History That Doesn't Suck - 201: A Soft Underbelly: The Allied Invasion of Sicily & the Fall of Il Duce
Episode Date: March 16, 2026"My dear Duce, it’s no longer any good… At this moment you are the most hated man in Italy.” This is the story of Operations Underworld, Mincemeat, and Husky. On the heels of the decisive ...Allied victory in Africa, leaders decide to take the fight north. But Hitler and Mussolini surely know they’ll be aiming for Sicily next, right? Actually, pre-Husky Allied intelligence victories have the Germans and Italians barking up the wrong tree (shoring up the wrong island defenses), all thanks to one Major William Martin. Meanwhile, back in mainland Europe, Germany is wondering if Italy is still 100% committed to the Fascist alliance. After all, Mussolini’s popularity is tanking, and it looks like he might get the boot any day. Things are… uncertain, to say the least. How will the combined Allied forces fare in Sicily? Which army will win the race to catch the Axis retreaters at Messina? Will George Patton get promoted again, as he so desperately wants? And perhaps most importantly—where to next? ____ Connect with us on HTDSpodcast.com and go deep into episode bibliographies and book recommendations join discussions in our Facebook community get news and discounts from The HTDS Gazette come see a live show get HTDS merch or become an HTDS premium member for bonus episodes and other perks. HTDS is part of Audacy media network. Interested in advertising on the History That Doesn't Suck? Contact Audacyinc.com. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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My friends, it's Professor Jackson.
I know you hear me from time to time promoting live shows or the HDDS membership program and so forth.
But what sounds like self-promotion is actually much more about you, the listeners.
I started this podcast to share my passion for history and to make learning history not suck.
Along the way, a community of informed citizens coalesced.
And that makes me genuinely happy.
If you haven't heard, I've been working on a book for two years and I wanted to do
something different. Something special to celebrate with the community of listeners that inspired
me to write the book in the first place. So to celebrate its publication, we're planning the
ultimate book club meeting on a Caribbean cruise May 18th through the 22nd. And I'd love for you
to join me. Each guest will get an advanced signed copy of my book. I'll perform our live show,
we'll record a live podcast, and much more. I know it's not for everyone, so there are only a few
cabins available. If you're interested in joining me and this H-TDS community for some fun,
fellowship and learning at sea, then go to htdskruise.com. That's htdscruise.com and use the code
HDDS for $100 off. Hope to have you aboard. If it's not for you, don't worry, we're playing
some other events. Thanks for being a listener, truly. It's about nine in the morning on an unspecified
day, late April, 1942.
We're in Midtown Manhattan, just south of Central Park on West 58th Street at a popular,
upscale New York City chain called Longchamps, where two gentlemen are just walking in and making
their way past countless tables and booths, ready to get some breakfast.
They're an odd pair, and no, I'm not referring to the way 46-year-old Moses Polikoff
towers over his younger, shorter, heavier set, and thicker-haired colleague Murray Gervine.
I'm referring to the fact that Moses represents some of the most of the most of the most of the
most notorious names in organized crime, while Murray is New York County's assistant district attorney
and oversees the Rackets Bureau. Yeah, these two are usually locking legal horns, not going out to share
a meal. But the contrast between them reaches new heights as they sit at their booth, which is already
occupied by their breakfast meeting's third participant. Seated and sipping his coffee is the short,
life, smartly dressed, and infamous gangster, Meyer Lansky. Tell you what,
Let me fill you in on the situation while this assistant DA, lawyer, and gangster decide how to order their eggs.
Here's the deal.
Two months ago, in February, 1942, a French ocean liner getting outfitted for naval service, the Normandy, went up in flames in New York Harbor.
The fear is that this was sabotage, whether it was or wasn't.
And it wasn't.
This incident got the Office of Naval Intelligence, aka the O&I, thinking about the need for better control.
of New York's docks.
And who controls those docks?
Yeah, not the government, but New York's crime bosses,
including a figure we met back in episode 159,
Charlie Lucky Luciano.
And come to think of it,
if the allies end up taking the fight to the Mediterranean,
to Sicily, this native-born Sicilian
could prove useful far beyond New York's waterfront.
Huh.
Sounds like Charlie might do a lot of good for Uncle Sam.
Or at least O&I commander Charles Haffenden hopes so.
There's just one small complication.
Charlie is currently doing time for basically running all prostitution in New York City.
It's going to take a lot to approach him, let alone convince the jailbird to lend his influence to the cause.
Nonetheless, the O&I thinks this long shot is worth it, and it's to this end that assistant DA Murray Gerfine is having breakfast with Charlie's lawyer and the gangsters likewise logger.
breaking best friend. And with that, I think breakfast is being served. Let's see how the
conversation is going. As the men eat and talk, Murray is pleased to find both of his breakfast
companions are on board. Moses Polakov might represent some of the worst criminals in the nation,
but he also served in the Navy during World War I. He's a patriot, just one who thinks everyone
deserves good counsel. Meyer Lansky is also in, perhaps even more so. He might be
one of the greatest criminal minds of his generation, but he's actually quite a patriot. He loves
America, and as a Jewish man, he loathes Adolf Hitler and Nazism. He's all for doing his part
to bring down the axis. Yes, Meyer is willing to talk to Charlie. It's now a few weeks later,
Friday morning, May 15, 1942, and two guards at upstate New York's Great Meadow Correctional
facility are unlocking the door to Charlie Lucky Luciano's cell, because he has visitors.
Wait, what?
Visitors?
Stepping out and walking down the hall, Charlie is thrilled.
But what gives?
