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8,000 Italian Soldiers Trusted Wehrmacht in 1943—And Never Came Home JJ

15 September 1943. The Greek island  of Cephalonia erupts into violence   after Italy’s sudden surrender shatters its  alliance with Nazi Germany. One week earlier,   on 8 September, Italy has capitulated to the  Allies. Southern Italy falls under Allied control,   while Benito Mussolini, rescued by German  commandos, establishes a new Fascist regime in   the German-controlled north. The Italian army is  left divided, confused, and dangerously exposed. 

On Cephalonia, the Italian Acqui Division receives  conflicting orders. After bitter debate among his   officers, General Antonio Gandin allows his  men to vote on whether to resist the Germans.   The majority choose to fight. As a result,  German troops respond with overwhelming force.   Aircraft bomb Italian positions, artillery  pounds the hills, and the island trembles as   former allies turn their weapons on one another.

 Outnumbered and cut off from support, the Italians   surrender after days of fighting, believing they  will be treated as prisoners of war. Instead,   the Nazis commit one of the most hideous war  crimes during the German occupation of Greece.   Thousands of Italian soldiers are executed with  bullets to the back of the head, while others are   forced onto ships that later sink in mined waters.

 This atrocity, committed by the Nazis against more   than 8,000 Italian prisoners of war, becomes known  as the Cephalonia Massacre. However, this crime   will not remain unpunished, and the perpetrators  will pay for their crimes with their own lives. The Second World War started on 1 September  1939, when Nazi Germany invaded Poland.   Less than 2 years later, Adolf Hitler  set his sights on the Soviet Union,   its partner in the war against Poland.

 However, before he could launch Operation   Barbarossa, which was the codename for the  invasion of the Soviet Union, he needed to   secure the southern flank to ensure crucial supply  routes and prevent any interference. Therefore,   on 6 April 1941, Germany invaded Greece with  rapid and coordinated assaults and by 27 April   1941 Athens, the Greek capital, had fallen.

 With mainland Greece under Axis control,   the country was divided between Germany, Italy,  and Bulgaria. The Ionian Island of Cephalonia   fell within the Italian zone of occupation,  where from June 1943 General Antonio Gandin   commanded approximately 12,000 soldiers  of the 33rd Infantry Division “Acqui”.   From the following month alongside them  stood roughly 2,000 German troops under   the command of Oberstleutnant Johannes Barge.

 By the summer of 1943, however, Italy’s war effort   in Europe was collapsing. On 25 July 1943, Italian  dictator Benito Mussolini was removed from power   and arrested by order of King Victor Emmanuel III.  Marshal Pietro Badoglio formed a new government   and began secret negotiations with the Allies.  On 8 September 1943, the Armistice of Cassibile   was announced – marking the end of hostilities  between Italy and the Allies during World War II.  

Southern Italy soon fell under Allied control,  while Mussolini, rescued by German commandos,   was installed as head of a new Fascist regime  in northern Italy under Nazi protection. The German High Command had anticipated this  possibility and under Operation Achse, plans had   been prepared to disarm Italian units and to seize  control of former Italian-occupied territories.  

In Greece, the armistice caused immediate  confusion. Communications with Rome broke down,   and Italian commanders received conflicting  instructions. On Cephalonia, General Gandin   received orders first to cooperate, then to treat  German troops as enemies, and finally to resist   any attempt at disarmament with armed force.

 Negotiations began between General Gandin and   Oberstleutnant Johannes Barge on 9 September 1943.  As a gesture of goodwill, Gandin withdrew from the   strategically important heights of Kardakata,  surrendering a vital defensive position. At   the same time, German reinforcements  were already being moved into position.  On 13 September, when German forces attempted to  land additional troops at the port of Argostoli,   Italian artillery batteries opened fire and  sank two landing craft.

 The brief exchange   marked the beginning of open combat across  the island. Yet even as clashes spread,   Gandin hesitated, still seeking guarantees that  his men would be repatriated safely to Italy.  During the night of 13 September, Gandin  ordered a referendum across the division.   Officers and men were asked to choose between  continued cooperation, surrender, or resistance.  

By the following morning, the result was  clear: the division would fight the Germans.  As negotiations stalled, the Germans prepared  to resolve the crisis by force and presented the   Italians with an ultimatum that expired at 2 PM on  15 September. Even before the deadline passed, the   Luftwaffe, the German Air Force, began bombarding  Italian positions with Stuka dive bombers. 

On the ground, Italian units initially held  the advantage and captured roughly 400 German   soldiers. However, the arrival of fresh German  forces changed the situation. On 17 September,   reinforcements from the elite 1st Mountain  Division under Major Harald von Hirschfeld   landed on the island.

 Among them were elements  of the 98th Mountain Regiment, a unit that had   already taken part in brutal anti-partisan  operations and atrocities against civilians   in the region of Epirus in northwestern Greece  in the months preceding the fight on Cephalonia. At the same time, the Germans dropped propaganda  leaflets over Italian lines. The message read:  “Italian comrades, soldiers and officers,   w

hy fight against the Germans? You have been  betrayed by your leaders!… LAY DOWN YOUR   ARMS!! THE ROAD BACK TO YOUR HOMELAND WILL BE  OPENED UP FOR YOU BY YOUR GERMAN COMRADES.”  Gandin repeatedly appealed to the Italian High  Command for assistance, but no response arrived.   Allied authorities, fearing defection,  refused to allow Italian aircraft or   naval units to intervene, leaving the  Acqui Division isolated on the island. 

