Italian invasion of France

Italian Invasion of France
Part of the Battle of France during World War II

The Val Dora battalion of the 5th Alpini Regiment in action in the Col de Pelouse
Date10–25 June 1940
LocationFranco-Italian border
Result

See Aftermath section

Belligerents
 France
 United Kingdom
Italy Italy
Commanders and leaders
France René Olry Italy Umberto di Savoia
Strength
85,000 300,000
Casualties and losses
229 casualties
1 destroyer damaged
1 sloop damaged
6,029 casualties
1 submarine destroyed

The Italian invasion of France, also called the Battle of the Alps[lower-alpha 1] (10–25 June 1940), was the first major Italian engagement of World War II and the last major engagement of the Battle of France.

Italy's entry into the war widened its scope considerably in Africa and the Mediterranean Sea. The goal of the Italian leader, Benito Mussolini, was the elimination of Anglo-French domination in the Mediterranean, the reclamation of historically Italian territory (so-called Italia irredenta) and the expansion of Italian influence over the Balkans and in Africa. France and Britain endeavoured throughout the 1930s to draw Mussolini away from an alliance with Germany, but Germany's rapid successes in the early phase of the war made Italian intervention on the German side inevitable by May 1940.

Italy declared war on France and Britain on the evening of 10 June, to take effect just after midnight. The two sides exchanged air raids on the first day of war, but little transpired on the Alpine front, since both France and Italy had adopted a defensive posture along their frontier. There was some skirmishing between patrols and the French forts of the Ligne Alpine exchanged fire with their Italian counterparts of the Vallo Alpino. On 17 June, France announced that it would seek an armistice with Germany. On 21 June, with a Franco-German armistice about to be signed, the Italians launched a general offensive all along the Alpine front, with the main attack in the northern sector and a secondary advance along the coast. They penetrated a few kilometres into French territory against strong resistance. The offensive stalled before its primary objectives could be attained, the coastal town of Menton being the most significant conquest.

On the evening of 24 June, an armistice was signed at Rome. It came into effect just after midnight on 25 June, at the same time as the armistice with Germany (signed 22 June). Italy was allowed to occupy the territory it had captured in the brief fighting, a demilitarised zone was created on the French side of the border, Italian economic control was extended into southeast France up to the river Rhône and Italy obtained certain rights and concessions in certain of France's colonies. An armistice control commission, the Commissione Italiana d'Armistizio con la Francia (CIAF), was set up in Turin to oversee France's compliance.

Background

Italian imperial ambitions

Ambitions of Fascist Italy in Europe in 1936.

During the late 1920s, the Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini spoke with increasing urgency about imperial expansion, arguing that Italy needed an outlet for its "surplus population" and that it would therefore be in the best interests of other countries to aid in this expansion.[5] The immediate aspiration of the regime was political "hegemony in the Mediterranean–Danubian–Balkan region", more grandiosely Mussolini imagined the conquest "of an empire stretching from the Strait of Gibraltar to the Strait of Hormuz".[6] Balkan and Mediterranean hegemony was predicated by ancient Roman dominance in the same regions. There were designs for a protectorate over Albania and for the annexation of Dalmatia, as well as economic and military control of Yugoslavia and Greece. The regime also sought to establish protective patron–client relationships with Austria, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria, which all lay on the outside edges of its European sphere of influence.[7] Although it was not among his publicly proclaimed aims, Mussolini wished to challenge the supremacy of Britain and France in the Mediterranean Sea, which was considered strategically vital, since the Mediterranean was Italy's only conduit to the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.[5]

In 1935, Italy initiated the Second Italo-Ethiopian War, "a nineteenth-century colonial campaign waged out of due time". The campaign gave rise to optimistic talk on raising a native Ethiopian army "to help conquer" Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. The war also marked a shift towards a more aggressive Italian foreign policy and also "exposed [the] vulnerabilities" of the British and French. This in turn created the opportunity Mussolini needed to begin to realize his imperial goals.[8][9] In 1936, the Spanish Civil War broke out. From the beginning, Italy played an important role in the conflict. Their military contribution was so vast, that it played a decisive role in the victory of the rebel forces led by Francisco Franco.[10] Mussolini had engaged in "a full-scale external war" due to the insinuation of future Spanish subservience to the Italian Empire, and as a way of placing the country on a war footing and creating "a warrior culture".[11] The aftermath of the war in Ethiopia saw a reconciliation of German-Italian relations following years of a previously strained relationship, resulting in the signing of a treaty of mutual interest in October 1936. Mussolini referred to this treaty as the creation of a Berlin-Rome Axis, which Europe would revolve around. The treaty was the result of increasing dependence on German coal following League of Nations sanctions, similar policies between the two countries over the conflict in Spain, and German sympathy towards Italy following European backlash to the Ethiopian War. The aftermath of the treaty saw the increasing ties between Italy and Germany, and Mussolini falling under Adolf Hitler's influence from which "he never escaped".[12][13]

The Fascist Grand Council in session, 9 May 1936.

In October 1938, in the aftermath of the Munich Agreement, Italy demanded concessions from France. These included a free port at Djibouti, control of the Addis Ababa–Djibouti railway, Italian participation in the management of Suez Canal Company, some form of French-Italian condominium over French Tunisia, and the preservation of Italian culture on Corsica with no French assimilation of the people. The French refused the demands, believing the true Italian intention was the territorial acquisition of Nice, Corsica, Tunisia, and Djibouti.[14] On 30 November 1938, Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano addressed the Chamber of Deputies on the "natural aspirations of the Italian people" and was met with shouts of "Nice! Corsica! Savoy! Tunisia! Djibouti! Malta!"[15] Later that day, Mussolini addressed the Fascist Grand Council "on the subject of what he called the immediate goals of 'Fascist dynamism'." These were Albania; Tunisia; Corsica, an integral part of France; the Ticino, a canton of Switzerland; and all "French territory east of the River Var", including Nice, but not Savoy.[16]

Beginning in 1939 Mussolini often voiced his contention that Italy required uncontested access to the world's oceans and shipping lanes to ensure its national sovereignty.[17] On 4 February 1939, Mussolini addressed the Grand Council in a closed session. He delivered a long speech on international affairs and the goals of his foreign policy, "which bears comparison with Hitler's notorious disposition, minuted by colonel Hossbach". He began by claiming that the freedom of a country is proportional to the strength of its navy. This was followed by "the familiar lament that Italy was a prisoner in the Mediterranean".[lower-alpha 2] He called Corsica, Tunisia, Malta, and Cyprus "the bars of this prison", and described Gibraltar and Suez as the prison guards.[19][20] To break British control, her bases on Cyprus, Gibraltar, Malta, and in Egypt (controlling the Suez Canal) would have to be neutralized. On 31 March, Mussolini stated that "Italy will not truly be an independent nation so long as she has Corsica, Bizerta, Malta as the bars of her Mediterranean prison and Gibraltar and Suez as the walls." Fascist foreign policy took for granted that the democracies—Britain and France—would someday need to be faced down.[17][21][22] Through armed conquest Italian North Africa and Italian East Africa—separated by the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan—would be linked,[23] and the Mediterranean prison destroyed. Then, Italy would be able to march "either to the Indian Ocean through the Sudan and Abyssinia, or to the Atlantic by way of French North Africa".[16]

As early as September 1938, the Italian military had drawn up plans to invade Albania. On 7 April, Italian forces landed in the country and within three days had occupied the majority of the country. Albania represented a territory Italy could acquire for "'living space' to ease it's overpopulation" as well as the foothold needed to launch other expansionist conflicts in the Balkans.[24] On 22 May 1939, Italy and Germany signed the Pact of Steel joining both countries in a military alliance. The pact was the culmination of German-Italian relations from 1936 and was not defensive in nature.[25] Rather, the pact was designed for a "joint war against France and Britain", although the Italian hierarchy held the understanding that such a war would not take place for several years.[26] However, despite the Italian impression, the pact made no reference to such a period of peace and the Germans proceeded with their plans to invaded Poland.[27]

German coal entering Italy through the Brenner Pass. The issue of Italian coal was prominent in diplomatic circles in the spring of 1940.

In September 1939, Britain imposed a selective blockade of Italy. Coal from Germany, which was shipped out of Rotterdam, was declared contraband. The Germans promised to keep up shipments by train, over the Alps, and Britain offered to supply all of Italy's needs in exchange for Italian armaments. The Italians could not agree to the latter terms without shattering their alliance with Germany.[28] On 2 February 1940, however, Mussolini approved a draft contract with the Royal Air Force to provide 400 Caproni aircraft; yet he scrapped the deal on 8 February. The British intelligence officer, Francis Rodd, believed that Mussolini was convinced to reverse policy by German pressure in the week of 2–8 February, a view shared by the British ambassador in Rome, Percy Loraine.[29] On 1 March, the British announced that they would block all coal exports from Rotterdam to Italy.[28][29] Italian coal was one of the most discussed issues in diplomatic circles in the spring of 1940. In April Britain began strengthening their Mediterranean Fleet to enforce the blockade. Despite French misgivings, Britain rejected concessions to Italy so as not to "create an impression of weakness".[30] Germany supplied Italy with about one million tons of coal a month beginning in the spring of 1940, an amount that even exceeded Mussolini's demand of August 1939 that Italy receive six million tons of coal for its first twelve months of war.[31]

Battle of France

Main article: Battle of France
A map of northern France depicting the Anglo-French and German lines.
The situation on 4 June. Belgian, British, and French forces have been encircled near Dunkirk, while the remaining French armies take up positions to defend Paris.

On 1 September 1939, Germany invaded Poland.[32] Following a month of war, Poland had been defeated.[33] A period of inaction, called the Phoney War, then followed between the Allies and Germany.[34] On 10 May 1940, this inactivity ended as Germany launched an offensive against France and, for reasons of military strategy, also attacked the neutral nations of Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg.[35] By the end of May, The Netherlands and Belgium had been overrun.[36]

On 13 May, having traversed the Ardennes, the Germans broke through the French lines and crossed the Meuse at Sedan. The Germans rapidly encircled the northern Allied armies. On 27 May, trapped Anglo-French forces began evacuating the continent from Dunkirk, abandoning their heavy equipment in the process.[37] Following the Dunkirk evacuation, the Germans continued their offensive towards Paris. With over 60 divisions, compared to remaining 40 French divisions in the north, the Germans were able to breach the French defensive line along the River Somme by 6 June. Two days later, Parisians could hear distant gunfire. On 9 June, the Germans entered Rouen, in Upper Normandy.[38] The following day, the French Government abandoned Paris, declaring it an open city, and fled to Bordeaux.[39]

Italian declaration of war

On 23 January 1940, Mussolini remarked that "even today we could undertake and sustain a ... parallel war", having in mind a war with Yugoslavia, since on that day Ciano had met with the dissident Croat Ante Pavelić. A war with Yugoslavia was considered likely by the end of April.[40] On 26 May, Mussolini informed Marshals Pietro Badoglio, chief of the Supreme General Staff, and Italo Balbo that he intended to join the German war against Britain and France, so to be able to sit at the peace table "when the world is to be apportioned" following an Axis victory. The two marshals unsuccessfully attempted to persuade Mussolini that this was not a wise course of action, arguing that the Italian military was unprepared, divisions were not up to strength, troops lacked equipment, the empire was equally unprepared, and the merchant fleet was scattered across the globe.[41][lower-alpha 3] On 5 June, Mussolini told Badoglio, "I only need a few thousand dead so that I can sit at the peace conference as a man who has fought".[43] According to the post-war memoires of Paul Paillole, in 1940 a captain in the French military intelligence, the Deuxième Bureau, he was forewarned about the Italian declaration of war on 6 June, when he met Major Navale, an Italian intelligence officer, on the Pont Saint-Louis to negotiate an exchange of captured spies. When Paillole refused Navale's proposal, the major warned him that they only had four days to work something out before war would be declared, although nothing much would happen near Menton before 19/20 June.[44]

Mussolini delivering his declaration of war speech, from the balcony of the Palazzo Venezia in Rome

