The fall of Benito Mussolini (7-25-43)

The Pittsburgh Press (July 26, 1943)

MUSSOLINI DEPOSED, FATE A MYSTERY
Italy under martial law

Badoglio, new Rome ruler, is reported seeking deal with Allies
By Harrison Salisbury, United Press staff writer

London, England –
Marshal Pietro Badoglio, new Premier of Italy, proclaimed countrywide martial law today and unconfirmed reports circulated that ousted Premier Benito Mussolini had fled into exile or had been arrested by the army as a “war criminal” to be turned over to the Allies.

An authoritative source said that Britain was ready to talk peace terms with the new Italian regime, but there was still deep mystery around. Badoglio’s intentions regarding a separate peace as well as around the fate of the fallen Duce.

Rumors circulating in Stockholm, however, suggested that the new Italian Premier might desire to make a deal with the United Nations and turn Mussolini over to them for trial – if he could get out from under German domination. The rumors lacked any official support.

It appeared likely that the true position of the new Italian government would emerge only after considerable delay, although an expected speech by Prime Minister Winston Churchill at the nest sitting of the House of Commons may clarify the outlook.

The outstanding question regarding Italy concerned the position of German Armed Forces in that country and of Italian troops in the Nazi-occupied Balkans. It was estimated that the Germans from 7-9 divisions (possibly 130,000 men) in Italy and Sicily and there has been much speculation that the Nazis would eventually seek to set up a defense line protecting the northern industrial area of Italy above the Po River.

Although Marshal Badoglio was known to have opposed the Nazis as well as the Fascists in the pasts, there was no concrete evidence that he would try to oust the Germans and seek peace with the Allies. The nearest the Rome radio came to hinting at an anti-German stand was the discontinuance of daily lessons in the German language and failure to broadcast any foreign news, omitting even the daily Nazi war communiqué.

Marshal Badoglio emphasized that the Fascist organization was being liquidated as such by removing Blackshirt guards at the Swiss border and replacing them with regular military police, but he gave no hint as to the whereabouts of Mussolini, who has frequently been reported thin and gaunt recently as a result of illness.

Stockholm newspapers, usually a center for Axis propaganda feelers, also appeared to be without information of a definite nature, but did produce the usual rumors and speculation. One such rumor was that Mussolini had fled to Switzerland or Germany. No source was indicated.

Another conflicting rumor in Stockholm was that Badoglio had arrested Mussolini and other high Fascists and that he would later seek to use them in negotiations with the Allies, possibly offering to turn the Fascists over to the United Nations for trial on “war guilt” charges.

Madrid reports said that Mussolini and other Fascist leaders are under police protection at a villa believed to be in the Rome area.

There was also speculation that Mussolini might have sought to save himself by some negotiations through the Vatican, where his son-ion-law, Count Galeazzo Ciano, has been ambassador and where the Ciano family was expected to take refuge.

The Nazi broadcasts took the position that Mussolini was ill and that the government would fight on with Germany. This position was taken by Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels after considerable delay. The Japanese broadcasts even delayed 16 hours in announcing Mussolini’s resignation.

Badoglio quickly established a drastic military regime in all of Italy.

He ordered a dusk-to-dawn curfew and banned all public meetings in what may have been a move to prevent a civil war between ousted Fascists and supporters of the new Royalist regime.

If the Badoglio government does ask for terms, an authoritative British diplomatic commentator said, Britain will be prepared to deal with him “provided that it is evident he exercises full authority in Italy.”

The only “terms” acceptable to the Allies, as specified by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, will be “unconditional surrender.” Both the United States and Britain had refused even to discuss a separate peace for Italy so long as Mussolini remained at the helm.

The British Cabinet will soon meet to examine the implications of Mussolini’s deposal and decide its attitude toward the new government, the commentator said. The government was said to be watching closely to see whether the Badoglio regime will overthrow the Fascist system or merely substitute a new figurehead for Mussolini.

