omen that Rome should fall on the Lord’s Day.”

1,250 U.S. planes batter French invasion coast

Mighty blitz seen swelling to climax asked by Eisenhower
By Phil Ault

London, England (UP) –
Up to 1,250 U.S. heavy bombers and fighters raked the French invasion coast with bombs and gunfire today, carrying forward the bombardment that in four days and nights has rained more than 13,000 tons of explosives across Germany’s West Wall fortifications.

The U.S. daylight blow followed a night of almost ceaseless activity across the English Channel during which swarms of the RAF’s heaviest raiders blasted the same invasion-marked area and ranged on into the Rhineland to drop their blockbusters on Cologne.

Other British planes laid mines in enemy waters. Not a single plane was lost in the night-long operations.

Yanks launch daylight blow

Some 750 U.S. Flying Fortresses and Liberators, accompanied by about 500 Thunderbolt and Mustang fighters, launched the daylight blow at the West Wall this morning, their third attack on that shattered strip of coast in the past 24 hours and their sixth since the latest chain of pre-invasion bombing began Friday.

U.S. Air Force headquarters said the targets again were in Boulogne and Calais areas.

Radio Paris said U.S. bombers raided the outskirts of Pans at midday.

A steady parade of other Allied warplanes shuttled across the Channel in brilliant sunshine this morning, and other raiders picked up the offensive later in the day, although gathering clouds blotted out the high-flying formations.

Britain’s “Hellfire Corner” opposite the Pas de Calais area reverberated almost continually to the thunder of bombs landing on the West Wall 25 miles away.

The mighty aerial barrage appeared to be swelling swiftly toward the crescendo that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower told U.S. airmen he would require to accompany his invasion armies into the continent.

The U.S. 8th Air Force heavies struck twice at the invasion coast yesterday and followed through with a dusk attack on the chain of Nazi communications extending back into the Paris area, while hundreds of medium bombers and fighters of the U.S. and Allied air forces swept northern France.

americavotes1944

New Mexico GOP voters to pick governor nominee

Albuquerque, New Mexico (UP) –
Only about 33,000 Democratic votes, less than half the 64,000 party votes recorded in the 1942 primary, will be cast in New Mexico’s primary election tomorrow, Ray Rodgers, State Democratic chairman, predicted today.

Major interest in the Republican ticket was centered in the race for the nomination for Governor between Gallup banker Glenn Emmons and Grants businessman Carroll Gunderson.

Seeking nomination for the state’s two seats in the House of Representatives in the Democratic contest, Reps. Clinton Anderson and Antonio Fernandez are running for reelection, opposed by Robert Valdez and Capt. Bob Wollard.


ALP names Dickstein as Congress candidate

Rep. Samuel Dickstein, a Manhattan Democrat, who has served in Congress 22 years, yesterday was named as the American Labor Party candidate from the new 19th Congressional district.

Tammany leaders are scheduled to select a candidate today, and there was some doubt as to whether Dickstein or Rep. Arthur Klein would get the Democratic nomination.

U.S. Chamber chief raps Communism in Moscow speech

Want trade, not ideas, Reds are told
By M. S. Handler

Rome’s liberation recalls how other Germans conquered city

By the United Press

Heavy schedule dims Congress’ recess hope


Vinson demands Senate rejection of textile plan

Puerto Rican groups criticize Hull statement


Blacklist extension may sway Finland

Leaky cylinder causes gas scare in Bronx

Corby: Song of the Open Road due tomorrow at Criterion, offers 4 young stars

By Jane Corby

Editorial: World gives thanks Rome has escaped destruction

Americans push steadily ahead of Mokmer Ridge

americavotes1944

Farley’s name may be offered to convention

New Deal foes would prevent unanimous choice of Roosevelt
By Lyle C. Wilson

Washington (UP) –
Submission of James A. Farley’s name to the Democratic National Convention for the presidential nomination in opposition to President Roosevelt’s fourth term candidacy was under consideration today by conservative Democrats.

Farley’s permission still has to be obtained. No one expects the proposed maneuver to prevent the President’s renomination, but it would prevent unanimous action. It is the only method by which anti-Roosevelt Democrats can show the voters the extent of fourth term opposition within the party – be it large or small.