On 10 June, Ciano informed his ambassadors in London and Paris that a declaration of war would be handed to the British and French ambassadors in Rome at 1630 hours, local time. When Ciano presented the declaration, the French ambassador, André François-Poncet, was alarmed, while his British counterpart Percy Loraine, who received it at 1645 hours,[45] "did not bat an eyelid", as Ciano recorded in his diary.[46] The declaration of war took effect at midnight (UTC+01:00) on 10/11 June.[47] Italy's other embassies were informed of the declaration shortly before midnight.[46] Commenting on the declaration of war, François-Poncet called it "a dagger blow to man who has already fallen", and this occasioned United States President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's famous remark that "the hand that held the dagger has struck it into the back of its neighbor".[48] François-Poncet and the French military attaché in Rome, General Henri Parisot, declared that France would not fight a "rushed war" (guerre brusquée), meaning that no offensive against Italy was being contemplated with France's dwindling military resources.[48]

Late in the day, Mussolini addressed a crowd from the Palazzo Venezia, in Rome. He declared that he had taken the country to war to rectify maritime frontiers.[49] Mussolini's exact reason for entering the war has been much debated, although the consensus of historians is that it was opportunistic and imperialistic.[50][lower-alpha 4]

French response

On 26 May General Olry had informed the prefect of the town of Menton, the largest on the Franco-Italian border, that the town would be evacuated at night on his order. He gave the order on 3 June and the following two nights the town was evacuated under the code name "Exécutez Mandrin".[56][57] On the evening of 10/11 June, after the declaration of war, the French were ordered from their casernes to their defensive positions.[4] French engineers destroyed the transportation and communication links across the border with Italy using fifty-three tons of explosives.[58][57] For the remainder of the short war with Italy, the French took no offensive action.[59]

As early as 14 May, the French Ministry of the Interior had given orders to arrest Italian citizens known or suspected of being anti-French in the event of war. Immediately after the declaration of war, the French authorities put up posters in all the towns near the Italian border ordering all Italian citizens to report to the local police by 15 June. Those who reported were asked to sign a declaration of loyalty that entailed possible future military service. The response was impressive: a majority of Italians reported, and almost all willingly signed the declaration. In Nice, over 5,000 Italians reported within three days.[60]

Forces

Anglo-French

A black and white photo of a man, looking to the right.
General René Olry, commander of the Army of the Alps

In June 1940, only five Alpine passes between France and Italy were practicable for motor vehicles: the Little Saint Bernard Pass, the Mont Cenis, the Col de Montgenèvre, the Maddalena Pass (Col de Larche) and the Col de Tende. The only other routes were the coast road and the mule trails.[61][62] Prior to September 1939, the Alpine front was defended by the Sixth Army under General Antoine Besson, which contained eleven divisions and 550,000 men—much more than necessary to defend a well-fortified frontier.[63][64] In October the Sixth Army was reduced to the level of an army detachment (détachement d'armée), renamed the Army of the Alps (Armée des Alpes) and placed under the command of General René Olry.[64] A plan for a "general offensive on the Alpine front" (offensive d'ensemble sur le front des Alpes), in the event of war with Italy, had been worked out in August 1938 at the insistence of Generals Gaston Billotte and Maurice Gamelin, and the army was deployed for offensive (not defensive) operations in September 1939.[63] Olry nonetheless received orders not to engage the Italian military unless fired upon.[65]

By December 1939, all mobile troops had been stripped from Olry's army and redeployed north to the main front against Germany, and his general staff had been much reduced.[64] This left Olry with "three Alpine divisions, some Alpine battalions, the Alpine fortress demibrigades, and two Alpine chasseurs demibrigades" totaling between 175,000 and 185,000 men. Of this force, only 85,000 men were based on the frontier: 81,000 men in 46 battalions facing Italy, supported by 65 groups of artillery, and 4,500 facing Switzerland, supported by three groups of artillery.[63][64][65][66][lower-alpha 5] Olry's remaining force consisted of series-B reserve divisions: second-line troops, typically comprising reservists in their forties.[67] Overall, series-B divisions were a low priority for new equipment and there were also issues regarding the quality of training provided to the soldiers over the years.[68] However, the Army of the Alps maintained 86 sections d'éclaireurs-skieurs (SES), platoons of 35 to 40 men. These were elite troops trained in mountain warfare, skiing, mountain climbing, and equipped appropriately.[63][69]

On 31 May, the Anglo-French Supreme War Council came to the decision that, if Italy joined the war, aerial attacks should commence against industrial and oil-related targets in northern Italy. To facilitate this, the French allotted the British Royal Air Force (RAF) the use of two airfields, north of Marseille, to act as forward refueling and operation base for bombers flying from the United Kingdom. The headquarters of No. 71 Wing arrived at Marseille on 3 June, operating under the codename Haddock Force. It comprised Whitley and Wellington bombers from No. 10, 51, 58, 77, 102, and 149 Squadrons.[70][71] The French themselves held back part of the Armée de l'Air in preparation for Italy's possible entry into the war. These units formed the Aerial Operations Zone of the Alps (Zone d'Opérations Aériennes des Alpes, ZOAA), with its headquarters at Valence-Chabeuil Airport.[72][73] Fortunately for the French, Italian army intelligence, the Servizio Informazioni Militari (SIM), had overestimated the number of aircraft still available in the Alpine and Mediterranean theaters by 10 June, when many had been withdrawn to face the German invasion. The actual numbers in the ZOAA were 70 fighters, 40 bombers and 20 reconnaissance craft, with a further 28 bombers, 38 torpedo bombers and 14 fighters with Aéronavale (naval aviation) and three fighters and 30 other aircraft on Corsica.[lower-alpha 6] Italian reconnaissance had put the number of French aircraft at over 2,000,[lower-alpha 7] and that of the British at over 620, in the Mediterranean.[74] SIM also pegged the strength of the Army of the Alps at twelve divisions, although at most it had six by June.[75]

Fortifications

The Little Maginot Line
1–6: Fortified Sector of Savoy
7–12: Fortified Sector of Dauphiné
14–27: Fortified Sector of the Maritime Alps
For a full list and details on the various strong points, see List of Alpine Line ouvrages.

During the 1930s, the French had constructed a series of fortifications—the Maginot Line—along their border with Germany. This line had been designed to deter a German invasion across the Franco-German border and funnel an attack into Belgium, which could then be met by the best divisions of the French Army. Thus, any future war would take place outside of French territory avoiding a repeat of the First World War.[76][77]

In addition to this force, the French had constructed a series of fortifications known as Alpine Line, or the Little Maginot Line. In contrast to the Maginot Line facing the German border, the fortifications in the Alps were not a continuous chain of forts. In the Fortified Sector of the Dauphiné, several passes allowed access through the Alps between Italy and France. To defend these passes, the French had constructed nine artillery and ten infantry bunkers.[lower-alpha 8] In the Fortified Sector of the Maritime Alps, the terrain was less rugged and presented the best possible invasion route for the Italians. In this area, 35 miles (56 km) long between the coast and the more impenetrable mountains, the French constructed 13 artillery bunkers and 12 infantry forts. Along the border, in front of the above main fortifications, numerous blockhouses and casemates had been constructed. However, by the outbreak of the war some of the Little Maginot Line's positions had yet to be completed and overall the fortifications were smaller and weaker than those in the main Maginot Line.[79][80]

Italy had a series of fortification along its entire land border: the Alpine Wall (Vallo Alpino). By 1939 the section facing France, the Occidental Front, had 460 complete opere (works, like French ouvrages) with 133 artillery pieces. As Mussolini prepared to enter the war, construction work continued round the clock on the entire wall, including the section fronting Germany. The Alpine Wall was garrisoned by the Guardia alla Frontiera (GAF), and the Occidental Front was divided into ten sectors and one autonomous subsector. When Italy entered the war, sectors I and V were placed under the command of XV Corps, sectors II, III and IV under II Corps and sectors VI, VII, VIII, IX and X under I Corps.[81]

Italian

A row of round brick turrets can be seen in the foreground. A mountain range occupies the background.
Several of the destroyed artillery turrets of Fort Chaberton.

During the interwar years and 1939, the strength of the Italian military had dramatically fluctuated due to waves of mobilization and demobilization. By the time Italy entered the war, over 1.5 million men had been mobilized.[82][83] The Regio Esercito (Royal Italian Army) had formed 73 divisions out of this influx of men. However, only 19 of these divisions were complete and fully combat ready. A further 32 were in various stages of being formed and could be used for combat if needed, while the rest were not ready for battle.[84]

Italy was prepared, in the event of war, for a defensive stance on both the Italian and Yugoslav fronts, for defence against French aggression and for an offensive against Yugoslavia while France remained neutral. There was no planning for an offensive against France beyond mobilisation.[85] On the French border, 300,000 men—in 18 infantry and four alpine divisions—were massed.[86] These were deployed defensively, mainly at the entrance to the valleys and with their artillery arranged to hit targets inside the border in the event of an invasion. They were not prepared to assault French fortifications, and their deployment did not change prior to June 1940.[87] These troops formed the First and Fourth armies, which were under the command of General Umberto di Savoia of Army Group West (Gruppo Armate Ovest).[lower-alpha 9] The Seventh Army was held in reserve at Turin, and a further ten mobile divisions, the Army of the Po (later Sixth Army), were made available.[lower-alpha 10] However, most of these latter divisions were still in the process of mobilizing and not yet ready for battle.[86][87][92] Supporting Army Group West was 3,000 pieces of artillery and two independent armoured regiments.[84][86] After the campaign opened, further tank support was provided by the Littorio Armoured Division bringing the total number of tanks deployed to around 200.[93] The Littorio had received seventy of the new type M11/39 medium tanks shortly before the declaration of war.[94]

Despite the numerical superiority, the Italian military was plagued by numerous issues. During the 1930s, the army had developed an operational doctrine of rapid mobile advances backed by heavy artillery support. Starting in 1938, General Alberto Pariani[lower-alpha 11] initiated a series of reforms that radically altered the army. By 1940, all Italian divisions had been converted from triangular divisions into binary divisions. Rather than having three infantry regiments, the divisions were composed of two, bringing their total strength to around 7,000 men and therefore smaller than their French counterparts. The number of artillery guns had also been reduced, each division had a single artillery regiment whereas their contemporary counterparts had three or four. Pariani’s reforms also promoted frontal assaults to the exclusion of other doctrine.[86][95][96] Further, army front commanders were forbidden to communicate directly with their aeronautical and naval counterparts, rendering inter-service cooperation was almost impossible.[97]

A small tank, with a motorbike and rider to the right, move towards the camera.
An Italian L3/35, as used during the invasion of France. This photo depicts an Italian tank and German motorbike rider during the invasion of Yugoslavia (1941).

Marshal Rodolfo Graziani had complained that due to the lack of motor vehicles, the Italian army would be unable to undertake mobile warfare as had been envisioned let alone on the levels the German military was demonstrating.[98] The issues also extended to the equipment used. Overall, the Italian troops were poorly equipped and such equipment was inferior to that in use by the French.[65] After the invasion had begun, a circular advised that troops were to be billeted in private homes where possible because of a shortage of tent flies.[99] The vast majority of Italy’s tanks were L3/35 tankettes, mounting only a machine gun and protected by light armour unable to prevent machine gun rounds from penetrating. They were obsolete by 1940, and have been described by Italian historians as "useless".[86][98] According to one study, 70% of engine failure was due to inadequate driver training.[100] The same issue extended to the artillery arm. Only 246 pieces, out of the army’s entire arsenal of 7,970 guns, were modern. The rest were up to forty years old and included many taken as reparations, in 1918, from the Austro-Hungarian Army.[86]

The Regia Aeronautica (Italian Air Force) had the third largest fleet of bombers in the world when it entered the war.[22] A potent symbol of Fascist modernisation, it was the most prestigious of Italy's service branches, as well as the most recently battle-hardened, having participated in the Spanish Civil War.[101] The 1a Squadra Aerea in northern Italy, the most powerful and well-equipped of Italy's squadre aeree,[lower-alpha 12] was responsible for supporting operations on the Alpine front.[103]

Italian aerial defences were weak. As early as August 1939 Italy had requested from Germany 150 batteries of 88-mm anti-aircraft (AA) guns. The request was renewed in March 1940, but declined on 8 June. On 13 June, Mussolini offered to send one Italian armoured division to serve on the German front in France in exchange for 50 AA batteries. The offer was refused.[46][101]