Unofficial observers said it was well within possibility that the Italians have already indirect contacts with the Allies. Reports circulated that Italian delegates attended the Roosevelt-Churchill Casablanca Conference last winter and only the past fortnight, similar delegates were said to have been in Algiers. None of these reports was confirmed.

With Mussolini out of the way, the Allies were expected to intensify their military and propaganda campaign to knock Italy out of the war and leave Germany alone to face the onrushing Russians from the East and the Allies from the West “before the leaves of autumn fall.”

Germany was also believed to determine the path to be chosen by the Badoglio government. Swedish newspapers quoted the Rome radio as saying that Marshal Albert Kesselring, German commander in Italy, and Hans-Georg Viktor von Mackensen, German Ambassador to Rome, had conferred with Badoglio.

There had been no authentic reports of widespread disorders in Italy preceding Mussolini’s ouster last night, but major trouble is expected when army Royalists take over power from the Fascist hierarchy.

Nearly 300,000 Fascist Blackshirt troops are believed stationed in Italy.

Marshal Badoglio announced the appointment of Raffaele Guariglia, Ambassador to Turkey, as Foreign Minister, an additional portfolio taken over by Mussolini last spring following the removal of his son-in-law, Count Galeazzo Ciano.

Guariglia was reported by Radio Rome to be en route to the Italian capital by plane from Ankara, where he easily could have arranged informal third-party contacts with Allied nations, possibly to extend peace feelers.

The Fascist rule of Mussolini, who gave Italy her greatest modern empire and then lost it all in a mad gamble for additional lands, ended last night with his “resignation,” 20 years and nine months, lacking four days, from the time of his famous “Blackshirt” March on Rome that made him Premier and dictator.

Rigid censorship cloaked any repercussions within Italy from Mussolini’s deposal, but earlier reports from neutral capitals had told of increasing strikes and unrest in his homeland as the Allies turned the full weight of their aerial assault against Italy, rolled across Sicily and threatened the mainland with invasion.

The British and American governments remained silent officially on the sudden shift in the Italian government.

Prime Minister Churchill worked at his desk until the early hours of morning awaiting developments and discussing implications. Cabinet members hurried to Whitehall.

Perhaps significantly, President Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill had told the Italian people in a joint statement only 10 days ago that the deposal of Mussolini was one of the cardinal conditions to a possible peace with Italy.

But Mussolini’s removal alone will not satisfy the allies, sources here emphasized, and the government-controlled BBC told the Italian people:

Now Mussolini has gone. But those to whom he handed over the Italian people, the Germans, are still in Italy… Peace and liberty will not come to the Italian people before the last German soldier has been chased from Italian soil.

Marshal Badoglio’s proclamation of martial law and establishment of a curfew was announced in a manifesto issued through commanders of army corps and territorial defense forces and broadcast by Radio Rome.

Military in charge

The manifesto provided that:

  1. The commander in each province will take over all armed forces including police, militia, citizens’ armed groups, and similar organizations.

  2. All powers for maintaining public order have passed to the military.

  3. The militia will be incorporated in the army.

  4. All public places, such as movie theaters and the like, will be closed.

  5. Meetings of more than three persons anywhere or at any time are prohibited.

  6. Sales of arms and ammunition are banned.

  7. Use of autos, boats or planes except in public or military service with special permit is banned.

  8. All bill-posting except that of Catholic Churches is prohibited, as is signaling of all kinds.

  9. All permits for carrying arms are revoked.

  10. All citizens must carry identification documents.

  11. Only one edition daily of newspapers will be permitted.

The manifesto ordered all troops and other forces to carry out the provisions of the manifesto even if it became necessary to use arms. All arrested will be given a military trial, the Italian broadcast said.

Only priests, doctors, midwives and nurses carrying out their duties were specifically exempted from the terms of the curfew.

People urged

Marshal Badoglio, in his new capacity as chief of government over 40 million Italians, also issued a proclamation – the second since he took office last night – calling on the Italian people to resume their “posts of work and responsibility.”

He said:

This is not a moment to abandon ourselves to demonstrations which will not be tolerated. The present grave hour imposes upon everyone seriousness, patriotism and acts of devotion to the supreme interests of the nation.