Convention spectators will see real political drama if Farley is placed in nomination. Among some of the big and little convention delegates already selected, there is a scattering of anti-fourth term sentiment which will never have an opportunity to express itself unless there is at least one name put up against Mr. Roosevelt.

Could poll delegations

But with two men in the contest, a situation will be created in which all or any of the state delegations can be polled. The usual way of casting ballots is for the chairman of each delegation to announce the disposition of its voters as the state roll is called. Some of the big states and some of the little ones bind their delegations with the so-called unit rule.

In Florida, for instance, the unit rule has been followed. That state’s 18 delegates to the Democratic convention are divided 14 for Mr. Roosevelt and four for Senator Harry F. Byrd (D-VA). Under the unit rule, the chairman could and probably will announce that Florida casts 18 convention votes for Mr. Roosevelt’s renomination.

But with Farley or any opposition candidate in the race, there could be a request for a poll of the delegation.

Foresee split in 20 states

It is believed that in upwards of 20 states, Farley’s name would cause a minority of the various delegations to split away from the Roosevelt parade to cast what would be, at most, courtesy ballots for the former Postmaster General and protest ballots against the President.

Farley was placed in nomination four years ago in opposition to a third term.

The purpose of the anti-fourth term campaign is not to elect some alternative Democrat President of the United States. It is to defeat Mr. Roosevelt. He has taken party control away from men who feel that they are entitled to consideration in Democratic affairs and they are determined to come back to power.

The Pittsburgh Press (June 5, 1944)

Ernie Pyle V Norman

Roving Reporter

By Ernie Pyle

London, England – (by wireless)
Here I’ve been gallavantin’ around with lieutenant generals again. If this keeps up, I’m going to lose my amateur standing. This time it is Jimmy Doolittle, who is still the same magnificent guy with three stars on his shoulder that he used to be with a captain’s bars.

Gen. Doolittle runs the American 8th Air Force. It is a grim and stupendous job, but he manages to keep the famous Doolittle sense of humor about it.

Doolittle, as you know, is rather short and getting almost bald. Since arriving in England from Italy, he has diabolically started a couple of false rumors circulating about himself.

One is that his nickname used to be “Curly,” and he occasionally throws his head back as though tossing hair out of his eyes. His other claim is that he used to be six feet tall but has worried himself down to his present small height in the past five months.

Jimmy Doolittle has more gifts than any one man has a right to be blessed with. He has been one of America’s greatest pilots for more than 25 years. He is bold and completely fearless. Along with that he has a great technical mind and a highly perfected education in engineering.

In addition to his professional skill, he is one of the most engaging humans you ever ran across. His voice is clear and keen, he talks with animation, and his tone carries a sense of quick and right decision.

He is one of the greatest of storytellers. He is the only man I’ve ever known who can tell stories all evening long and never tell one you’ve heard before. He can tell them in any dialect, from Swedish to Chinese.

Above all he loves to tell stories on himself. Here is an example:

The other day he had his plane set up for a flight to northern England. The weather turned awful, and one of his crew suggested that they cancel the trip. As Jimmy said, he would probably have canceled it himself, but when the junior officer suggested it, he sort of had to go ahead and go.

They were hanging around the operations room, getting the latest reports. The crew thought Gen. Doolittle had left the room. The junior officers were talking about the dangers of making the trip in such weather. They didn’t think the general ought to take the chance. And then he overhead one of them say, “I don’t think the b****** gives a damn about the weather.”

The poor officer almost died when he discovered that the general had heard him.

Other passengers said that throughout the flight this benighted fellow just say staring at the floor and now and then shaking his head like a condemned man.

The general thinks it was wonderful. No, he didn’t do anything about it, for he was flattered by the compliment.

Doolittle says:

But only one thing saved him. If he had used the word “old” in front of b******, I would’ve had him hung.

He tells another one. He was at a Flying Fortress base one afternoon when the planes were coming back in. Many of them had been pretty badly shot up and had wounded men aboard.