On 29 May, Mussolini convinced King Victor Emmanuel III, who was constitutionally the supreme commander of the Italian armed forces, to delegate his authority to Mussolini,[104] and on 4 June Badoglio was already referring to him as supreme commander.[105] On 11 June the king issued a proclamation to all troops, naming Mussolini "supreme commander of the armed forces operating on all fronts."[104] This was a mere proclamation and not a royal decree; it thus lacked legal force. Technically, it also restricted Mussolini's command to forces in combat, but this distinction was unworkable.[106] On 4 June, Mussolini issued a charter sketching out a new responsibility for the Supreme General Staff (Stato Maggiore Generale, or Stamage for short): to transform his strategic directives into actual orders for the service chiefs.[107] On 7 June Superesercito (the Italian army supreme command) ordered Army Group West to maintain "absolute defensive behavior both on land and [in the] air",[108] casting in doubt Mussolini's comment to Badoglio about a few thousand dead.[109] Two days later, the army general staff (Stato Maggiore del Regio Esercito) ordered the army group to strengthen their anti-tank defenses. However, no attack was planned or ordered for the following day when the declaration of war would be issued.[108]

Battle

Marshal Graziani, chief of staff of the Regio Esercito and de facto front commander in the Alps

Marshal Graziani, as army chief of staff, went to the front to take over the general direction of war after 10 June. He was joined by the under-secretary of war, General Ubaldo Soddu, who had no operational command, but who served as Mussolini's connection to the front and was appointed deputy chief of the Supreme General Staff on 13 June.[105][lower-alpha 13] Graziani's adjutant, General Mario Roatta, remained in Rome to transmit the orders of Mussolini—restrained somewhat by Marshal Badoglio—to the front. Many of Roatta's orders, like "be on the heels of the enemy; audacius; daring; rushing after", were quickly contradicted by Graziani.[110] Graziani kept all the minutes of his staff meeting during June 1940, in order to absolve himself and condemn both subordinates and superiors should the offensive fail, as he expected it would.[111]

Air campaign

In the first air raids of Italy's war, Savoia-Marchetti SM.79s from the 2a Squadra Aerea (Sicily and Pantelleria) under fighter escort twice struck Malta on 11 June, beginning of the long siege of Malta that lasted until November 1942. The first strike that morning involved 55 bombers, but Malta's anti-aircraft defences reported an attack of between five and twenty aircraft, suggesting that most bombers failed to find their target. The afternoon strike involved 38 aircraft.[112][113] On 12 June some SM.79s from Sardinia attacked French targets in northern Tunisia and, on 13 June, 33 SM.79s of the 2a Squadra Aerea bombed the Tunisian aerodromes.[112][113] That day Fiat BR.20s and CR.42s the 1a Squadra Aerea in northern Italy made the first attacks on metropolitan France, bombing the airfields of the ZOAA, while the 3a Squadra Aerea in central Italy targeted shipping of France's Mediterranean coast.[112]

Immediately after the declaration of war, Haddock Force began to prepare for a bombing run. The French, in order to prevent retaliatory Italian raids, blocked the runways and prevented the Wellingtons from taking off.[101] This did not deter the British. On the night of 11 June, 36 RAF Whitleys took off from bases in Yorkshire in order to bomb targets in Turin, the industrial heart of Italy. The bombers refuelled in the Channel Islands, before proceeding. Most were forced to divert over the Alps because of icing conditions and turbulence. During the early hours of 12 June, ten bombers reached Turin, and a further two bombed Genoa. The Italians failed to detect the raid until it was over. The aerodrome at Caselle misidentified the bombers as their own aircraft from Udine and lit up the landing strip for them. At Turin the air raid alarm was not raised until the unmolested Whitleys had left. The results of the action were unimpressive: fifteen civilians killed and no industrial targets damaged.[101]

On 15 June, the French finally permitted Haddock Force to operate. During the evening, eight Wellingtons took off to attack industrial targets in Genoa. Due to thunderstorms and problems locating their target, only one aircraft attacked the city during the early hours of the next day while the remainder returned to base. On the night of 16/17 June, Haddock Force made their final sorties. Nine Wellington bombers took off to bomb targets in Italy, although only five managed to find their objectives. Following which, due to the deteriorating situation in France, the 950 men of Haddock Force were withdrawn by ship from Marseille; their equipment and stores were abandoned.[71][101][114] British bombers reportedly dropped leaflets over Rome saying:

"France has nothing against you. Drop your arms and France will do the same."

"Women of Italy! Your sons and husbands and sweethearts have not left you to defend their country. They suffer death to satisfy the pride of one man."

"Victorious or defeated you will have hunger, misery and slavery."[115]

From bases in French North Africa, the Armée de l'Air bombed Cagliari, Trapani (22 June) and Palermo (23 June).[72] Twenty civilians were killed at Trapani and 25 at Palermo; these were the most severe French bombings of Italian soil.[101][103] These sites were strategically irrelevant and many of the bombers had recently been withdrawn from France in the face of the German advance.[72] Over 600 aircraft had been assembled in French North Africa by 22 June, when General Charles Noguès, commander of French forces in that theatre, requested permission to undertake offensive operations against Italy or Libya and was initially refused.[116]

On 15 June, the 3a Squadra Aerea sent some SM.79s and G.50s to bomb Corsica and, on 16 June, some Breda Ba.88s to strafe the airfields there. The most intense air-to-air combat of the campaign took place over southern France on 15 June, when Italian BR.20s and CR.42 engaged French D.520s and MB.151s. A BR.20 and several CR.42s were lost, and some French aircraft were downed.[112] On 17 June, the Italians bombed the centre of Marseille, killing 143 and wounding 136. On 21 June they bombed the port in a daylight raid and a subsequent night raid.[117] Aerial combats also occurred over Tunisia, with each side claiming kills. On 17 June, some CANT Z.506B floatplanes of the 4a Zona Aerea in southeastern Italy joined some SM.79s in bombing Bizerte in Tunisia. The last Italian aerial operations against France were undertaken on 19 June by aircraft of the 2a and 3a Squadre Aeree and Sardinia against targets in Corsica and Tunisia.[112] On 21 June, nine Italian bombers attacked the French destroyer Le Malin, but scored no hits.[118] On the night of 22/23 June, twelve Savoia-Marchetti SM.81s out of Rhodes made the first bombing run against the British naval base in Alexandria. One bomber ran out of fuel and was forced to ditch on the return leg.[119]

Italian aircraft roundels
Tricolour roundel
(to 1936)
Fascist wing roundel
(from 1936)
Fascist fuselage roundel
(from 1926)

During the general offensive of 21–24 June, the Regia Aeronautica bombed the French fortifications of the Alpine Line to little effect. According to General Giuseppe Santoro, this strategy was incoherent: the fortifications were designed to withstand heavy shelling and partially buried in the mountainsides.[120] He notes further that poor maps, fog and snow made target identification difficult, and the aircrews had not been prepared for such operations, nor were their pre-war studies on them. Only 115 out of 285 Italian bomber sorties during 21–24 June located their targets, dropping only 80 tonnes of bombs.[97][121] On the morning of 23 June, Italian pilots looking for the French artillery at Cap Martin, which was engaging Italian troops in Menton, accidentally bombed their own artillery on Capo Mortola, 10 km (6.2 mi) distant.[122] The Armée de l'Air in southern France took no part in the defence of the Alpine Line, preferring to concentrate on defending its aerodromes from Italian attacks.[121] Stories of Italian aircraft strafing columns of refugees on the road from Paris to Bordeaux, however, have no basis in fact. The Regia Aeronautica never ventured beyond Provence in June 1940 and only targeted military sites. Eyewitness reports of aircraft bearing red, white and green roundels are false, since the Italian air force had replaced the tricolour roundel with a Fascist one by 1940.[123]

Initial fighting

During the day on 12 June, French SES groups crossed the border and skirmished with Italian units in the Maddalena Pass. An Italian outpost was surprised, resulting in the death of an Italian NCO and a further two soldiers being wounded.[71][108] The Italian defensive attitude changed with the collapse of Paul Reynaud's government, in France, on 15 June. Since Reynaud's successor, General Pétain, was known to favour an understanding with Germany, Mussolini believed it was imperative that the Italians make gains before an armistice could be signed. The same day he ordered Army Group West to prepare to begin an offensive in three days: an unrealistically aggressive timeline.[124] Badoglio insisted that converting the troops from a defensive to an offensive disposition alone would take 25 days.[125] The Supreme General Staff thus turned Mussolini's order into two directives: the first permitted Italian incursions into French territory, while the second abrogated the staging plan then in force[lower-alpha 14] and ordered the army group to prepare to take advantage of the possible collapse of the Armée des Alpes.[124] On 17 June, Pétain announced, "It is with a heavy heart that I tell you today that we must stop fighting."[lower-alpha 15] This stoked the belief among the Italians that the French Army of the Alps was on the point of dissolving, if not already in the process of collapse. The Supreme General Staff also falsely believed that the German advance in the Rhône Valley would force the French to begin evacuating their Alpine forts. In orders to his troops on 18 June, General Paolo Micheletti of the 1st Alpine Division Taurinense advised that "a strong resistance cannot be anticipated, owing to the shaken [French] morale."[129] Micheletti, indeed, was more concerned about bands of armed fuoriusciti (Italian political exiles) rumoured to be in the area than about the French.[130]

A mountain. Walls can be seen along several flat sections.
Fort de l'Olive, from the Aiguille Rouge

On 16 June, Marshal Graziani gave the order for offensive operations to begin within ten days. Three actions were planned: Operation B through the Little Saint Bernard Pass, Operation M through the Maddalena Pass and Operation R along the Riviera.[131] That day, elements of the Italian Fourth Army attacked in the vicinity of Briançon. As the Italians advanced, the French at Fort de l'Olive began bombarding the Italian Fort Bardonecchia. In retaliation, the 149-mm guns of the Italian fort on Mont Chaberton—"an imposing structure lost in the clouds at an altitude of 3,130 meters"—were trained on Fort de l'Olive. The Italian bombardment silenced the French fort the following day.[65] On 18 June, the guns of Fort Chaberton, which dominated the Col de Montgenèvre, fired upon the small French Ouvrage Gondran, near Briançon, in aid of the Italian ground advance.[65] The shots did little damage to the French fort, but had a strong moral effect on the French.[59] During the day, Army Group West received two seemingly contradictory orders: "the hostilities against France had to be immediately suspended" and "the preparation for the previously announced [...] operations should continue at the same pace".[124] The purpose of these orders is still not clear, but as word spread through the Italian ranks many began to celebrate the end of the war and even to fraternize with the French. The commanders at the front were ordered to explain the situation correctly to their troops: hostilities would eventually resume.[124] That day Mussolini met Hitler in Munich and was informed that Italian claims on Nice, Corsica and Tunisia were interfering with Germany's armistice negotiations. The implication was clear: Italian claims had to be backed up by military feats if they wanted German support in their claims.[129]

French naval offensive

Prior to the Italian declaration of war, the British Royal Navy and the French Marine Nationale (the French National Navy) had planned to sortie into the Mediterranean and provoke the Regia Marina (the Italian Royal Navy) into battle: the British by sending the Mediterranean Fleet towards Malta (in a move that also sought to test the effectiveness of the Italian air and submarine forces)[lower-alpha 16] and the French by attacking shore targets in the Gulf of Genoa, the Tyrrhenian Sea, along southern Italy, Sicily and the Dodecanese. The Allied fleets held a 12:1 advantage, in the Mediterranean, in Capital ships over the Italians.[lower-alpha 17] Admiral Domenico Cavagnari, chief of staff of the Italian navy, held an opposing view to a decisive battle between the opposing fleets. Cavagnari preferred to utilize his surface force to mine the Sicilian Channel while deploying his submarines en masse to seek out and engage Allied ships.[118]

With France in the process of being overrun by Germany, the naval offensive envisioned by the allies was not undertaken. Rather, four French cruisers supported by three destroyers conducted a patrol of the Aegean Sea during the opening days of the war with Italy while much of the French submarine fleet put to sea.[118] The Royal Navy, instead of sorting towards Malta, confined themselves to the coast of Africa.[118]

On 12 June, elements of the French fleet sortied in response to a report of German warships entering the Mediterranean. The report turned out to be incorrect, the French entered the sights of the Italian submarine Dandolo who fired, without success, on the light cruisers Jean de Vienne, French cruiser La Galissonnière, and Marseillaise.[118] That same day, the Italian submarine Alpino Attilio Bagnolini sank the British cruiser HMS Calypso south of Crete.[134]

The Foch, a Suffren-class cruiser (as were the Colbert and Dupleix).