Assemblies are prohibited and public forces have been ordered to disperse them ruthlessly.

The drastic measures invoked by Badoglio enhanced the impression that Mussolini’s disposal may have been more of a “palace revolution” than first was indicated.

They also indicated that Italy may have been on the verge of complete internal collapse.

Mussolini’s deposal was revealed in a series of proclamations broadcast by the Rome radio last night.

The first announced that King Victor Emmanuel had accepted Mussolini’s resignation as chief of government, Prime Minister and Secretary of State and had appointed Badoglio, Italy’s greatest soldier, to the three posts.

Proclamation by King

Next came a proclamation from the King, countersigned by Marshal Badoglio, in which the monarch assumed command of the nation’s armed forces and called on the Italian people “in the solemn hour which has occurred in the destinies of our country” to take up again their “post of duty and of fighting.”

The King said:

No deviation must be tolerated. No recrimination must be allowed. Every Italian must stand firm in the face of the grave danger which has beset the sacred soil of the fatherland.

Badoglio, in proclaiming that he was taking over the military government of the country with “full powers,” said:

The war continues. Italy, hard hit in her invaded provinces, in her destroyed cities, loyally keeps her given word, jealous custodian of her military traditions. All must group themselves around His Majesty, the King Emperor, living image of the fatherland and an example for all.

Thus ends Duce’s career

Thus ended the career of Mussolini, who literally rose from the gutter to make Italy a leader among the world powers and then plunged her into her darkest hour by entering the war on the side of his country’s World War I enemy Germany.

His deposal was made all the more complete by the selection of Badoglio, who in 1922 asked the King to permit him to throw Mussolini and his “Blackshirt upstarts” into the sea with a single company of police. Instead, the King turned over the government to Mussolini.

Badoglio, despite his open dislike for Fascism, responded to a call from Mussolini when Italy’s Ethiopian campaign speared on the point of failure, rallied the flagging armies and completed the conquest.

Made army’s scapegoat

He was made chief of the Italian General Staff and retained the post until 1940, when he was made scapegoat for the dismal Italian showing in Greece and Africa and replaced. He has since lived in retirement.

It was noteworthy that the King and Badoglio in their proclamations gave only the date July 25, 1943, and not the usual “year twenty-one of the Fascist era.” Likewise, Rome radio followed the proclamations only with the royal march, omitting for the first time since the advent of Mussolini the Fascist anthem, “Giovinezza.”

Though there was no sign that Italy would withdraw from the war immediately, it was noted that the King in his proclamation calling on the people to do their duty, made no reference to continuing the war.

Devotion to duty stressed

Marshal Badoglio said the war “would continue,” but laid much greater emphasis on devotion to duty, possibly in an attempt to persuade the Italian people to end their strikes and internal dissension.

The authoritative British Press Association commented that Italy’s days as an Axis partner were numbered.

It was virtually impossible to overestimated the repercussion of Mussolini’s ouster, particularly throughout the Balkans.

The encouragement given the guerilla forces in Yugoslavia and Greece is bound to be tremendous and even more serious, from Berlin’s viewpoint, will be the tendency of Romania and Hungary to refuse further demands from Germany for troop levies and to increase their peace feelers through Turkey.

May be aid to Russia

Germany has been dependent upon the Italians and other satellites for the bulk of troops defending Southeastern Europe. If suddenly required to take over responsibility for the defense of the Balkans as well as northern Italy, there is no question but what Germany would be forced to withdraw major forces from Russia.

An American source said the crisis in Italian affairs may have stemmed directly from the meeting a week ago today of Hitler and Mussolini at Verona, in northern Italy. He believed that Mussolini may have entered a final plea for reinforcements to defend Italy, only to be refused because of the Russian offensive on the Eastern Front.

When Mussolini reported this to King Victor Emmanuel, it was said, the King called for and received his resignation.

Another major factor in Mussolini’s ouster may have been his illness. The former Duce has been in poor health for the past five years and has appeared in public less and less frequently. Recent photographs disclosed that he has lost almost entirely his former prominent paunch.