German air superiority, combat experience,  and control of key terrain steadily weakened   Italian resistance. After days of bombardment and  mounting casualties, ammunition began to run out.   On 22 September 1943, at eleven o’clock, the  surviving Italian forces laid down their arms. During the fighting, approximately  1,315 Italian soldiers were killed,   while German losses were reported  at around 300 dead.

 Fifteen Greek   partisans also died fighting  alongside the Acqui Division. The Italian soldiers may have surrendered,  waving white flags, but what followed was   one of the largest atrocities carried  out by the Nazis on the Greek territory. Even before the surrender, orders had been  issued from Berlin.

 Adolf Hitler authorized   the summary execution of Italian officers who  resisted, and the German High Command declared   that no prisoners were to be taken, citing what it  called the Italians’ “perfidious and treacherous   behaviour” on Cephalonia. With that directive, the  fate of thousands of Italian soldiers was sealed.  Beginning on 21 September, Italian soldiers  who laid down their arms were assembled in   groups of four to ten and shot at close  range, often where they stood after   surrendering. The executions were carried  out by troops of the 1st Mountain Division,  

many of them Austrians, who moved from  one group to the next without pause.   When several Bavarian soldiers protested  the killing of surrendered prisoners,   they were threatened with summary execution  themselves and forced back into line.  The senior Italian officers met the same fate.

 On  24 September, General Antonio Gandin and 137 of   his officers were hastily court-martialled and  shot, their bodies later thrown into the sea.   The divisional infantry commander, General Luigi  Gherzi, had already been executed on 22 September,   immediately after his capture, while  the fighting was still ongoing. Romualdo Formato, one of the division’s  seven chaplains and among the few survivors,   later described scenes of unbearable anguish.

 As  the executions unfolded, Italian officers wept   openly, prayed aloud, and began to sing. Many  cried out the names of their mothers, wives,   and children. Three officers embraced one another  and declared that they had been comrades in life   and would remain comrades in death, promising  to meet again in paradise. Others clawed at   the grass as if instinct alone might open a  path of escape.

 At one point, German soldiers   moved among the wounded, loudly announcing that  medical assistance would be given. When twenty   men crawled forward in hope, a sudden burst of  machine-gun fire cut them down where they lay. According to the Austrian soldier Alfred Richter,  who later spoke about the events, prisoners were   shot in the head after surrendering, their bodies  thrown into heaps.

 Boots were stripped from the   dead for reuse. Groups of Italians were marched  to quarries and stone-walled enclosures near the   village of Frangata. There, machine guns fired for  hours, the sound of gunfire and the screams of the   condemned echoed through nearby homes. Richter  later admitted that he and many of his comrades   experienced what he described as “a delirium  of omnipotence” as the killings continued.

 He   also recalled a soldier who had once entertained  German troops in local taverns by singing arias;   during the executions, he was forced to sing  again while his fellow Italians were shot. The disposal of the dead revealed the scale of  the slaughter. Thousands of bodies were burned   on massive wooden pyres, the air over the island  thick with the smell of burning flesh.

 Others   were loaded onto ships and buried at sea, or  thrown into the water with stones tied to them.  In Argostoli harbour, executions were carried  out in full view of the Greek population, with   corpses left where they fell as the streets filled  with the stench of decay. The Germans refused to   allow Italian soldiers to bury their own dead.

  When chaplains later searched for remains,   they found bones scattered across the landscape. In one of the final acts of cruelty,   twenty Italian sailors were forced to load the  bodies of executed officers onto rafts and push   them out to sea. The Germans then detonated  the rafts with the sailors still aboard.  By the time the killings ended, an estimated 5,155  Italian soldiers had been massacred on Cephalonia. 

The remaining officers and men were transported  to the mainland and eventually to concentration   camps, but several of the ships struck  mines or were hit in Allied air raids   in the Adriatic Sea. Approximately 3,000 more  Italian soldiers died during those transports. When news of the massacre reached Benito  Mussolini, he reportedly reacted with anger   at the German killing of Italian soldiers, yet  remarked: “Our men defended themselves.

 They hit   several German landing craft, sinking them.  They fought as Italians know how to fight.” The Second World War in Europe ended on  8 May 1945. In the years that followed,   those responsible for killing  Italian prisoners of war,   as well as for atrocities committed  elsewhere in Europe, faced justice. Harald von Hirschfeld, who led reinforcements  from the 1st Mountain Division and played a   major role in the Cephalonia massacre,  was severely wounded during the Battle   of Dukla Pass on the border between  present-day Slovakia and Poland.  

He died of his wounds in January 1945, before the  war had ended. By that time, he had been promoted   to Generalmajor and was the youngest general  officer in the Wehrmacht, the German Army.  Thousands more who had once served  in the 1st Mountain Division were   killed during the Second World war.

 Others  were executed after the war, including the   former divisional commander Josef Kübler, who  was hanged in Ljubljana on 26 February 1947. Thanks for watching the World History  Channel. Be sure to like and subscribe   and click the bell notification  icon so you don’t miss our next   episodes. We thank you and we’ll  see you next time on the channel.