On 13 June, the Marine Nationale launched Operation Vado. The French 3rd Squadron comprised four heavy cruisers and 11 destroyers[lower-alpha 18] left Toulon and sailed for Italy. At 0426 hours on 14 June, the French heavy cruisers opened fire on shore targets. Firing from 16,000 yards (15,000 metres), the Algérie struck oil storage tanks in Vado Ligure, but soon found subsequent shooting difficult due to "the smoke pouring from the burning tanks", while the Foch fired upon a steel mill in Savona. The Colbert and Dupleix, firing from 14,000 yards (13,000 metres), attacked a gasworks at Sestri Ponente. In response, Italian shore batteries to the west of Genoa and at Savona and an armoured train[lower-alpha 19] opened fire on the attacking French ships. A 6-inch (150-millimetre) shell from the Batteria Mameli at Pegli penetrated the boiler room of the French destroyer Albatros, killing 12 sailors.[118][135] The crew of the Italian torpedo boat Calatafimi, which was in the area of Genoa escorting a minelayer, were taken by surprise by the French attack. Due to misty conditions, the boat's commanding officer believed that he would be able to launch a torpedo strike upon the assaulting French. As the Calatafimi moved into position, it was spotted by French destroyers and engaged. A near miss caused damage to the Italian's boats hull, but it managed to fire four torpedoes at the French force although none struck any targets. A third attempt, aiming for the cruisers Colbert and Dupleix, failed and the boat withdrew towards Genoa. Under pressure from the Italian coastal artillery, the Colbert and Dupleix withdrew.[118] As the capital ships pulled out of range of the Italian guns, their escorting destroyers opened and silenced a shore battery at Cape Vardo.[136] To the southeast of Savona, the Italian 13th MAS squadron had been patrolling and moved rapidly towards the French force, near Genoa and Savona, once they opened fire. MAS539 was able to get within 2,000 yards (1,800 metres) of the Algérie and Foch before firing its torpedoes although without success. As the French withdrew, MAS534 and MAS538 each fire two torpedoes at the French cruisers, although all missed. MAS535 was struck during the squadron's attack, resulting in light damage to the boat and the crew suffering three casualties.[118] The entire force withdrew as planned and arrived back in port before midday on 14 June.[136] In total, the French ships fired 1,500 shells and the Italian shore guns fired around 300. The French reported "that they had subjected their targets to a sustained and effective bombardment", although later noted that "the results of the fire against the shore ... were nearly null, causing damage of no importance."[118] The crew of the Calatafimi believed "the flash of the shell hitting Albatross marked the detonation of their torpedoes." This claim was used for propaganda purposes and "lent an exaggerated aura of efficiency to the Italian coastal forces."[118] In coordination with the Marine Nationale, eight Lioré et Olivier LeO 45s of the Armée de l'Air bombed Italian aerodromes, and nine Fairey Swordfishes of No. 767 Squadron of the British Fleet Air Arm, based in Hyères, attacked Genoa.[101][137] The French naval action precipitated Mussolini's order to the air force to begin strikes on metropolitan France, although reconnaissance operations had already been undertaken.[125]

On 17 June, the French sloop La Curieuse forced the Italian submarine Provana to surface off Oran and then sank it by ramming. La Curieuse also sustained heavy damage. This was the only Italian submarine to be sunk by the French Navy.[138] Further sorties by French cruisers and destroyers on 18 and 19 June did not result in any action. On 21 June, the French battleship Lorraine, accompanied by the British cruisers HMS Orion and HMS Neptune, the Australian cruiser HMAS Sydney, and a further four British destroyers, opened fire on the port of Bardia in Italian Libya.[118] French naval aircraft also attacked Livorno in mainland Italy during some of the last actions of the French against the Italians.[139]

On 18 June, the staff of the Regia Marina conducted a study which showed that a landing on Malta was not feasible, despite the island's paucity of defences. This was accepted by Badoglio at the first meeting of the several chiefs of staff during the war, on 25 June.[140]

Italian offensive (21–24 June)

A French chasseur in 1940

On 19 June, General Roatta wrote to Army Group West that "it might be that there are French troops in the fortifications, but it is probable that the mobile troops, situated in the rear, are already in retreat."[141] These false beliefs about retreat did not trickle down to the front commanders,[129] but belief in low French morale did. Some Italian officers jokingly lectured their troops on how to behave with the French girls.[141] Thus, when the main offensive began, the Italians, led by overconfident officers, advanced in orderly columns into the range of the French forts.[129]

On 19 June, Mussolini ordered his generals to seek contact with the enemy, and at 2050 hours Roatta sent a directive to "undertake small offensive operations immediately [and t]o make contact with the enemy everywhere, to decisively harass enemy forces as harshly as possible."[142] The main offensive was to begin "as soon as possible [and] no later than 23 June" (al più presto possibile ... non oltre il 23 corrente).[143] On the morning of 20 June, Mussolini told Badoglio to start the offensive immediately by the next morning, stating "I do not want to suffer the shame of the Germans occupying Nice and remitting it to us."[143] Badoglio ordered Graziani: "Tomorrow, the 21st, at the commencement of action at 0300 hours, the First and Fourth Armies will whole-heartedly attack along the entire front. Goal: penetrate as deeply as possible into French territory."[143] At 1745 hours that day, Graziani ordered Army Group West:

The Germans have occupied Lyon, it must be categorically avoided that they arrive first at the sea. By three-o'-clock tonight [i.e., 3:00 a.m.], you must attack along the whole front from the Little Saint Bernard to the sea (per questa notte alle 3 dovete attaccare su tutta la fronte dal San Bernardo al mare). The air force will contribute by mass bombardment of the fortifications and cities. The Germans, during the day tomorrow and the day after, will send armoured columns originating from Lyon in the direction of Chambéry, Saint-Pierre de Chartreuse and Grenoble.[143]

Graziani then modified his directive of 16 June: now, the main goal of the offensive was Marseille. This final edition of the offensive plan had only two main actions, Operation M through the Little Saint Bernard and Operation R along the Riviera, the action in the Maddalena Pass being reduced to a diversionary advance.[131][144] The immediate objective of Operation M was Albertville, while that of R was the town of Menton.[145] At 2000 hours on 20 June, Mussolini countermanded the attack order, but before it could go out to the troops, he received confirmation that Germany was continuing its push down the Rhône valley despite the impending armistice. He then revoked his countermand, only shifting the emphasis to the northern sector of the front, as his generals had urged all along.[146]

On 20 June, the guns of Fort Chaberton—nicknamed a "battleship in the clouds" (cuirassé des nuages) by the French[147]—switched targets to Ouvrage Janus. This French position was unable to train its battery of six guns on the Italian position and return fire. Due to the supporting fire of the fort, the Italian troops were able to advance and capture the village of Montgenèvre. However, no further gains were made in the Briançon sector as the French were able to hold the line. On 21 June, the French had been able to maneuver a battery of 280-mm mortars of the 154th Artillery Regiment into a position at the foot of the Fort de l'Infernet to fire on Fort Chaberton. Over a three-day period, with firing delayed and interrupted by adverse weather, the French were able to silence six of the eight armoured turrets of the Italian fort in only 57 shots.[65][59][148] Obscured by fog, the remaining two turrets continued to fire until the armistice.[59]

On 21 June, the main Italian offensive began.[149] Early that morning, Italian troops crossed the French border at points all along the front. Initially, the Italian offensive enjoyed some level of success. The French defensive lines were weakened due to the French high command shuffling forces north to fight the Germans. The Italian forces attacking through the Riviera—about 80,000 strong including reserves—advanced about 5 mi (8.0 km) on 21 June.[139] Near the coast the French had the greatest concentration of forces, about 38,000 troops.[150]

Fourth Army

Alpine Corps
Italian offensive through the Little Saint Bernard towards Bourg-Saint-Maurice

The main Italian attack was by the Fourth Army under General Alfredo Guzzoni.[146] The Alpine Corps reinforced by the corps artillery of the IV Army Corps on its left flank opened up its offensive on a front stretching 21–25 mi (34–40 km) from the Col de la Seigne to the Col du Mont.[145] Its main thrust was through the Little Saint Bernard Pass, which would have been the easiest route, had the French not destroyed the bridges.[151] This route was covered by the Redoute Ruinée, the ruins of an old fort, which the French garrisoned with seventy men plus machine guns,[151][lower-alpha 20] and by the avant-poste (advance post) at Seloge (Séloges).[145] The total strength of the French in the barrage of Bourg-Saint-Maurice, part of the sub-sector (sous-secteur) of Tarentaise, was 3,000 men, 350 machine guns and 150 other guns.[145][lower-alpha 21] These forces were backed by 18 battalions with 60 guns. The primary objectives of the Alpine Corps were capturing Bourg-Saint-Maurice, Les Chapieux, Séez and Tignes. After that, they were to advance on to Beaufort and Albertville.[145]

On 21 June, the right column of the Alpine Corps took the Seigne Pass and advanced several kilometres across a glacier, but were met with heavy fire from Seloge. They quickly outflanked it and on 24 June charged up the Cormet de Roselend, but they were still in the process of completing their encirclement when the armistice was signed.[145] The central column passed through the Little Saint Bernard only to be stopped by fire from the Redoute Ruinée. The 101st Motorised Division Trieste of the Army of the Po was brought up from Piacenza to reinforce the attack. At 1100 hours the Trieste's motorcycle battalion broke through the pass and began a rapid advance for 2 km (1.2 mi). They then forded a river under heavy machine gun fire, while Italian engineers repaired the demolished bridge, suffering heavy losses in the process.[145]

On 22 June, the Trieste's tank battalion passed the motorcycles and was stopped at a minefield.[145] Two L3s became entrapped in barbed wire and of those following one struck a landmine trying to go around the leading two, another fell into a ditch doing the same and the remaining two suffered engine failure.[100] That same day, a battalion of the 65th Motorised Regiment of the Trieste Division was met by French infantry and field fortifications while trying to attack the Redoute from the rear. A machine gun unit relieved them and they abandoned the assault, continuing instead to Séez. The left column of the Alpine Corp met only weak resistance and attained the right bank of the Isère river on 22 June.[145] By the armistice the central column had occupied Séez, but the Italians never brought up the artillery required to reduce the Redoute Ruinée, reinforced in the meantime.[145] Although they did manage to damage the fort, its guns continued to hamper passage of the Little Saint Bernard until the armistice. The Alpine Corps did not take its ultimate objective, Bourg-Saint-Maurice. At the armistice they let the Redoute's garrison march out with honours of war.[151]

I Corps
Italian offensive around Mont Cenis. In the Treaty of Peace with Italy of 1947, the pass of Mont Cenis was ceded to France.