Duce, bum and turncoat, bossed Italy 21 years

Fall comes 38 months after vow to kill off democracies
By the United Press

Benito Mussolini, agitator, bun and turncoat in his time and creator of dictatorship in the modern manner, lasted 21 years as boss of Italy – a great many of them on bluff.

Less than 38 months after he stuck out his lower jaw and promised that his never-produced millions of bayonets would help kill off democracy, Mussolini’s regime died with guns of the Allies firing within hearing distance of the Italian mainland.

It was an easier end than had ever been anticipated for Mussolini – and unexpected. As Mussolini’s rise exemplified the waning of freedom in Europe, his fall was the first big stroke looking toward the freeing of Europe.

It came only four days before his 60th birthday. His armies were failing everywhere. Allied troops marched through Sicily and were in position to threaten the mainland soon. His African empire, won with blood, was gone.

Father was blacksmith

Mussolini, son of a radical-minded blacksmith, led his Blackshirt legions on Rome on Oct. 28, 1922, and became Premier in a bloodless revolution, forcing King Emmanuel to yield. Mussolini himself went before the King, wearing his black shirt and keeping a pistol swinging from his hip.

Taking the title Il Duce (the leader), Mussolini promised that the Fascist Blackshirts, advocates of force, would either get the government quickly or would seize it at the expense of the “miserable dominant class.”

He was then only 38 years old, a strong, vigorous man. Behind him was a long record as a socialist editor and agitator. He was the forerunner from whom Hitler and various other imitators borrowed the ideas for Fascist forms of the corporative state.

Named for Mexican hero

Mussolini became a full-fledged dictator with all the trappings of ancient Caesarism and the talk of a new order of social organization when Adolf Hitler was still an obscure agitator hanging around a Munich beer hall where he recruited the followers for his Nazi movement of 1933.

Mussolini was born July 29, 1883, at Dovia di Predappio, a village in northern Italy where his mother was a schoolteacher and his father Alessandro, a blacksmith. His father named him Benito Juarez after the Mexican revolutionary.

Brawlings and various escapades interrupted his schooling. However, he was educated enough to become a teacher before he started bumming his way through Europe. He was arrested as a socialist agitator when he came back to him hometown and fomented a farm strike.

Denounced as turncoat

Then he moved in with his father, married, and helped around the father’s tavern. He founded a newspaper of agitation that led to his being, by the time of World War I, a man of some prominence in Italy. But his socialist friends denounced him for suddenly turning – some believe because of financial considerations – from a peace-lover to an advocate of Italy’s entrance into the war.

He had founded in 1915 what later became the Fascist Party. He served in the army during the war, rising to sergeant. He once suffered 42 wounds when a trench mortar exploded.

His wife, Donna Rachele of Forli, lived in obscurity. She bore her husband five children.

Made many reforms

Street brawling characterized the rise of Fascism. Unrest was rampant in Italy. At its height, the March on Rome occurred.

With an amazing vigor that infected all the country, Mussolini set out to remake Italy. He accomplished many things, bettering for a time the lot of workers, carrying out pension programs and government reforms but leveling heavy taxes.

He ruthlessly suppressed every free movement, broke up all terrorist organizations and instituted codes that keep Italy functioning.

Climax of this period came when he started to work with Hitler, set out to expand the Italian Empire and eventually conquered Ethiopia in 1936 in defiance of the League of Nations and Great Britain.

Stabs France in back

After Hitler forced World War II on the world in 1939, Mussolini hung back until France was dying before Hitler’s Nazi legions. Mussolini ordered Italian troops into the French Riviera on June 10, 1940.

He said:

Now the die is cast and our will has burned our ships behind us. We are going to war against the decrepit democracies. We shall win and we shall give a long period of peace and prosperity to Italy and the world.

President Roosevelt said Mussolini’s act put a dagger into the back of helpless France. Eighteen months later, Mussolini went to war against the United States with Germany.

