Biscari massacre
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The Biscari massacre was a series of two incidents caused by U.S. troops during World War II, in which unarmed German and Italian prisoners of war were killed at Biscari in 1943.
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[edit] Massacre
Following the capture of Biscari Airfield in Sicily on July 14, 1943, seventy-four Italian and two German POWs were shot by American troops of the 180th Regimental Combat Team, 45th Division during the Allied invasion of Sicily. These killings occurred in two separate incidents between July and August 1943. The first incident involved 34 Italians and 2 Germans, while the second involved 40 Italians.[citation needed]
Sergeant Horace T. West was charged in the first incident with killing the 36 POWs under his charge. West admitted that he had participated in the shootings, was found guilty, stripped of rank and sentenced to life in prison, though he was later released as a private. In the second incident, Captain John T. Compton was court-martialed for killing 40 POWs in his charge. He claimed to be following orders. The investigating officer and the Judge Advocate declared that Compton's actions were unlawful, but he was acquitted. Compton was merely transferred to another regiment and died a year later fighting in Italy. This was seen at the time as a clear case of injustice and differing treatment for officers and NCOs.[citation needed]
Those involved claimed in their defense they were following orders. They quoted General George S. Patton’s speech to them before the invasion of Sicily:
When we land against the enemy, don't forget to hit him and hit him hard. When we meet the enemy we will kill him. We will show him no mercy. He has killed thousands of your comrades and he must die. If you company officers in leading your men against the enemy find him shooting at you and when you get within two hundred yards of him he wishes to surrender – oh no! That bastard will die! You will kill him. Stick him between the third and fourth ribs. You will tell your men that. They must have the killer instinct. Tell them to stick him. Stick him in the liver. We will get the name of killers and killers are immortal. When word reaches him that he is being faced by a killer battalion he will fight less. We must build up that name as killers.
—George S. Patton[1]
Neither Patton nor the unit commanding officer, Colonel E. Cookson, was held officially responsible.[citation needed]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Botting p. 355
[edit] References
- Botting, Douglas & Sayer, Ian: Hitler's Last General: The case against Wilhelm Mohnke. Bantam Books, London, 1989, 354-9
[edit] Further reading
- Atkinson, Rick (2007). The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944 (The Liberation Trilogy). New York: Henry Holt and Co.. ISBN 0805062890.
- James Weingartner, `Massacre at Biscari: Patton and An American War Crime, The Historian LII, no. 1, (November 1989), 24-39.
- Giovanni Bartolone,Le altre stragi. Le stragi alleate e tedesche nella Sicilia del 1943-1944, 2005, Tipografia Aiello & Provenzano Bagheria ( PA ), Italy, 2005.