To the south of the Alpine Corps, the I Army Corps advanced along a front of 25 mi (40 km) from Mont Cenis to the Col d'Étache. There subsidiary objective called for them to break through the French forts at Bessans, Lanslebourg and Bramans and the collection of ouvrages (Saint-Gobain, Saint-Antoine, Sapey) overlooking Modane and then turn north in the direction of Albertville.[152] The Battalions Val Cenischia and Susa (under Major Costantino Boccalatte)[153] of the 3rd Alpini Regiment of the Division Taurinense were attached to the Division Cagliari. The main attack of the I Army Corps was a three-pronged drive by the Division Cagliari, involving the capture of Bessans and Bramans, followed by a concerted advance along the river Arc toward Modane. The central column consisted of the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 64th Infantry Regiment and the 3rd Battalion of the 62nd Regiment. They advanced through the Col des Lacs Giaset and advanced down the valley of the Ambin.[152]

The 2nd Battalion of the 63rd Infantry Regiment crossed the Little Mont Cenis towards the village of Le Planay, where it joined the central column, while the 1st Battalion crossed the Pas de Bellecombe and augmented the central column at the village of La Villette. The Val Cenischia unit formed the left column that passed through the Col d'Étache. It was supposed to synchronise its attack on the flank of Modane with the arrival of the central column. The Susa under Major Boccalatte formed the right column and crossed the Pas du Chapeau and the Novalesa pass and followed the river Ribon towards Bessans. It was then to follow the Arc to Lanslebourg, meeting up with Colonel Cobianchi's 3rd Battalion of the 64th Infantry Regiment of the Division Cagliari, advancing across the Col de Mont Cenis. The French garrisons these forces faced were 4,500-strong, backed by two divisions with sixty tanks behind them.[152] The French also had an advanced post at Arcellins, consisting of three blockhouses, which were submerged in fog much of the time.[154] The Italian reserve comprised the Division Brennero around Lake Mont Cenis.[152]

The central column began its descent through the Col des Lacs Giaset shortly after noon on 21 June. As it approached the river Ambin it met strong resistance. The 2nd Battalion coming down the Little Mont Cenis had overcome weak resistance and met the central column. Some small groups were left behind for mopping up operations while the bulk of the column continued its advance towards Bramans. All the Cagliari battalions coalesced around a chapel outside Bramans, and, after eliminating the French field fortifications with artillery fire, they took the city by the end of the first day.[152] One battalion diverted to Termignon to meet up with the Battalion Susa, while the rest proceeded towards Modane. The Battalion Val Cenischia met no resistance as it crossed the Col d'Étache and the Col de Bramanette and emerged in the rear of the Fort de la Balme. The fortifications were taken on 23 June by the Division Cagliari, but the forts in front of Modane—Saint-Gobain at Villarodin and the Barrière de l'Esseillon—were much stronger. The Italians attempted to flank them from the south, and their artillery engaged the forts' guns. The forts were not reduced by the time the armistice came into effect, although the advance units of the Cagliari were with three kilometres (five miles) of Modane.[155]

While the Susa had occupied Lanslebourg and moved on to Termignon, the 3rd Battalion of the 64th Infantry had been held up. Its route was heavily mined and strewn with anti-infantry and anti-tank obstacles. A battalion of the 231st Avellino Infantry Regiment and a tank battalion from the Division Brennero were sent up to assist it.[155] Two L3 tankettes hit landmines on the narrow cliffside road, halting the entire column and allowing the French artillery to eliminate the tanks following.[100][155] The Italian infantry could only advance very slowly into heavy fire and in certain cases, having passed well-concealed French machine gun nests, found themselves taking fire in their rear.[155] The Italians managed to surround the powerful Fort de la Turra, but at the armistice it and the advanced post at Arcellins were still firing.[154] The Italian column had not reached Lanslebourg, which had been occupied days earlier by Major Boccalatte.[155]

First Army

Invasion routes of the First Army

The First Army had been spared responsibility for the main attack—which fell to the Fourth Army in the north—because of the appeals of its commander, General Pietro Pintor, on 20 June.[146] The southern front of the First Army, from Monte Grammondo to the coast, was held by the 37th Mountain Infantry Division Modena and the 5th Infantry Division Cosseria.[44] It had the 52nd Motorised Division Torino of the Army of the Po in reserve.[90][150] It opened its offensive along the whole front on 20 June and in most places was easily repulsed by French artillery.[44]

On 21 June, the units advancing through the Val Roia successfully occupied Fontan. The Cosseria Division, coming down the coast towards Nice, were supposed to be met by some Alpini coming down the valley of the Vésubie and by the San Marco Regiment making an amphibious landing behind the French Ouvrage Cap Martin. The amphibious assault had to be called off for logistical reasons—engine failures, overloaded boats, rough seas. Lacking sufficient landing craft, the Regia Marina had commandeered fishing boats and pleasure boats. The Italian navy attempted some landings, but after several craft grounded the whole operation was called off. The Cosseria Division was met by a barrage of shellfire from Cap Martin and the Ouvrage Mont Agel, which destroyed an armoured train.[44][150] Nonetheless, assisted by thunderstorms and fog, they occupied the lower quarter of Saint-Paul-de-Vence and La Grange on 22 June. Mussolini then gave the order that the Cosseria were to advance at all costs.[44]

On the night of 22/23 June, still under the cover of fog, the Cosseria Division bypassed Cap Martin and then entered the Garavan quarter of Menton. The bypassed French troops continued to fight, firing the fort's armament at Italian coastal shipping, until the armistice.[156] The fighting in the streets of Menton was fierce. The Italians pushed through the Baousset quarter and took the hilltop Capuchin monastery of Notre-Dame de l'Annonciade on 23 June. A planned naval landing at Garavan by the Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale (MVSN) on 24 June had to be called off because of high waves and a full moon.[44] The French—except for the garrison of the advanced fort of Pont Saint-Louis[lower-alpha 22]—gradually withdrew from Menton.[44][150]

The defenders of Pont Saint-Louis

On 24 June, the Italian infantry reached the plain of Carnolès and were repulsed by the French artillery—not by the Tirailleurs sénégalais as sometimes stated. Italian aircraft then bombed the French barracks there. That day the fort of Pont Saint-Louis engaged in its last artillery duel with the Italians. No vehicles managed to cross the bridge before the armistice.[44] The capture of "the pearl of France", Menton, a famous tourist destination, was "an undeniable success (albeit a bit expensive)" (un succès incontestable [même s'il a coûté cher]).[44] Mussolini visited the scene of the battle on 1 July and claimed, in a subsequent radio broadcast from Rome, that "our infantry were supported by an artillery train which came through the tunnel under La Mortola and shelled the strongly held town [Menton] in which the enemy was maintaining an obstinate resistance".[lower-alpha 23]

Along the northern front of the First Army, the 33rd Mountain Infantry Division Acqui, based at the entrance of the Valle Stura di Demonte, comprised six battalions and one legion of the MVSN[lower-alpha 24] and possessed thirty 81-mm mortars, twenty-four 75/13 mountain guns and twelve 100/17 model 16 howitzers. It also had 3,500 mules (on which its artillery was carried) and horses, 68 motor vehicles, 71 motorcycles and 153 bicycles.[158] The initial disposition of the troops was defensive, and some studies had even predicted a French mustard gas attack. On 20 June its orders were to advance up the valley 60 km (37 mi) into French territory on the only road through the valley. Its radios did not function in the rainy weather, and it soon left its food supply far in the rear, but on 23 June it reached the Maddalena Pass—with only one 100/17 howitzer in tow—and began descending the Ubaye Valley into France.[158] Heavy snow and fog slowed their advance, but also prevented the French gunners from adjusting their aim. The Acqui Division did not reach the French fortification until late on the 24th, by which time the armistice had been signed. They lost 32 dead and counted 90 wounded, 198 frostbitten and 15 missing. Because of a lack of artillery in the Ubaye Valley, they had not fired upon the French forts.[158]

Aftermath

Armistice

On 17 June, the day after he transmitted a formal request for an armistice to the German government, French Foreign Minister Paul Baudoin handed to the Papal nuncio Valerio Valeri a note that said: "The French government, headed by Marshal Pétain, requests that the Holy See transmit to the Italian government as quickly as possible the note it has also transmitted through the Spanish ambassador to the German government. It also requests that he convey to the Italian government its desire to find together the basis of a lasting peace between the two countries." That same morning, Mussolini received word from Hitler that France had asked Germany for an armistice, and he went to meet Hitler at Munich, charging General Roatta, Admiral Raffaele de Courten and Air Brigadier Egisto Perino with drafting Italy's demands.[159] The final list of demands actually presented to the French were mild,[160] and Italy dropped its claims to the Rhône valley, Corsica, Tunisia,[lower-alpha 25] and French Somaliland. According to Roatta, it was Mussolini's signorilità (sportsmanship) that compelled him not to demand more than he had conquered.[162]

Badoglio reading the armistice conditions to the French delegation

On the evening of 21 June, Ambassador Dino Alfieri in Berlin transmitted the German armistice terms to Rome. According to Ciano, "under these [mild] conditions, Mussolini is not prepared to make territorial demands ... and [will] wait for the peace conference to make all our formal demands." He added that Mussolini wished to delay the meeting with the French in the hopes that General Gambara would take Nice.[163]

At 1500 hours on 23 June, the French delegation, headed by General Charles Huntziger, who had signed the German armistice the previous day, landed in Rome aboard three German aircraft. The French negotiators were the same who had met with the Germans. The first meeting of the two delegations took place at 1930 hours at the Villa Incisa all'Olgiata on the Via Cassia. It lasted only twenty-five minutes, during which Roatta read out loud the Italy's proposed terms, Huntziger requested a recess to confer with his government and Ciano adjourned the meeting until the next day. During the adjournment, Hitler informed Mussolini that he thought the Italian demands too light, and he proposed linking up the German and Italian occupation zones. Roatta ultimately convinced Mussolini that it was too late to change the demands.[164]

At 1915 hours on 24 June, at the Villa Incisa, after receiving his government's permission, General Huntziger signed the armistice on behalf of the French and Marshal Badoglio for the Italians signed the armistice. Both armistices came into effect at thirty-five minutes past midnight (0035 hours)[lower-alpha 26] on 25 June.[166][167][168] Just minutes before the signing, Huntziger had asked Badoglio to strike the clause calling for the repatriation to Italy of political refugees (like the socialist Pietro Nenni). Badoglio consulted Mussolini, who agreed.[164]

The Franco-Italian Armistice established a modest demilitarized zone 50 km (31 mi) deep on the French side of the border, thus eliminating the Alpine Line. The actual Italian occupation zone was no more than what had been occupied up to the armistice. It contained 832 km² and 28,500 inhabitants, which included the city of Menton and its 21,700 inhabitants.[169] Italy retained the right to interfere in French territory as far as the Rhône, but it did not occupy this area until after the Allied invasion of French North Africa in November 1942.[170] In addition, demilitarized zones were established in the French colonies in Africa. Italy was granted the right to use the port of Djibouti in Somaliland with all its equipment, along with the French section of the Addis Ababa–Djibouti railway. More importantly, the naval bases of Toulon, Bizerte, Ajaccio and Oran were also to be demilitarized.

Casualties

Reported French army casualties vary: 37 or 40 killed, 42 or 62 wounded, and 145 or 155 prisoners (or 150 reported missing).[171][172][173] The Army of the Alps suffered 20 killed, 84 wounded and 154 taken prisoner in the fighting with the German forces advancing from Lyon.[172] Italian casualties amounted to 631 or 642 men killed, 2,631 wounded and 616 reported missing. A further 2,151 men suffered from frostbite during the campaign.[100][171][172] The official Italian numbers were compiled for a report on 18 July 1940, when many of the fallen still lay under snow. It is probable that most of the Italian missing were dead. Units operating in more difficult terrain had higher ratios of missing to killed, but probably most of the missing had died. The 44th Regiment of the Infantry Division Forlì reported 21 dead, 46 wounded, 4 frostbitten and at least 296 missing, almost all whom were captured.[172] The official number of French POWs was 155.[172] All Italian prisoners of war—there is no record of how many there were, perhaps 1,141[173]—were released immediately, but the armistice negotiators seem to have forgotten the French prisoners, who were sent to the camp at Fonte d'Amore near Sulmona, later joined by 200 British and 600 Greeks. Although treated in accordance with the laws of war by the Italians, they probably fell into German hands after Italy's surrender in September 1943.[174]

Analysis

Battle for France. Note Italian invasion in the south.