Health failing

Mussolini’s present health was not known but he was believed to be failing. Recent pictures showed him losing weight, although for years he has been the most active of the Fascists and forced his followers into feats of strength of prove themselves. He reportedly shunned liquor.

Many times, assassins have tried to kill him. Once, a bullet grazed his nose. Another time, a bomb exploded outside his automobile. He boasted of his allegedly charmed life.

Bruno Mussolini, second son of the dictator, was killed in an airplane crash near Pisa on Aug. 7.

Badoglio derides Fascists; sees his opinion justified

In 1922, military leader wanted to ‘sweep upstarts into the sea’
By the United Press

It took 21 years for Marshal Pietro Badoglio to see his opinion of Benito Mussolini justified, and when it came, he succeeded the dictator as Premier.

Badoglio, now 71, was already famous for his part in World War I, and had served as Italian Chief of Staff when the Blackshirt Fascists poured into Rome in 1922 for the bloodless revolution. Watching the march from a balcony with King Victor Emmanuel, Badoglio said:

Sire, with just one company of Carabinieri, I could sweep those Blackshirt upstarts into the sea.

The King said no.

That remark made Badoglio an enemy of Mussolini but Badoglio stayed prominent in Italian military affairs, saved the Ethiopian campaign and retired as Chief of Staff only when the Fascists had to find a goat for their reverses.

Blamed for Caporetto disaster

Badoglio was born in Grazzano Monferrato, in Piedmont, on Sept. 28, 1871. His active military career began in 1896 in the Eritrean campaign and he fought in 1910 against the Turks in Libya and came out of that war a major.

By the time Italy entered World War I, he was a lieutenant colonel. He was blamed for the Italian disaster at Caporetto, but received a major share of credit for a victory at Vittorio Veneto. After his victory at Sabotino in 1916, he was made a marquis. In November 1919, he was made Chief of Staff.

Immediately after the rise of Mussolini, Badoglio was sent out of the country on goodwill missions by the King to avoid a clash with Il Duce. In 1924 and 1925, he was Ambassador to Brazil, being recalled to take the commission of marshal in the army.

Looked upon as a monarchist leader, Badoglio nevertheless followed Mussolini’s direction because he was an Italian and a soldier.

Saved Ethiopian campaign

The tall, quiet Badoglio became Governor of Libya in 1929, holding the post for five years. The King made him his honorary cousin as a mark of devotion. When the Ethiopian campaign began to bog down, Mussolini asked Badoglio to save him. He did and became viceroy of that new territory in the Empire.

He returned from Ethiopia to become commander-in-chief of the army until the reverses in Albania and North Africa led to his resignation in December 1940. From the obscurity of that retirement – forced by the Fascists – Badoglio was called by the King to lead his nation after Allied armies had wrecked the Empire and pierced the outer boundaries of the homeland.

Badoglio’s son, Paolo, was killed in North Africa two years ago, where he was a flier. His other son, Mario, is also a flier. He has one daughter.

Duce’s ouster hailed as sign Axis is doomed

Nation’s leaders agreed that total collapse of Italy is near
By the United Press

Persons in all walks of life today hailed the ouster of Benito Mussolini as the beginning of the end for Italy and a definite sign that the Axis structure is crumbling.

Comment included:

Former President Herbert Hoover:

The downfall of one of the world’s greatest persecutors… will give heart to every persecuted man and woman in the Axis-occupied world and it is the handwriting on the wall for his colleagues.

Vice President Henry A. Wallace:

Surely it won’t be long now as far as Italy is concerned.

Mayor F. H. La Guardia of New York:

I anticipate the complete capitulation of Italy within the next few days. He [Mussolini] will go down in history as the betrayer of Italy.

Prime Minister John Curtin of Australia:

The repercussions on occupied countries cannot be overstated. Hitler sees in the fate of his ally the handwriting on the wall for himself.

Foreign Minister Ezequiel Padilla of Mexico:

The machinery of the Axis is breaking up.

Count Carlo Sforza, former Foreign Minister of Italy:

If the Fascist machine and the party’s Blackshirted army go on, the world may be entitled to wonder whether the change in Italy is not an indirect service rendered to Hitler in order to allow him to organize his defense in the Alps, while hoping that the United Nations will accept being cheated by a simulated anti-Fascist regime.

