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- History
-
- Benito MussoliniÆs Rise and Fall to Power
-
- Benito Mussolini had a large impact on World War II. He wasnÆt always a
- powerful dictator though. At first he was a school teacher and a
- socialist journalist. He later married Rachele Guide and had 5 children.
- He was the editor of the Avanti, which was a socialist party newspaper
- in Milan.
- Benito Mussolini founded the Fasci di Combattimento on March of 1919.
- ôThis was a nationalistic, anti liberal, and anti socialist movement.
- This movement attracted mainly the lower middle class.ö1 Fascism was
- spreading across Europe. Mussolini was winning sympathy from King Victor
- Emmanuel III. Mussolini then threatened to march on Rome. This persuaded
- King Victor Emmanuel III to invite Mussolini to join a coalition, which
- strongly helped him gain more power.
- Benito Mussolini brought Austria on Germany's side by a formal
- alliance. ôIn 1937, he accepted a German alliance. The name of this
- alliance was the Anti Comntern Pact. On April 13, 1937 Benito Mussolini
- annexed Albania. He then told the British ambassador that not even the
- bribe of France and North Africa would keep him neutral.ö2 The British
- ambassador was appalled and dismayed.
- On May 28, 1937, Mussolini strongly gave thought to declaring
- war. He then attacked the Riviera across the Maritime. ôOn September 13,
- 1937 he opened an offensive into British-garrisoned Egypt from Libya.ö3
- On October 4, 1937, while the offensive still seemed to promise
- success, Benito Mussolini met Adolf Hitler at the Brenner Pass, on
- their joint frontier. ôThe two of them discussed how the war in the
- Mediterranean, BritainÆs principal foothold outside its island base,
- might be turned to her decisive disadvantage. Hitler suggested to
- Mussolini that Spain might be coaxed on the axis side, thus giving
- Germany free use of the British Rock of Gibraltar, by offering Franco
- part of French North Africa, and that France might be persuaded to
- accept that concession by compensation with parts of British West
- Africaö.4
- Mussolini seemed enthusiastic and very understandable why this was the
- case, since this scheme included the gaining of Tunis, Corsica, and Nice
- (annexed by Napoleon III in 1860) from France. Hitler then hurried home
- to his house in Berlin to arrange visits to Franco and Petan. ôBack in
- the capital Hitler created a letter to Stalin inviting Molotov, the
- Soviet Foreign Minister, to visit early, when Germany and the U.S.S.R.
- might then agree among themselves how to profit from Britain not having
- a defense.
- A week later, on October 20, he left in his command train, Amerika, to
- meet Petan and Franco. The meeting with Franco took place on October 23
- at Hendaye on the Franco-Spanish frontier.ö5 It had become quite famous
- in the history of World War Two for Hitlers furious parting shot that he
- would ôrather have three or four teeth extracted from than go through
- that again.ö Franco, who was greatly supported by his Prime Minister,
- Serrano Suner, stonewalled throughout the hours towards negotiation with
- Franco. When his train left at two in the morning, Hitler had not
- advanced an inch towards co-belligerency with Franco.
- Petan met Hitler on October 24, and proved to be equally unresponsive.
- Petan convinced Hitler that they had a meeting of minds. Petan had only
- agreed to a promise to consult his government, Hitler decided to make a
- bigger deal out of it and believed that they were united in a productive
- hostility to Britain.
- Hitler now had the outlines, despite Francos struggle, of a larger
-
- coalition war to present to Molotov at his next visit. ôWhen Hitler was
-
- waiting for the Soviet Foreign minister to come, he was distracted by
- the weird behavior of Mussolini, who then chose to mount an attack from
- Albania (occupied by the Italian army in April 1939) into Greece.ö6
- Mussolini said that he was motivated by the fear that the British would
- establish positions in Greece if he did not. ôHe had good strategic
- reasons for wishing to deny them naval and air bases any closer to his
- own along the Adriatic that those who already possessed in Egypt and
- Malta. He attacked Greece in October, 1937.ö7
- Mussolini's participation in the Battle of France aroused the derision
- of neutrals and enemies. He was determined to win in Greece his share of
- the laurels which had fallen in a not proportionate number to the
- Wehrmacht.