The limited demands of the Italian Government, at the armistice, provoked several theories from contemporary Italian sources. General Roatta believed that Mussolini curbed his intentions because the military had failed to break the French front line and Mussolini was thus "demonstrating his sportsmanship". Dino Alfieri advanced the popular but controversial argument that Mussolini weakened his armistice demands to "maintain some semblance of a continental balance of power".[175] Historian MacGregor Knox argues that the claims of Ciano and Alfieri are fanciful, but admits that "Mussolini's humiliation over the results of the first day's attack in the Alps ... did contribute to his decision to reduce his demands". Furthermore, Knox comments that Ciano's diary and Mussolini's comments to Hitler "quite adequately explain" the Italian position given the "strategic situation": the military had failed to break through the Alps, and the French were willing to fight on—as Huntziger had made clear to the Germans.[176][177] Historian Samuel Mitcham argues that Mussolini was forced to abandon most of what he wanted at the behest of Hitler, who did not wish to see the arrival of the Italians to be greatly rewarded.[178] This is a view shared by Gerhard Weinberg, who comments that "the singularly inglorious record of the Italians in what little fighting they had done ... facilitated German policy", and forced Mussolini to review his armistice demands.[3] Nevertheless, Italy's war aims remained geographically expansive. A programme published on 26 June set out the acquisition of Nice, Corsica, Tunisia, Malta, southern Switzerland and Cyprus as war aims, as well as replacing Britain and France in Egypt, Iraq, Somaliland, the Persian Gulf and southern Arabia.[179]

The overwhelming historical consensus is that the Italian military fared poorly during the invasion. On 21 June 1940, Ciano recorded in his diary that Mussolini was very humiliated by the invasion of France as "our troops have not made a step forward. Even today, they were unable to pass, and stopped in front of the first French strong point that resisted."[176] Mussolini lambasted the spirit of the Italian people for the failure of the first day of the offensive.[178] Following the armistice, highlighting his unhappiness, he remarked that it was "more a political than a military armistice after only fifteen days of war—but it gives us a good document in hand."[165] Mitcham comments that the severely depleted Army of the Alps, commanded by General Rene Olry, had "held off 32 Italian divisions for five days and inflicted severe casualties" upon the Italians. Mitcham notes that this French victory came as a "surprise and delight" to many "including the vast majority of the German General Staff".[1]

Knox calls the Italian attacks into the Alps a "fiasco", which had morale implications upon the Italian generals, and notes how the campaign was a humiliation for Mussolini.[176] Paul Henry Collier called the Italian attacks "hapless" and the Italian contribution to victory over France as "ignominious".[2] Italian historian Giorgio Rochat wrote that "the end result of the great Italian offensive was quite miserable".[180] Historians J. E. Kaufmann and H. W. Kaufmann likewise highlight how "seven French divisions ... managed to halt an Italian army group of more than 30 divisions". Italian divisions, however, were binary divisions (divisione binaria); that is, consisting of two regiments instead of the usual three. The Italian military requested aid from the Germans, to outflank the French positions. The initial German attack was checked, and the "French soldiers of the Alps ... did not have to face military defeat as their government had finally succeeded in negotiating an armistice with Italy".[156] In an attempt to explain the Italian deficiency, they comment that the Italian superiority in numbers was betrayed by the troops being poorly equipped and such equipment being inferior to that of their French counterparts.[65] Nevertheless, "the stormy Alpine weather was probably the best ally the French had."[97] One German officer who visited the Alpine battle sites after the armistice remarked that the Blitzkrieg tactics that had served Germany well in northern France would have been problematic in the Alpine terrain,[181] which has been called "perhaps the most unsuitable of all conceivable theatres of operation".[182] The attack through the Little Saint Bernard Pass in the Alps also stalled on the first day due to a massive snow storm.[139] Italian troops stuck in the snow were easy targets for French snipers, and the winding mule trails provided plenty of opportunity for SES squads to lay ambushes. The snow also hampered the movement of artillery, food and ammunition to the summits.[129] Richard Carrier, however, shifts the focus away from any perceived Italian deficiencies onto the leadership of General Olry, arguing that it was his leadership and autonomy from the dithering politicians in Paris that allowed him, his staff and his officers to demonstrate remarkable efficiency in the performance of their duties, to check not only the Italian advance, but the German advance down the Rhone as well.[183]

In some cases, the Italians wore their gas masks because of the difficulty of breathing in the driving snow.[100] Advanced troops outran their food supplies and could not be revictualed. For example, on 23 June, the front-line commander of the 4th Alpine Division Cuneense complained to his superior of the Second Army that he was unable to keep in touch with the troops at the front because he could not move his headquarters up the mountain because of the weather.[97] Italian field kitchens sometimes lacked the pots and pans to provide warm meals.[167] The Italians also had an insufficient number of sappers and poor intelligence of French gun emplacements, making the elimination of the enemy forts impossible.[97] In the assessment of General Emilio Faldella, who commanded the 3rd Alpini Regiment during the invasion of France, the Italian leadership was asking too much of its soldiers:

At the front, near the border, the mission of the French forts was to delay the Italian army from reaching the line of defense, made up of steel and concrete fortifications. . . Our infantry had to advance in the open against well-protected troops through a field under French artillery fire. . . And all this was to happen in three to four days. In these conditions, greater Italian manpower has no advantage. . . It would be a mistake to say that a battle was fought in the western Alps; what took place were only preliminary actions, technically called 'making contact'. It is not possible to speak in terms of victory or defeat. . .[142]

Notes

Footnotes
  1. This is a translation of the French term Bataille des Alpes. In Italian, it is called the Battaglia delle Alpi Occidentali, the "Battle of the Western Alps".
  2. The phrase "prisoner in the Mediterranean" had been used in parliament as early as 30 March 1925, by the naval minister Admiral Paolo Thaon di Revel. Revel was arguing for naval funding to receive priority over army funding.[18]
  3. Historian Paul Collier comments that up to "a third of the Italian merchant shipping fleet ... was caught without warning in neutral ports".[2] James Sadkovich provides numbers: "212 of 786 ships over 500 GRT were caught outside the Mediterranean on 10 June 1940—a loss of 1,216,637 GRT of a total 3,318,129."[42]
  4. This view is also supported by historians such as Alan Cassels, MacGregor Knox, Ray Moseley, Circo Paoletti, Giorgio Rochat, Gerhard Schreiber, Brian Sullivan, and Gerhard Weinberg, as well as by contemporary Italian politicians, such as Dino Alfieri and Filippo Anfuso. Historian Denis Mack Smith partially supports this view, but argues that although Mussolini wanted to enter the war, he did not wish to participate actively. Alfieri and the Italian journalist Virginio Gayda argue that the decision to go to war was based in part on the fear of German aggression against Italy. Paoletti notes that Mussolini feared an Italo-German war following the conclusion of the fighting with the Western Powers. Thus, in order to seize his imperial ambitions Mussolini envisioned a limited war with few casualties in order preserve his military strength for the post-war era.[50][51][52][53][54][55]
  5. On 10 May, the order of battle was as follows:
    Army of the Alps
    • Army reserve
      • 8th Colonial Light Infantry Division
    • 14th Corps: General Étienne Beynet
      • Fortress troops
      • 64th Mountain Infantry Division
      • 66th Mountain Infantry Division
    • 15th Corps: General Alfred Montagne
      • Fortress troops
      • 2nd Colonial Infantry Division
      • 65th Mountain Infantry Division
  6. In North Africa the French had 65 fighters and 85 bombers, and in Syria 13 bombers, 26 fighters and 46 other aircraft.
  7. That includes 900 bombers and 1,160 fighters from the ZOAA, North Africa and Syria. These SIM estimates have been taken at face value by some Italian historians.[74]
  8. The French referred to these as ouvrages, in reference to forts from the First World War, which were split into several categories. Gros ouvrages were artillery forts and petits ouvrages were infantry forts.[78]
  9. The Italian order of battle for the invasion of France was as follows:[86][88]
    Army Group West: General Umberto di Savoia (Chief of Staff: General Emilio Battisti)
    II Army Corps: General Francesco Bettini
    Acqui, Forlì, and Livorno infantry divisions.
    Cuneense Alpine Division
    III Army Corps: General Mario Arisio
    Cuneo and Ravenna infantry divisions
    1st Alpine Group (three Alpini battalions and two mountain artillery battalions)
    XV Army Corps: General Gastone Gambara (recalled from his ambassadorial post in Madrid on 10 May)[89]
    Cosseria, Cremona, and Modena infantry divisions
    2nd Alpine Group (four Alpini battalions, one Blackshirt battalion, two mountain artillery battalions)
    Army Reserve
    Cacciatori delle Alpi, Lupi di Toscana and Pistoia infantry divisions.
    Pusteria Alpine Division
    1st Bersaglieri Regiment
    3rd Armoured Regiment
    Monferrato Cavalry Regiment