If Badoglio advises the immediate dissolution of the National Fascist Party and of the criminal armed gang called the Blackshirted Army and if he frees at once the heroic political prisoners… In that case, it may happen that a new beginning of confidence will be shown in the new government.

Attorney General Francis Biddle:

It looks like the first evidence of the internal breaking up of Italy.

War Manpower Commissioner Paul V. McNutt:

The action would indicate the end of the Fascist regime.

Rep. Sol Bloom (D-NY):

The people respect Badoglio as the only man who had the nerve to tell Mussolini to his face what he thought of him and his regime.

Carol II, exiled King of Romania:

It is widely known that King Victor Emmanuel has been against the war from the very start.

Rep. Vito Marcantonio (ALP-NY):

This is the beginning of the end. Neither the people of the United Nations, nor Americans, will accept any compromise short of unconditional surrender, and that means no dictator and no king.

Ferdinand Pecora, New York State Supreme Court Justice:

Italy will not be in the war for more than a month more.

‘I never give up,’ fallen Benito once boasted

Mussolini in his heyday predicted many Italian ‘triumphs’
By the United Press

Among the heyday boasts of Benito Mussolini were:

June 10, 1940, in declaring war against Britain and France:

Now the die is cast and our will has burned our ships behind us…. We are going to war against the decrepit democracies… We shall win and we shall give a long period of peace and prosperity to Italy and the world.

Feb. 24, 1941:

The war on the continent has ended and it cannot flare back.

July 29, 1941:

Not even the slightest doubt can arise concerning the outcome of this battle. We shall win.

Oct. 28, 1941:

Bolshevism and its befuddled allies of Europe and America will die.

Nov. 18, 1940:

Once I start, I never give up until the end.

March 26, 1939, in discussing Italy’s demands on France:

No matter how things go, we wish to hear no more about brotherhood, sisterhood, cousins and other such… relationships, because relationships between states are relations of force and these relations of force are the determining elements of their policy.

In an address to his Blackshirt followers in the early days of the Fascist regime:

Should I recede, kill me.

A motto he caused to be inscribed on Italian 20 lire coins:

After the first year of war, we are certain of victory.

June 11, 1941:

The entry of the United States into the war would come too late, and even if it did not come too late, it would alter nothing.

Man who escaped Rome says –
Downfall of Mussolini is biggest break of war

Badoglio, known enemy of Fascism, will find way to sever ties with Axis, Packard believes
By Reynolds Packard, United Press staff writer

This dispatch was written by the former manager of the Rome Bureau of the United Press who was interned when the United States declared war on Italy and subsequently released under the exchange agreement. He is an authority on Italian affairs.

Allied HQ, North Africa –
The fall of Mussolini is the most momentous development in the war to date and the first question that follows is: Will Marshal Pietro Badoglio find a way to break with Germany?

That Marshal Badoglio will look for a way is obvious to one who knows Italy. How else could the advent of a known enemy of Mussolini and of Fascism at Italy’s helm be regarded?

I am sure the Italian people know Marshal Badoglio didn’t take over just to follow Mussolini’s policies. And they also must know that Mussolini didn’t desert until the raid on Rome and the defeat in Sicily made him sense inevitable disaster.

The development created great excitement here. Mussolini’s resignation was expected, of course, but not so soon. The next thing that must be ascertained before Marshal Badoglio’s course can be judged is Germany’s reaction.

Hitler’s men in Italy seem to have only one of two possible steps:

  1. They must pull out entirely, giving up Italy to her own future, or

  2. They must cease the role of a Gestapo over Italy and take open steps to make the Italians stay in the war.

When I left Italy more than a year ago, it was estimated Germany had seven divisions in Italy. Lately, they have sent in more, possibly preparing for just such a thing as has happened. I have reason to believe there may be 20 Nazi divisions there now. The Gestapo already controls the Italian secret police.