The general walked up to one plane from which the crew had just got out. The upper part of the tail gun turret was shot away. Gen. Doolittle said to the tail gunner, “Were you in there when it happened?”

The gunner, a little peevishly, replied, “Yes, sir.”

As the general walked away the annoyed gunner turned to a fellow crewman and said in a loud voice: “Where in the hell did he think I was, out buying a ham sandwich?”

A frightened junior officer, fearing the general might have overhead, said, “My God, man, don’t you know who that was?”

The tail gunner snapped:

Sure I know, and I don’t give a damn. That was a stupid question.

With which Jimmy Doolittle, the least stupid of people, fully agrees when he tells the story.

Another time the general went with his chief, Lt. Gen. Spaatz, to visit a bomber station which had been having very bad luck and heavy losses. They thought maybe their presence would pick the boys up a bit. So they visited around awhile. And when they get ready to leave, a veteran Fortress pilot walked up to them.

He said:

I know why you’re out here. You think our morale is shot because we’ve been taking it on the nose. Well, I can tell you our morale is all right. There is only one thing that hurts our morale. And that’s having three-star generals coming around to see what’s the matter with it.

Jimmy tells these stories wonderfully, with more zest and humor than I can out into them second-handed. As he says, the heartbreaks and tragedies of war sometimes push all your gaiety down into the depths. But if a man can keep a sense of the ridiculous about himself, he is all right. Jimmy Doolittle can.

More of this tomorrow.

President Roosevelt’s Fireside Chat 29
On the Fall of Rome
June 5, 1944, 8:30 p.m. EWT

Broadcast audio:

My friends:

Yesterday, on June 4, 1944, Rome fell to American and Allied troops. The first of the Axis capitals is now in our hands. One up and two to go!

It is perhaps significant that the first of these capitals to fall should have the longest history of all of them. The story of Rome goes back to the time of the foundations of our civilization. We can still see there monuments of the time when Rome and the Romans controlled the whole of the then-known world. That, too, is significant, for the United Nations are determined that in the future no one city and no one race will be able to control the whole of the world.

In addition to the monuments of the older times, we also see in Rome the great symbol of Christianity, which has reached into almost every part of the world. There are other shrines and other churches in many places, but the churches and shrines of Rome are visible symbols of the faith and determination of the early saints and martyrs that Christianity should live and become universal. And tonight, it will be a source of deep satisfaction that the freedom of the Pope and the Vatican City is assured by the armies of the United Nations.

It is also significant that Rome has been liberated by the armed forces of many generation– many nations. The American and British armies, who bore the chief burdens of battle, found at their sides our own North American neighbors, the gallant Canadians. The fighting New Zealanders from the far South Pacific, the courageous French and the French Moroccans, the South Africans, the Poles and the East Indians – all of them fought with us on the bloody approaches to the city of Rome.

The Italians, too, forswearing a partnership in the Axis which they never desired, have sent their troops to join us in our battles against the German trespassers on their soil.

The prospect of the liberation of Rome meant enough to Hitler and his generals to induce them to fight desperately at great cost of men and materials and with great sacrifice to their crumbling Eastern line and to their Western front. No thanks are due to them if Rome was spared the devastation which the Germans wreaked on Naples and other Italian cities. The Allied generals maneuvered so skillfully that the Nazis could only have stayed long enough to damage Rome at the risk of losing their armies.

But Rome is of course more than a military objective.

Ever since before the days of the Caesars, Rome has stood as a symbol of authority. Rome was the Republic. Rome was the Empire. Rome was and is in a sense the Catholic Church, and Rome was the capital of a united Italy. Later, unfortunately, a quarter of a century ago, Rome became the seat of Fascism, and, still later, one of the three capitals of the Axis.

For this quarter century the Italian people were enslaved. They were degraded by the rule of Mussolini from Rome. They will mark its liberation with deep emotion. In the north of Italy, the people are still dominated, threatened by the Nazi overlords and their Fascist puppets. Somehow, in the back of my head, I still remember a name – Mussolini.

Our victory comes at an excellent time, while our Allied forces are poised for another strike at Western Europe, and while the armies of other Nazi soldiers nervously await our assault. And in the meantime, our gallant Russian allies continue to make their power felt more and more.