    • Fourth Army: General Alfredo Guzzoni (Chief of Staff: General Mario Soldarelli)
    I Army Corps: General Carlo Vecchiarelli
    Cagliari, Pinerolo, and Superga infantry divisions
    IV Army Corps: General Camillo Mercalli
    Assietta and Sforzesca infantry divisions
    Alpine Army Corps: General Luigi Negri
    Taurinense Alpine Division
    Levanna Autonomous Group (three Alpini battalions, and one mountain artillery battalion)
    The 3rd Alpini Regiment
    Army Reserve
    Brennero and Legnano infantry divisions
    Tridentina Alpine Division
    4th Bersaglieri Regiment
    1st Armoured Regiment
    Nizza Cavalry Regiment
  10. The Army of the Po—formed in November 1938 under General Ettore Bastico—was composed one corps of two armoured divisions (equipped with L/3 tankettes) and two motorised divisions in the Armoured Corps (Corpo d'armata corazzato), and a second corps of three fast (celeri) divisions (consisting of cavalry regiments and Bersaglieri mounted on bicycles and motorbikes) and three autotrasportabili (auto-transportable) divisions (equipped with mobile artillery and support units).[84][90][91]
  11. Pariani was both under-secretary of war and army chief of staff prior to his retirement in October 1939.[85]
  12. Italy had four geographical squadre aeree (aerial squads) and one zona aerea (aerial zone) covering the peninsula and Sicily. Each squadra aerea was composed of stormi (singular stormo, "flock"), composed of gruppi (singular gruppo, "group") of two squadriglie (singular squadriglia). Each stormo typically operated one type of aircraft.[102]
  13. Mussolini was both Prime Minister and Minister of War.[110]
  14. This was P.R. 12 (Piano Radunata 12 or Staging Plan 12), designed for war with Britain and France, with Greece, Turkey and Yugoslavia neutral.[126] It placed Italian troops in the Alps in a defensive stance. It was first drawn up in January 1938, updated in April 1939 and again in March 1940.[91][127] On 26 May, when the decision for war was taken, a slightly modified P.R. 12bis was adopted, since Yugoslavia was perceived as hostile. This was abandoned after Ciano succeeded in convincing the Yugoslav ambassador of Italy's peaceful intentions towards his country on 29 May.[126]
  15. C'est le coeur serré que je vous dis aujourd'hui qu'il faut cesser le combat.[128]
  16. On 21 September 1939, Italy agreed with Britain that her submarines would remain on the surface and under escort when outside of their exercise areas, of which Britain was to be notified in advance. This meant that any detected submerged submarine was presumed to be hostile.[132]
  17. Overall, on 10 June 1940, the Allied and Italian navies were disposed as follows:[133]
    • British Royal Navy: 62 combat surface ships and 12 submarines based around the Mediterranean.
    • French Navy: 78 surface ship, in addition to six torpedo boats, and 40 submarines based in the Mediterranean.
    • Italian Royal Navy: 83 surface ships, 138 torpedo boats, and 113 submarines.
  18. The heavy cruisers Algérie, Colbert, Dupleix, and Foch. The destroyers Aigle, Albatros, Vauban, Vautour, Guépard, Lion, Valmy, Verdun, Tartu, Chevalier Paul, and Cassard.[118]
  19. The Regia Marina operated two groups of armoured trains (batterie mobili ferroviare), the Genoa Group—with logistical headquarters at La Spezia—and the Palermo Group.[135]
  20. This was Fort Traversette to the Italians, since that had been its original name when built by the House of Savoy (founding royal house of Italy) in the 17th century.
  21. Kaufmann and Kaufmann say that the French positions at Bourg-Saint-Maurice were held by 5,500 troops.[144]
  22. The entire bridge (pont) of Saint-Louis was Italian before the war.[157]
  23. The New Statesman and Nation published a propaganda article mocking the Italian claims.[157]
  24. One MVSN legion (legione) typically possessed about 1,300 men.
  25. The failure to seize Tunis or Bizerte in Tunisia—more valuable ports than those in Italy for supplying Italian troops in Africa—was slammed by Roatta in his memoirs.[161]
  26. Some authorities say 0135 hours,[145][165] which is more consistent with the six hour delay between signing and coming into force reported by Auphan and Mordal.[166]
Citations
  1. 1 2 Mitcham 2008, p. 345.
  2. 1 2 3 Collier 2010, p. 22.
  3. 1 2 Weinberg 1994, p. 140.
  4. 1 2 Kaufmann & Kaufmann 2007, p. 175.
  5. 1 2 Mack Smith 1982, p. 170.
  6. Martel 1999, pp. 184 and 198.
  7. Bideleux & Jeffries 1998, p. 467.
  8. Bell 1997, pp. 70–71.
  9. Martel 1999, p. 198.
  10. Preston 1996, pp. 21–22.
  11. Preston 1996, pp. 22, 50–51.
  12. Bell 1997, pp. 73–74, 154.
  13. Grenville & Wasserstein 2001, p. 211.
  14. Burgwyn 1997, pp. 182–83.
  15. Clark 2005, p. 243.
  16. 1 2 Bell 1997, p. 72.
  17. 1 2 Salerno 2002, pp. 105–06.
  18. Knox 2000, p. 8.
  19. Martel 1999, p. 67.
  20. Clark 2005, p. 244.
  21. Bell 1997, pp. 72–73.
  22. 1 2 Harvey 2009, p. 96.
  23. Mallett 2003, p. 9.
  24. Zabecki 1999, p. 1353.
  25. Bell 1997, pp. 73, 291.
  26. Weinberg 1994, p. 73.
  27. Bell 1997, p. 291.
  28. 1 2 Cliadakis 1974, p. 178–80.
  29. 1 2 Mallett 1997, p. 158.
  30. Sadkovich 1989, p. 30.
  31. Jensen 1968, p. 550.
  32. Evans 2008, pp. 1–2.
  33. Hempel 2005, p. 24.
  34. Mackay 2003, p. 45.
  35. Evans 2008, pp. 122–23.
  36. Mackay 2003, p. 59.
  37. Jackson 2003, p. xvi.
  38. Jackson 2003, p. 101.
  39. Jackson 2003, pp. xvi and 135–36.
  40. Knox 1999, p. 54.
  41. Mitcham 2008, p. 340.
  42. Sadkovich 1988, p. 464.
  43. Badoglio 1946, p. 37.
  44. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Panicacci 1981, pp. 7–9.
  45. Playfair et al. 1954, p. 109.
  46. 1 2 3 Schreiber 1995, p. 107.
  47. Brown 2004, p. 27.
  48. 1 2 Burgwyn 2012, p. 26.
  49. Knox 1999, p. 125.
  50. 1 2 Mallett 1998, p. 186.
  51. Paoletti 2008, p. 171.
  52. Rochat 2008, para. 6.
  53. Weinberg 1994, p. 74.
  54. Martel 1999, pp. 67 and 198.
  55. Moseley 2000, p. 94.
  56. Panicacci 1981, p. 5.
  57. 1 2 Sica 2016, p. 22.
  58. Panicacci 1981, p. 6.
  59. 1 2 3 4 Rochat 2008, para. 22.
  60. Sica 2016, p. 19.
  61. Rochat 2008, para. 2.
  62. David 2008, para. 3.
  63. 1 2 3 4 Rochat 2008, para. 10.
  64. 1 2 3 4 Garraud 2008, paras. 23–24.
  65. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kaufmann & Kaufmann 2007, p. 177.
  66. Plan & Lefèvre 1982, p. 26.
  67. GUF 1967, pp. 737–74.
  68. Jackson 2003, p. 35.
  69. Sumner 1998, p. 45.
  70. Ellis 1954, p. 293.
  71. 1 2 3 Richards 1953, pp. 145–47.
  72. 1 2 3 Harvey 1990, p. 451.
  73. Leulliot 1999.
  74. 1 2 Schreiber 1995, p. 84.
  75. Knox 1999, p. 99.
  76. Jackson 2003, p. 33.
  77. Roth 2010, p. 6.
  78. Kaufmann, Jankovič-Potočnik & Lang 2011, p. 14.
  79. Sterling 2009, p. 207.
  80. Kaufmann, Jankovič-Potočnik & Lang 2011, pp. 82–83.
  81. Kaufmann & Jurga 2002, p. 199.
  82. Rochat 2008, para. 7.
  83. Jowett 2000, p. 3.
  84. 1 2 3 Rochat 2008, para. 8.
  85. 1 2 Rochat 2008, para. 5.
  86. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Jowett 2000, pp. 4–5.
  87. 1 2 Rochat 2008, para. 9.
  88. Nafziger 1997, pp. 1–10.
  89. Knox 1999, p. 100.
  90. 1 2 Nafziger 1997, pp. 15–16.
  91. 1 2 Gooch 2007, p. 413.
  92. Plan & Lefèvre 1982, p. 32.
  93. Sweet 2007, pp. 154 and 169.
  94. Schreiber 1995, p. 75.
  95. Millett & Murray 2010, p. 159.
  96. Paoletti 2008, p. 170.
  97. 1 2 3 4 5 Sica 2012, p. 372.
  98. 1 2 Paoletti 2008, p. 169.
  99. Sica 2012, p. 369 n. 68.
  100. 1 2 3 4 5 Sica 2012, p. 374.
  101. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Harvey 1985, pp. 37–38.
  102. Harvey 2009, p. 101 n. 6.
  103. 1 2 Harvey 2009, p. 97.
  104. 1 2 Smyth 1951, p. 40.
  105. 1 2 Schreiber 1995, pp. 93–94.
  106. Knox 1999, p. 105.
  107. Knox 2000, p. 69.
  108. 1 2 3 Sica 2012, p. 369.
  109. Rochat 2008, para. 11.
  110. 1 2 Rochat 2008, para. 12.
  111. Knox 2000, p. 118.
  112. 1 2 3 4 5 Shores 1976, p. 19.
  113. 1 2 Harvey 2009, p. 99.
  114. Overy 2013, p. 208.
  115. Packard 1940, p. 9.
  116. Thomas 1993, p. 494.
  117. Florentin 2008, p. 54.
  118. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 O'Hara 2009, pp. 12–16.
  119. Harvey 2009, p. 98.
  120. Rochat 2008, para. 24.
  121. 1 2 Rochat 2008, para. 25.
  122. Sica 2012, p. 372 n. 86.
  123. Rochat 2008, para. 26.
  124. 1 2 3 4 Sica 2012, p. 370.
  125. 1 2 Burgwyn 2012, p. 27.
  126. 1 2 Corvaja 2001, p. 113.
  127. Sica 2012, p. 368.
  128. Sica 2012, p. 371 n. 78.
  129. 1 2 3 4 5 Sica 2012, p. 371.
  130. Sica 2012, p. 371 n. 80.
  131. 1 2 Stefani 1985, pp. 108–09.
  132. Playfair et al. 1954, p. 44.
  133. O'Hara 2009, pp. 6–8.
  134. Brescia 2012, p. 46.
  135. 1 2 Brescia 2012, p. 36.
  136. 1 2 Jordan & Moulin 2013, p. 183.
  137. Playfair et al. 1954, p. 110.
  138. Piekałkiewicz 1987, p. 82.
  139. 1 2 3 Piekałkiewicz 1987, p. 83.
  140. Knox 2000, p. 89.
  141. 1 2 Rochat 2008, para. 17.
  142. 1 2 Corvaja 2001, p. 123.
  143. 1 2 3 4 Rochat 2008, para. 14.
  144. 1 2 Kaufmann & Kaufmann 2007, p. 178.
  145. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Andreyev 1941, p. 58.
  146. 1 2 3 Knox 1999, p. 129.
  147. Garraud 2015, para. 63.
  148. Garraud 2015, para. 64.
  149. Rochat 2008, para. 15.
  150. 1 2 3 4 Sica 2012, p. 373.
  151. 1 2 3 Rochat 2008, para. 21.
  152. 1 2 3 4 5 Andreyev 1941, p. 59.
  153. Faldella 1977, p. 19.
  154. 1 2 Garraud 2015, para. 62.
  155. 1 2 3 4 5 Andreyev 1941, p. 60.
  156. 1 2 Kaufmann & Kaufmann 2002, p. 302.
  157. 1 2 K. W. 1940, p. 11.
  158. 1 2 3 Rochat 2008, para. 20.
  159. Corvaja 2001, p. 116.
  160. Corvaja 2001, p. 118.
  161. Knox 2000, p. 99.
  162. Knox 2000, p. 131.
  163. Corvaja 2001, p. 124.
  164. 1 2 Corvaja 2001, pp. 125–26.
  165. 1 2 Knox 1999, p. 133.
  166. 1 2 Auphan & Mordal 1959, p. 112.
  167. 1 2 Jowett 2000, p. 5.
  168. Panicacci 1981, p. 7.
  169. Rochat 2008, para. 27.
  170. Rochat 2008, para. 29.
  171. 1 2 Porch 2004, p. 43.
  172. 1 2 3 4 5 Rochat 2008, para. 19.
  173. 1 2 Garraud 2015, para. 67.
  174. Rochat 2008, para. 28.
  175. Knox 1999, p. 130.
  176. 1 2 3 Knox 1999, pp. 129–32.
  177. Corvaja 2001, p. 121.
  178. 1 2 Mitcham 2008, p. 347.
  179. Knox 2000, p. 78.
  180. Rochat 2008, para. 23.
  181. Sica 2012, p. 378.
  182. Schreiber 1995, p. 246.
  183. Carrier 2008, passim.