Thus, Marshal Badoglio’s job of telling Hitler that Italy no longer wants his war is magnified. How the Marshal, who saved Mussolini in Ethiopia and was later discarded by the Fascists, can get the job done is the question. Naturally, it might be asked whether Hitler engineered the deal. That isn’t likely unless Hitler has found Italy is impossible to defend and consented only to neutralize the country and use it as a buffer between Sicily and the German defenses.

Marshal Badoglio’s immediate statement that the “war continues” seems – and I was in Ethiopia with him and know his character – aimed at preventing the Axis from moving in at once. With a few weeks’ delay, he might be able to work things out.

When Marshal Badoglio retired in disgust and anger at what he regarded as the criminal Greek offensive in 1940, he was looked upon by Italians as a symbol of opposition to Mussolini. Why a revolt didn’t develop then is a major Italian mystery.

Two other points come up in the situation:

  1. Did Mussolini save his own skin by making a deal for his resignation?
  2. What is the position of King Victor Emmanuel and the royal House of Savoy?

As to the first, the most probable answer is that he did.

Mussolini has always been a master bargainer and a diplomatic dealer. While I was interned, there were constant rumors in Italy that Mussolini would try to engineer his escape through Vatican City in case of defeat. This was bolstered by the fact that he had made his pampered son-in-law, Count Ciano, Italian Ambassador to the holy See, sand skullduggery was suspected.

Great effect on Europe

The little King and other members of royalty, to my mind, have played along with Fascism. The Prince of Piedmont, for example, commanded Italian forces that marched into France. But for some years, the King’s present feeling toward Fascism has been a matter of speculation.

The fall of Mussolini is bound to have a great effect upon the other states of Europe which have watched him strut about and bluff them for years. And inside Italy, it will change the life of every Italian, allowing him to live a little more like a human.

New York’s ‘Little Italy’ cheers downfall of Duce

Loss of ‘pitcher beer’ forgotten as jubilant throngs pack Mulberry St.

New York (UP) –
Little groups sat in Mulberry St., heart of New York’s “Little Italy” yesterday, bemoaning the latest war casualty of their neighborhood – “pitcher beer.”

Then came word of Benito Mussolini’s resignation.

They forgot “pitcher beer.” The groups became larger and they went from door to door spreading the news. Soon the narrow streets, across which stretch red, white and blue service flags, were filled.

But there was no formal celebration.

Angelina Corzia, busy selling shirt buttons to Chinese laundrymen, said:

Now we will have peace. That Mussolini, he was no good.

She seemed to echo the sentiments of most of the city’s 1,300,000 Americans of Italian descent.

A meeting of the friends of Italy and Sicily was held up for 20 minutes by the cheering which greeted the news. In parks throughout the city, amateur baseball games were broken up as spectators swarmed over the diamonds.

At Yankee Stadium, where 36,779 spectators saw the New York Yankees and the Chicago White Sox divide a doubleheader, an announcer broke in with a special bulletin during the sixth inning of the second game. He got only as far as Mussolini’s resignation. The rest of the announcement was lost in the tumultuous reaction.

Völkischer Beobachter (July 27, 1943)

Regierungswechsel in Italien

Mussolini als Regierungschef und Ministerpräsident zurückgetreten – Marschall Badoglio zum Nachfolger ernannt

dnb. Rom, 26. Juli –
Wie die Agentur Stefani am Sonntagabend bekanntgab, hat der König und Kaiser von Italien eine von Benito Mussolini angebotene Demission vom Amt des Regierungschefs und Ministerpräsidenten angenommen. Er hat zu seinem Nachfolger als Regierungschef und Ministerpräsidenten den Marschall von Italien Pietro Badoglio ernannt.

Man nimmt an, daß dieser Regierungswechsel auf den Gesundheitszustand des Duce zurückzuführen ist, der in der letzten Zeit erkrankt war.

The Pittsburgh Press (July 27, 1943)

Badoglio regime termed one of ‘doubtful quality’

Packard views cabinet as collection of semi-official Fascists, nonentities with few enemies
By Reynolds Packard, United Press staff writer

The following dispatch was written by the former manager of the Rome Bureau of the United Press and an expert on Italian affairs.