From a strictly military standpoint, we had long ago accomplished certain of the main objectives of our Italian campaign: The control of the islands – the major islands – the control of the sea lanes of the Mediterranean to shorten our combat and supply lines, and the capture of the airports, such as the great airports of Foggia, south of Rome, from which we have struck telling blows on the continent, the whole of the continent all the way up to the Russian front.

It would be unwise to inflate in our own minds the military importance of the capture of Rome. We shall have to push through a long period of greater effort and fiercer fighting before we get into Germany itself. The Germans have retreated thousands of miles, all the way from the gates of Cairo, through Libya and Tunisia and Sicily and southern Italy. They have suffered heavy losses, but not great enough yet to cause collapse.

Germany has not yet been driven to surrender. Germany has not yet been driven to the point where she will be unable to recommence world conquest a generation hence.

Therefore, the victory still lies some distance ahead. That distance will be covered in due time – have no fear of that. But it will be tough and it will be costly, as I have told you many, many times.

In Italy the people had lived so long under the corrupt rule of Mussolini that, in spite of the tinsel at the top – you have seen the pictures of him – their economic condition had grown steadily worse. Our troops have found starvation, malnutrition, disease, a deteriorating education and lowered public health – all byproducts of the Fascist misrule.

The task of the Allies in occupation has been stupendous. We have had to start at the very bottom, assisting local governments to reform on democratic lines. We have had to give them bread to replace that which was stolen out of their mouths by the Germans. We have had to make it possible for the Italians to raise and use their own local crops. We have to help them cleanse their schools of Fascist trappings.

I think the American people as a whole approve the salvage of these human beings, who are only now learning to walk in a new atmosphere of freedom.

Some of us may let our thoughts run to the financial cost of it. Essentially it is what we can call a form of relief. And at the same time, we hope that this relief will be an investment for the future – an investment that will pay dividends by eliminating Fascism, by ending any Italian desires to start another war of aggression in the future. And that means that they are dividends which justify such an investment, because they are additional supports for world peace.

The Italian people are capable of self-government. We do not lose sight of their virtues as a peace-loving nation.

We remember the many centuries in which the Italians were leaders in the arts and sciences, enriching the lives of all mankind. We remember the great sons of the Italian people – Galileo, Marconi, Michelangelo, Dante, and incidentally that fearless discoverer who typifies the courage of Italy, Christopher Columbus.

Italy cannot grow in stature by seeking to build up a great militaristic empire. Italians have been overcrowded within their own territories, but they do not need to try to conquer the lands of other peoples in order to find the breadth of life. Other peoples may not want to be conquered.

In the past, Italians have come by the millions into the United States. They have been welcomed, they have prospered, they have become good citizens, community, governmental leaders. They are not Italian-Americans. They are Americans – Americans of Italian descent.

The Italians have gone in great numbers to the other Americas – Brazil and the Argentine, for example – hundreds and hundreds of thousands of them. They have gone to many other nations in every continent of the world, giving of their industry and their talents, and achieving success and the comfort of good living and good citizenship.

Italy should go on as a great mother nation, contributing to the culture and the progress and the goodwill of all mankind – developing her special talents in the arts and crafts and sciences, and preserving her historic and cultural heritage for the benefit of all peoples.

We want and expect the help of the future Italy toward lasting peace. All the other nations opposed to Fascism and Nazism ought to help to give Italy a chance.

The Germans, after years of domination in Rome, left the people in the Eternal City on the verge of starvation. We and the British will do and are doing everything we can to bring them relief. Anticipating the fall of Rome, we made preparations to ship food supplies to the city, but, of course, it should be borne in mind that the needs are so great, and the transportation requirements of our armies so heavy that improvement must be gradual. But we have already begun to save the lives of the men, women and children of Rome.

This, I think, is an example of the efficiency of your machinery of war. The magnificent ability and energy of the American people in growing the crops, in building the merchant ships, in making and collecting the cargoes, in getting the supplies over thousands of miles of water, and thinking ahead to meet emergencies – all this spells, I think, an amazing efficiency on the part of our Armed Forces, all the various agencies working with them, and American industry and labor as a whole.