- The failure of Mussolini's invasion of Greece greatly upset Hitler as
- he waited MolotovÆs arrival. This not only messed up his scheme to
- change the Balkans into a satellite zone by peaceful diplomacy; it was
- also upsetting the Soviet Union. ôOn October 31, Britain occupied Crete
- and the Aegean Island of Lemnos with troops sent from Egypt. In the next
- few days they transferred air units to southern Greece, putting
- RomaniaÆs Ploesti oil fields, his main source of supply, in danger of
- bombing attack.ö8
- The Panzer units Mussolini wanted would instead be used for
- communicating in Greece from positions inside Bulgaria, GermanyÆs First
- World War aly, which Hitler was now trying to coax into the tripartie
- Pact, while MussoliniÆs army was left to manage its desert campaign
- against British as best it could. On June 24, 1938 Petain signed terms
- with Mussolini.
- Benito Mussolini was ItalyÆs dictator for 21 years. He had gone through
- a lot with the people of Italy. All in all they did not like Mussolini.
- During the mid summer of 1943 many many supporters turned on him with a
- great passion. Sicily was being overrun by Allied armies. Italys'
- economy went straight downhill from here.
- The Grand Council of Fascist party, a rubber-stamp assembly that had
- not met for 3 and a half years, met to decide MussoliniÆs fate. With
- unexpected anger, Dino Grandi, a much respected council member shouted:
- ôIn this war, we already have a hundred thousand dead, and we have a
- hundred thousand mothers who cry: æMussolini has assassinated my
- son!Æ...You have imposed a dictatorship on Italy that is historically
- immoral.ö After hours of heated debate, the party leaders in the early
- hours of July 25 voted 19-7 for a motion of no confidence in the aging
- dictator. On this very same day King Victor Emmanuel III diverted
- Mussolini of his powers and then later arrested him.
- ôAfter his arrest, Mussolini was taken to a ski lodge on Gran Sasso
- dÆItalia in the Apennine mountains about 75 miles north-west of Rome.
- The lodge was accessible only by a railroad and had been built so
- recently that it was not marked on military maps or on mountain climbers
- charts. But German intelligence agents under the direction of SS Captain
- Otto Skorzeny had learned of MussoliniÆs whereabouts, and at HitlerÆs
- direction a rescue mission was organized.
- To determine how safe the landing will be, Skorzeny flew over the Gran
- Sasso at 15,000 feet in a Heinkel-111. Leaning out the window in a
- numbing 200-mile-an-hour wind, he took pictures while his friend held
- tightly to his legs. These pictures showed a spot where they could land
- their planes.
- When Skorzeny and his 90 men swept silently down on the lodge in 12
- gliders, they discovered to their great dismay that the meadow had a
- rapid drop-off at its end. ôIt was much like the platform for a ski
- jump,ö Skorzeny later said. He ordered his pilot to make a ôvertical
- landingö which tore open his flimsy glider but brought it to a halt in
- less than 30 yards.
- Jumping from the plane, Skorzeny and his men swept past shocked guards
- and without firing a shot made their way to Mussolini. ôI knew that my
- friend Adolf Hitler would not desert me,ö the old dictator said.
- Soon a small plane came into the meadow. When Skorzeny and Mussolini
- climbed in it, the pilot was shocked. With both men in it the plane
- would probably crash. Yet Skorzeny insisted that they go ahead.
- The plane bounced along the meadow, brushed off a rock and staggered
- over the edge of the plateau. It dropped through the thin air, but made
- itÆs way to Rome.ö9
- From Rome, Mussolini was flown to Vienna and finally to WolfÆs lair,
- HitlerÆs headquarters at Rastenburg in East Prussia. Hitler very much
- wanted to restore MussoliniÆs power.