Allied HQ, North Africa –
The new Italian Cabinet appears to be not only less liberal than expected but also of doubtful quality to handle Italy’s delicate position.

As a matter of fact, at first glance it seems to be little more than a collection of semi-official Fascists and nonentities put in by Premier Pietro Badoglio only because its membership would not arouse opposition at home.

Most of the men were too obscure to have many enemies in politics. It remains to be seen whether they have the capability necessary to cope with the transition of Italy from an Axis partner to her next step toward peace.

Probably the best known among them is Raffaele Guariglia, new Foreign Minister, a career diplomat who has been Ambassador to Turkey and Argentina. He has less Fascist leanings than the other members, having followed a fairly non-political course during his public service.

Although lack of news obscures the real situation in Italy, Badoglio seems more and more to be playing the part for his country that Pétain played for France. He is trying to maintain order ion the country to prevent bloodshed and trying to ease the nation through a tough period of change before setting out definitely on a course.

Whether he will be any more adept than Pétain at politics is a question.

There is some indication that Rome is making an effort to placate the Allies. For instance, the Rome radio has discontinued its daily German lessons along with its daily Arabic lessons. The latter was a Fascist method of trying to spread itself through the Muslim world.

Not yet, my friend. Not yet.

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It is Italy after all. So this tactic will not apply to other nations.

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Well, I always have been guilty of jumping ahead.

Yeah but if you are looking for confirmation it might, then here you go. When historians look back at the war crime that they claim bombing to be you can’t forget that to those issuing the orders it looks like it is paying off.

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Excellent point,to the Allies going on till the last made no sense this bombing helped to convince. Did the Italians care more for their kids than their “leader”?. When making a strategic choice decision makers assume some logical sense,

Then again historians by definition work with 20/20 hindsight which makes criticising ways.

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Historians are just like patholigists. They survey the scene, tear everything apart to reach the conclusions as to what happened and what the causes were. And it’s always too late to make a difference :grinning:

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I have to agree (I have a history degree as well). We both lived during the cold war and in hindsight it is very easy to pinpoint the “causes” with many countries having different views on what caused the slow ending. Which hardly anyone predicted. Back then I played the simulation game balance of power in 1986 or so on the Amiga and basically everything you tried meant DEFCON 1. (think tennis but then with Nukes :frowning:

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To put on a “Timeshift expirement”:

Imagine we live in the same neighborhood in e.g. the USA and have Normans’ newspapers delivered to us every morning. Moreover we all have a giant maps were we draw out the front. Of course we know how World War 1 ended without having to march into Germany proper. (In spite of the snail pace).

Until June 1942 we were hanging on by our fingernails but now:
Syria is in Allied hands
The Germans + followers were mauled at Stalingrad
The ginormous North African coast is cleared of Germans and Italians
And now in Sicily the AXIS wheels seem to be coming off.

After all Germany gave up 25 years ago after losing its partners, what should we think? The German situation seems hopeless or not?

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Huh. Emulating Matthew Broderick, eh?

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Still a great flick this is the game I was talking about. I remember that graphics to be a lot less crappy :wink:

Balance of Power 1985 [Amiga] - Tedious Retro Gamer - YouTube

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I wish I still in London which gas a cinema which still offers these jewels on the big screen. They even restarted their hilarious :joy: singalongs.

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I believe Italy was done even before they joined uncle Adi’s French campaign.

Italy had pretty much bankrupted itself supporting the Spanish nationalists both in terms of money and materiel. Also, the Italian ‘volunteers’ have the unenviable record of being the only ones to lose a battle against a disorganized anarchist batallion.

Fun fact: most of the republican victories were by those other than the Spanish communist led units, and most of its heavy defeats precisely by those Spanish communists. Of course, others were blamed, but the truth is still clear. Republican Spain would still exist today (probably) if it hadn’t been for Moscow’s insistence on propaganda offensives (ie military offensives for propaganda reasons).