No great effort like this can be a hundred-percent perfect, but the batting average is very, very high.

And so I extend the congratulations and thanks tonight of the American people to Gen. Alexander, who has been in command of the whole Italian operation; to our Gen. Clark, to Gen. Leese of the Fifth and the Eighth Armies; to Gen. Wilson, the Supreme Allied Commander of the Mediterranean Theater, to Gen. Devers his American deputy; to Gen. Eaker; to Adms. Cunningham and Hewitt; and to all their brave officers and men.

May God bless them and watch over them and over all of our gallant, fighting men.

SHAEF Order of the Day
June 6, 1944

Broadcast audio:

580px-SHAEF_Shoulder_Patch.svg

SUPREME HEADQUARTERS
ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE

Dwight_D_Eisenhower

Soldiers, Sailors, and Airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force!

You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade, toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The hope and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you. In company with our brave Allies and brothers-in-arms on other Fronts, you will bring about the destruction of the German war machine, the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed peoples of Europe, and security for ourselves in a free world.

Your task will not be an easy one. Your enemy is well trained, well equipped and battle-hardened. He will fight savagely.

But this is the year 1944! Much has happened since the Nazi triumphs of 1940-41. The United Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great defeats, in open battle, man-to-man. Our air offensive has seriously reduced their strength in the air and their capacity to wage war on the ground. Our Home Fronts have given us an overwhelming superiority in weapons and munitions of war, and placed at our disposal great reserves of trained fighting men. The tide has turned! The free men of the world are marching together to Victory!

I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle. We will accept nothing less than full Victory!

Good luck! And let us beseech the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking.

DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER

Hand-written, unissued message:

Our landings in the Cherbourg-Havre area have failed to gain a satisfactory foothold and I have withdrawn the troops. My decision to attack at this time and place was based upon the best information available. The troops, the air and the Navy did all that bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches to the attempt it is mine alone.

TOP SECRET

SHEAF
STAFF MESSAGE CONTROL
INCOMING MESSAGE

SHEAF CP

Filed 060800B June
SHEAF 83/06
TOR 060930B June

URGENT

FROM: SHAEF COMMAND POST, PERSONAL FROM GENERAL EISENHOWER

TO: AGWAR TO GENERAL MARSHALL FOR HIS EYES ONLY; SHAEF FOR INFORMATION

REF NO: 90016, 6 June 1944

Local time is now 8 in the morning.

I have as yet no information concerning the actual landings nor of our progress through beach obstacles. Communiqué will not be issued until we have word that leading ground troops are actually ashore.

All preliminary reports are satisfactory. Airborne formations apparently landed in good order with losses out of approximately 1250 airplanes participating about 30. Preliminary bombings by air went off as scheduled. Navy reports sweeping some mines, but so far as is known channels are clear and operation proceeding as planned. In early morning hours reaction from shore batteries was sufficiently light that some of the naval spotting planes have returned awaiting call.

The weather yesterday which was original date selected was impossible all along the target coast. Today conditions are vastly improved both by sea and air and we have the prospect of at least reasonably favorable weather for the next several days.

Yesterday, I visited British troops about to embark and last night saw a great portion of a United States airborne division just prior to its takeoff. The enthusiasm, toughness and obvious fitness of every single man were high and the light of battle was in their eyes.

I will keep you informed.

DISTRIBUTION:

  1. SUPREME COMMANDER
  2. CHIEF OF STAFF
  3. SGS
    4. Gen. Strong (G-2)
    5. Gen. Bull (G-3)

Broadcast: Unconfirmed reports of invasion, June 6, 3:00 a.m. EWT (CBS):

London Calling With John Snagge: Communique No. 1, 3:30 a.m. EWT (BBC):

Broadcast, 3:30 a.m. EWT (CBS):

Broadcast, 3:32 a.m. EWT (NBC):

Supreme HQ Allied Expeditionary Force (June 6, 1944)

Communiqué No. 1

Under the command of Gen. Eisenhower, Allied naval forces, supported by strong air forces, began landing Allied armies this morning on the northern coast of France.