References

Books
  • Auphan, Gabriel Paul; Mordal, Jacques (1959). The French Navy in World War II. Annapolis, MD: United States Naval Institute. 
  • Badoglio, Pietro (1946). L'Italia nella seconda Guerra mondiale (in Italian). Milano: Mondadori. 
  • Bell, P. M. H. (1997) [1986]. The Origins of the Second World War in Europe (2nd ed.). Pearson. ISBN 978-0-582-30470-3. 
  • Bideleux, Robert; Jeffries, Ian (1998). A History of Eastern Europe: Crisis and Change. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-16111-4. 
  • Brown, David (2004). Road to Oran: Anglo-Franch Naval Relations, September 1939–July 1980. London: Frank Cass. 
  • Brescia, Maurizio (2012). Mussolini's Navy: A Reference Guide to the Regia Marina, 1930-1945. Annapolis, MD: United States Naval Institute. 
  • Burgwyn, James H. (1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, 1918–1940. Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-94877-1. 
  • Burgwyn, James H. (2012). Mussolini Warlord: Failed Dreams of Empire, 1940–1943. New York: Enigma Books. 
  • Cima, Bernard; Cima, Raymond; Truttman, Michel (1995). La glorieuse défense du Pont Saint-Louis, Juin 1940 (PDF). Menton. 
  • Clark, Martin (2005). Mussolini (1st ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-582-06595-6. 
  • Collier, Paul Henry (2010). O'Neill, Robert, ed. World War II: The Mediterranean 1940–1945. World War II: Essential Histories (1st ed.). Rosen Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-435-89132-6. 
  • Corvaja, Santi (2001). Hitler and Mussolini: The Secret Meetings. New York: Enigma. Translation of Mussolini nella tana del lupo (Milan: Dall'Oglio, 1983) by Robert L. Miller. 
  • Ellis, L. F. (1954). Butler, J. R. M., ed. The War in France and Flanders. History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. Her Majesty's Stationery Office. 
  • Evans, Richard J. (2008). The Third Reich at War. London: Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-713-99742-2. 
  • Faldella, Emilio (1977). Le Truppe alpine nella seconda guerra mondiale. Milan: Cavallotti Editore. 
  • Florentin, Eddy (2008). Les rebelles de La Combattante. Flammarion. ISBN 9782841412266. 
  • Gariglio, Dario (2001). Popolo italiano! Corri alle armi: 10–25 giugno 1940, l'attacco alla Francia. Peveragno: BLU Edizioni. 
  • Gooch, John (2007). Mussolini and His Generals: The Armed Forces and Fascist Foreign Policy, 1922–1940. New York: Cambridge University Press. 
  • Grenville, J. A. S.; Wasserstein, Bernard, eds. (2001). The Major International Treaties of the Twentieth Century: Volume I. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-23798-7. 
  • GUF (1967). Service Historique de l'Armée de Terre. Guerre 1939–1945 2. Paris: Imprimerie Nationale. 
  • Hempel, Andrew (2005). Poland in World War II: An Illustrated Military History. New York, NY: Hippocrene Books. ISBN 978-0-781-81004-3. 
  • Historique du 4e régiment d'infanterie coloniale. Campagne de France, 1939–40. Limoges: Charles-Lavauzelle. 1941. 
  • Jackson, Julian (2003). The Fall of France: The Nazi Invasion of 1940. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-192-80550-8. 
  • Jowett, Philip S. (2000). The Italian Army 1940–45 (1): Europe 1940–1943. Oxford–New York: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-855-32864-8. 
  • Jordan, John; Moulin, Jean (2013). French Cruisers, 1922–1956. Naval Institute Press. 
  • Kaufmann, H. W.; Jankovič-Potočnik, Aleksander; Lang, P. (2011). The Maginot Line: History and Guide. Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-848-84068-3. 
  • Kaufmann, J. E.; Kaufmann, H. W. (2002) [1993]. Hitler's Blitzkrieg Campaigns: The Invasion and Defense of Western Europe, 1939–1940 (2nd ed.). Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-81216-3. 
  • Kaufmann, J. E.; Kaufmann, H. W. (2007). Fortress France: The Maginot Line and French Defenses in World War II. Stackpole Military History Series. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-811-73395-3. 
  • Kaufmann, J. E.; Jurga, Robert M. (2002) [1999]. Fortress Europe: European Fortifications of World War II. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press. 
  • Knox, MacGregor (1999) [1982]. Mussolini Unleashed, 1939–1941: Politics and Strategy in Fascist Italy's Last War. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-33835-6. 
  • Knox, MacGregor (2000). Hitler's Italian Allies: Royal Armed Forces, Fascist Regime and the War of 1940–43. Port Chester, NY: Cambridge University Press. 
  • Mack Smith, Denis (1982). Mussolini. Littlehampton Book Services Ltd. ISBN 978-0-29778-005-2. 
  • Mackay, Robert (2003). Half the Battle: Civilian Morale in Britain During the Second World War. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-719-05894-3. 
  • Mallett, Robert (1998). The Italian Navy and Fascist Expansionism, 1935–1940. Cass Series: Naval Policy and History (1st ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-333-74814-5. 
  • Mallett, Robert (2003). Mussolini and the Origins of the Second World War, 1933–1940. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-714-64432-5. 
  • Mary, Jean-Yves; Hohnadel, Alain; Sicard, Jacques (2009a). Hommes et Ouvrages de la Ligne Maginot, Tome 4: La fortification alpine. Paris: Histoire et Collections. ISBN 978-2-915239-46-1. 
  • Mary, Jean-Yves; Hohnadel, Alain; Sicard, Jacques (2009b). Hommes et Ouvrages de la Ligne Maginot, Tome 5. Paris: Histoire et Collections. ISBN 978-2-35250-127-5. 
  • Martel, Gordon, ed. (1999). The Origins of the Second World War Reconsidered. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-16325-5. 
  • Millett, Allan R.; Murray, Williamson, eds. (2010). Military Effectiveness: Volume 3, The Second World War (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-73751-7. 
  • Ministère de la Défense (2000). Une bataille oubliée: les Alpes, 10–25 juin 1940 (PDF). Mémoire et citoyenneté 6. Direction de la mémoire, du patrimoine et des archives. 
  • Mitcham, Samuel W. (2008). The Rise of the Wehrmacht: The German Armed Forces and World War II, Volume 1. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-99661-1. 
  • Moseley, Ray (2000). Mussolini's Shadow: The Double Life of Count Galeazzo Ciano. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-07917-3. 
  • O'Hara, Vincent P. (2009). Struggle for the Middle Sea: The Great Navies at War in the Mediterranean Theater, 1940–1945 (1st ed.). Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-591-14648-3. 
  • Overy, Richard (2013). The Bombers and the Bombed: Allied Air War over Europe, 1940–1945. New York: Viking. 
  • Paoletti, Ciro (2008). A Military History of Italy. Westport, CT: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-98505-9. 
  • Piekałkiewicz, Janusz (1987). Sea War: 1939–1945. London–New York: Blandford Press. ISBN 978-0-713-71665-8. 
  • Plan, Étienne; Lefèvre, Éric (1982). La bataille des Alpes, 10–25 juin 1940: L'armée invaincue. C.-Lavauzelle. ISBN 978-2-702-50008-8. 
  • Playfair, I. S. O.; Stitt, G. M. S.; Molony, C. J. C.; Toomer, S. E. (1954). Butler, J. R. M., ed. Mediterranean and Middle East. Volume I: The Early Successes Against Italy (to May 1941). History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. 
  • Porch, Douglas (2004). The Path to Victory: The Mediterranean Theater in World War II (1st ed.). Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-20518-8. 
  • Richards, Dennis (1953). Butler, J. R. M., ed. The Royal Air Force 1939–1945, Vol I: The Fight at Odds. History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. 
  • Roth, Ariel Ilan (2010). Leadership in International Relations: The Balance of Power and the Origins of World War II. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-10690-1. 
  • Salerno, Reynolds M. (2002). Vital Crossroads: Mediterranean Origins of the Second World War, 1935–1940. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-801-43772-4. 
  • Shores, Christopher (1976). Regia Aeronautica: A Pictorial History of the Italian Air Force, 1940–1943. Crowley, TX: Squadron/Signal Publications. ISBN 0-89747-060-5. 
  • Sica, Emanuele (2011). Italiani Brava Gente? The Italian Occupation of Southeastern France in the Second World War, 1940–1943 (PDF) (PhD thesis). University of Waterloo. 
  • Sica, Emanuele (2016). Mussolini's Army in the French Riviera: Italy's Occupation of France. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-03985-0. 
  • Stefani, Filippo (1985). La storia della dottrina e degli ordinamenti dell'Esercito italiano, t. 1o: Da Vittorio Veneto alla 2a guerra mondiale, no. 2o: La 2a guerra mondiale, 1940–1943. Rome: Stato maggiore dell'Esercito. 
  • Sterling, Brent L. (2009). Do Good Fences Make Good Neighbors?: What History Teaches Us about Strategic Barriers and International Security. Georgetown University Press. ISBN 978-1-589-01571-5. 
  • Sumner, Ian (1998). The French Army 1939–45 (1): The Army of 1939–40 and Vichy France. Men-At-Arms Series (1st English ed.). Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-855-32666-8. 
  • Sweet, John Joseph Timothy (2007) [1980]. Iron Arm: The Mechanization of Mussolini's Army, 1920–1940. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-811-73351-9. 
  • Vaschetto, Diego (2003). Strade e Sentieri del vallo Alpino. Turin: Ed. del Capricorno. 
  • Weinberg, Gerhard L. (1994). A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-44317-2. 
  • Zabecki, David T., ed. (1999). World War II in Europe: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-824-07029-8. 
Articles
Websites

Further reading

  • Araldi, Vinicio (1965). Dalla non belligeranza all'intervento: Come e perche l'Italia entro in guerra. Capelli. 
  • Azeau, Henri (1967). La guerre franco-italienne: Juin 1940. Paris: Presses de la Cité. 
  • Beraud, Henri (1987). Bataille des Alpes: Album mémorial, juin 1940 – 1944/45. Éditions Heimdal. 
  • Biagini, Antonello; Frattolillo, Fernando, eds. (1986). Diario storico del Comando Supremo: Raccolta di documenti della seconda guerra mondiale, Volume I: 1 giugno 1940 – 31 agosto 1940 (Part I). Rome: Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. 
  • Bonacina, Giorgio (1970). Obiettivo Italia: I bombardamenti aerei delle città italiane dal 1940 al 1945. Milan: Mursia. 
  • Bernotti, Romeo (1960). Storia della Guerra nel Mediterraneo (1940–43). I Libri del Tempo 10. Rome: V. Bianco. 
  • Canevari, Emilio (1948). La guerra italiana, retroscena della disfatti. 2 vols. Rome: Tosi. 
  • Carmona Yáñez, Jorge (1957). Pétain y el armisticio. Madrid: Industrias Gráficas España. 
  • Cull, Brian (2013). First of the Few: 5 June – 9 July 1940. Fonthill Media. 
  • Domeyne, Bernard (1994). Du combat en montagne, l'exemple de la deuxieme guerre mondiale dans les alpes occidentales (1940–1945) (PhD thesis). Paul Valéry University, Montpellier III. 
  • Fenoglio, Alberto (1992). Il vallo alpino: Le fortificazioni delle Alpi occidentali durante la seconda guerra mondiale. Susalibri. 
  • François-Poncet, André. A Palazzo Farnese: Memorie di un Ambasciatore a Roma, 1938–1940. Le Lettere. 
  • Gallinari, Vincenzo (1981). Le Operazioni del giugno 1940 sulle Alpi Occidentali. Rome. 
  • Garello, Giancarlo (1975). Regia Aeronautica e Armée de l’Air, 1940–1943. Rome: Bizzarri. 
  • Lachal, Philippe (2006). Fortifications des Alpes (Ubaye—Ubayette—Restefond): leur rôle dans les combats de 1939–1945. L'Argentière-la-Bessée: Éditions du Fournel. ISBN 978-2-915493-30-6. 
  • Guelton, Frédéric (2001). "La bataille des Alpes". In Lévisse-Touzé, Charles. La campagne de 1940. Paris: Tallandier. 
  • Knox, MacGregor (1985). "The Sources of Italy's Defeat in 1940: Bluff or Institutionalized Incompetence". In Fink, Carole; Hull, Isabel V.; Knox, MacGregor. German Nationalism and the European Response, 1890–1945. Norman. pp. 247–66. 
  • Martel, André (1984). "La bataille des Alpes (juin 1940): De l'engagement raisonné des forces". Stratégique 22. 
  • Masson, Philippe (1991). La marine française et la guerre 1939–1945. Paris: Tallandier. 
  • Minniti, Fortunato (2000). Fino alla guerra: Strategie e conflitto nella politica di potenza di Mussolini. Naples: Edizioni scientifiche italiane. 
  • Minola, Mauro (2010). Battaglie di confine della seconda guerra mondiale in Valle d'Aosta, Piemonte, Riviera Ligure (10/25 giugno 1940). Susalibri. 
  • Montagne, Alfred (1952). La bataille pour Nice et la Provence. Nice: Éditions des Arceaux. 
  • Obici, Alfredo (1942). Dalle Alpi al Pindo: Guerra, 1940–1941. Episodi di valori e di eroismo. Società editrice internazionale. 
  • Pallière, J. (1989). "Les combats de juin 1940 en Savoie: le déferlement des Allemands". Mémoires et documents de la Société savoisienne d'histoire et d'archéologie. L'histoire en Savoie (Société savoisienne d'histoire et d'archéologie) (94): 1–56. 
  • Pallud, Jean Paul (1997). "The Battle of the Alps". After the Battle 97: 1–25. 
  • Pieri, Piero (1971). "La stratégie italienne sur l'échiquier méditerranéen". La Guerre en Méditerranée (1939–1945). Paris. pp. 61–78. 
  • Plan, Étienne; Chiavassa, H. (1989). La bataille des Alpes, 1940: synthèse des journaux d'opérations des unités. Nîmes: C. Lacour. 
  • Rainero, Romain H. (1985). La Commission italienne d'armistice avec la France, les rapports entre la France de Vichy et l'Italie de Mussolini, 10 juin 1940 – 8 septembre 1943. Vincennes. 
  • Rainero, Romain H., ed. (1990–92). Mussolini e Pétain: Storia dei rapporti tra l'Italia e la Francia di Vichy (10 giugno 1940 – 8 settembre 1943). Rome: Stato maggiore dell'Esercito. 
  • Rochat, Giorgio (2008). Le guerre italiane, 1935–1943: Dall'impero d'Etiopia alla disfatta (2nd ed.). Turin: Einaudi Storia. 
  • Sadkovich, James J. (1994). The Italian Navy in World War II. Greenwood Press. 
  • Schiavon, Max (2007). Une victoire dans la défaite: La destruction du Chaberton, Briançon 1940. Éditions Anovi. 
  • Schiavon, Max (2009). Une victoire dans la défaite: Racines, enjeux, significations: Le XIVème corps d'armée sur le front central des Alpes en juin 1940 (PhD thesis). Université de Lorraine (Metz). 
  • Schiavon, Max (2011). Victoire sur les alpes. Juin 1940. Briançonnais, Queyras, Ubaye. Mens Sana Éditions. 
  • Schiavon, Max; Le Moal, Frédéric (2010). Juin 1940. La guerre des Alpes. Enjeux et stratégies. Campagnes et stratégies. Economica. 
  • Shirer, William (1969). Collapse of the Third Republic: An Inquiry into the Fall of France in 1940. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-20337-5. 
  • Turinetti di Priero, Alberto (1990). La battaglia delle Alpi, 10–25 giugno 1940: La Divisione Superga e gli Alpini nell'Alta Valle di Susa. Susalibri. 
  • Ufficio Storico dell'Esercito [USE] (1981). La battaglia delle Alpi Occidentali. Rome. 
  • Ufficio Storico della Marina Militare [USMM] (1970). Le azioni navali in Mediterraneo dal 10 giugno 1940 al 31 marzo 1941. Rome. 
  • Zambon, David (2010). "L'heure des décisions irrévocables: 10 juin 1940, l'Italie entre en guerre". Histoire(s) de la Dernière Guerre 5. 
  • Zamagni, Vera (1998). "Italy: How to Lose the War and Win the Peace". In Harrison, Mark. The Economics of World War II: Six Great Powers in International Comparison. Cambridge University Press. pp. 177–223. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.