- Yet Duce thought they should retire from the public life so as to avoid
- having Italy in the Civil War. Hitler was quite upset. He argued that
- only a strong fascist government in northern Italy could save the
- Italian people, and that Mussolini could lead such a regiment. Hitler
- was really upset because Mussolini showed no enthusiasm to wreak
- retaliation on the members of the Grand Council who had betrayed
- him-presumably because one of the traitors was his son-in-law, Count
- Galeazzo Ciano.
- After the meeting Hitler told his Minister of Propaganda, Joseph
- Goebels, of his frustration with Mussolini saying that the Duce, whom he
- had once greatly admired, seemed a far smaller man than before.
- Hitler and Mussolini discussed for three days, and the Fuhrer finally
- had his way. On September 15, Mussolini approached him and said, ôI have
- come for my instructions.ö The instructions were very harsh: A new
- Fascist republic would be established in Northern Italy under Mussolini,
- but the Germans would assume control of its foreign policy and many of
- its economic resources and would govern part of the country.
- Also, all the members of the Grand Council that had voted against
- Mussolini would be tried and executed. On September 27, the Duce flew to
- Gargnano, north of Salo, to establish the headquarters of his new
- republic in German-occupied northern Italy.
- As HitlerÆs puppet, Mussolini came to be called ôthe prisoner of
- Gargnano.ö German guards tapped his phone lines and watched his every
- move. ôThey are always there, like the spots of the leopard,ö Mussolini
- once said. His key appointments had to be approved by the Germans, and
- each Italian official was assigned a German adviser.
- Mussolini tried to revitalize the army and to swell the ranks of his
- new social fascist party by promising better working and living
- conditions. But his time was running out: the people had deserted him,
- the Allies were penetrating deeper into Italy, and he was growing
- physically and mentally weaker.
- ôThe people turning on him, and the king arresting him and taking away
- his powers destroyed Mussolini leading him to a morphine addiction.ö 10
- This caused him to become too weak to work long hours, although he kept
- a light on at night in his empty office for show. His moods changed
- daily between outbursts of anger and periods of deep despair. He
- compared himself to Jesus and Napoleon, and blamed his failure on
- others-especially the Italian people. He proclaimed that the people of
- Italy were a ômediocre race of good-for-nothings only capable of singing
- and eating ice cream,ö and he expressed sickly happiness when Naples was
- bombed by the Allies.
- He lived for almost two years after his arrest. He participated in a
- series of bizarre and humiliating experiences before finally coming to a
- gruesome end.
- Mussolini died on a clear spring day in April 1945. Allies had moved
- into the northern part of Italy during the same month. Mussolini
- attempted to flee to Austria. Near the town of Dongo his truck convoy
- was ambushed by partisans. The Duce was dressed as a German soldier, in
- a greatcoat and steel helmet, but his expensive leather boots gave him
- away. The partisans took him to a farmhouse. He was then joined by his
- mistress, Claretta Petacci. Claretta had begged to be reunited with
- Mussolini.
- The next day the communist partisan drove both Claretta Petacci and
- Benito Mussolini to a nearby villa. He ordered the both of them out of
- the car and stuck a machine gun in their guilty as sin faces. This gun
- jammed but he got another one and quickly shot at Claretta Petacci and
- killed her instantly. Mussolini holding back the lapels of his jacket,
- said ôShoot me in the chest.ö The partisan shot him twice in the chest
- and Mussolini was dead.
- The morning after Mussolini and his mistress were slain, the partisans
- dumped their bodies in front of a garage in MilanÆs Puzzle Laureate. A
- crowd gathered around; some people shouted foul language, others just
- stood there and laughed. One woman fired a pistol at Mussolini five
- times to ôavenge her five dead sons.ö Eventually, the two mutilated
- bodies were strung upside down for everyone to see. For hours the crowd
- laughed and spit at MussoliniÆs body. On the following day he was buried
- in the family tomb in Predappo.
-
- by Susie
-