After years of languishing in the austere Clinton Correctional Facility near the Canadian border,
he suddenly got transferred only days ago to Great Meadow,
the so-called country club of New York prisons.
And now he has visitors?
During non-visiting hours?
Hmm, something isn't right.
Charlie is ushered into a room.
next to the warden's office, and as he enters, he can hardly believe his eyes.
There stands, Meyer Lansky, and Moses Polikoff.
Unable to contain his excitement, Charlie exclaims,
What the hell are you guys doing here? And of course, they then tell him.
They explained that Uncle Sam needs his help with the docks in New York.
Perhaps they mentioned future intel possibilities about the island of Sicily.
Charlie listens carefully, then answers quite clearly.
no. At least, not unless it's completely off the books. The mafioso explains,
look, I'm going to be deported. When I get out, nobody knows how this war will turn out.
Whatever I do, I want to keep quiet, private, so that when I get back to Italy, I'm not a marked man.
Meyer and Moses reassure him, everything will be entirely secret. And while there is no deal to be made per se,
they explain that he will enjoy frequent confidential visits with his men,
since he'll need to talk to them to assist.
Uh-huh.
I'll come to think of it.
That would make running his criminal empire a little easier.
Charlie's tomb starts to change.
By the time his visitors suggest a visit from Joe Sox-Lanzah,
the answers,
All right, fine.
Yes, the incarcerated mafia boss is in,
and when Meyer and Moses next visit Charlie in his new Swink Country Club prison, they will indeed
bring socks with them. Thus begins what will come to be known as Operation Underworld.
Welcome to History That Doesn't Suck. I'm your professor, Greg Jackson, and I'd like to tell you a story.
It's true. In a years-long partnership codenamed Operation Underworld, the U.S. government worked
with some of the nation's most notorious mobsters. But just how useful is, Charles.
Harley Lucky Luciano. Office of Naval Intelligence Commander, Charles Haffedon, will downplay the
mafioso's contributions. And yet, in 1946, this blast from the H.TDS playlist passed does get
released from prison with the one-way ticket to his native Italy. So, did he provide significant
protection for New York's ports? Did his mafiosos talk to Sicily's mafiosos, all Italians
who deeply hated Benito Mussolini, and thereby provide the al-aulis.
with Intel on the island before its invasion?
We may never know for sure,
but it's certainly a fascinating component
of the war to keep in mind for today's story.
The 1943 Allied invasion of Sicily,
codenamed Operation Husky.
We'll begin with some background.
Building on our last episode's coverage
of North Africa and the Casablanca Conference,
we turned to another tale of wartime deception
preparatory to the invasion of Sicily
carried out by British intelligence,
called Operation Mincemeat.
It's basically a James Bond moment in the midst of World War II, but no spoilers.
I'll leave it there for now.
We'll then head to Washington, D.C. for the Trident Conference, where Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill have a tense moment of disagreement
on where their combined efforts should go after Sicily.
Will they move against mainland Italy as Winston wants?
Or, to channel my inner Georgia Sea Marshall, will it finally be time to take the fight to France?
And once we finish this friendly tussle, it's go time.
We're parachuting on to Sicily in the dark of night with the 505th of the 82nd Airborne,
after which we'll encounter hard fighting, and bear witness as George Patton lets his open palm drag him into a scandal
that's on par with the likes of the modern-day actor Will Smith.
But ultimately, will this allied invasion of Sicily succeed?
Might it destabilize Benito Mussolini's reign?
How will it impact fascist idly?
We'll find all these answers and more, and we start by shipping out to the Mediterranean.
All ashore that's going ashore, all on board.
Roughly the size of Vermont, the hill-covered triangular-shaped island of Sicily,
and its towering 10,000 foot above sea-level volcano, Mount Etna,
officially enters into allied conversations at the Casablanca Conference of January, 1943.
I trust to recall this conference and the complicated colonial lay of the North African,
and land from the last episode, but to jog our memories, this conference in Casablanca,
Morocco, that is, the French protector of Morocco, which is now allied friendly, thanks to last
year's Darlond deal, is a gathering of allied minds that includes both President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. And here, they decide that,
once the forces under Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean, Dwight D. Eisenhower,
and British General Bernard Monty Montgomery closed their pincor movement in the
French protector of Tunisia, thereby forcing the axis out of North Africa.
Ike and the boys should take the Italian island of Sicily.
It makes sense.
Sicily lies smack dab in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea.
It's almost a literal puddle jump from Tunisia to Sicily, which is only 100 miles or so
to the northeast.
And once taken, would put the Allies about two to three miles from the toe of mainland Italy
at the Strait of Messina.
Talk about a sweet setup for taking the fight.
into the territory of the OG of fascism, and of course by OG I mean the original goose
ever.
Now, there is some concern that the plan is simply too obvious.
Germany, which, unlike Italy, can actually put up a fight, is bound to see this coming.
Some at the Casablanca Conference wonder, should they carry out an operation in Greece,
or perhaps the Mediterranean island of Sardinia instead?
Ah, no, they need to take Sicily, or the island of the sun, as it's also known.
known for all the same geographical reasons we just identified that will likely make the move so
obvious to the axis. But the question remains, might they throw the axis powers off the scent
of this Allied invasion? Well, some body might have an answer. It's just after 4 a.m. on a
moonless windy Friday, April 30, 1943. The British submarine, HMS-Sariff, is surfacing about a mile off
Wellva, Spain. Its commander, British lieutenant Norman Bill Jule, is tense. Along with two officers
and three crewmen, he's maneuvering a large metal tube up top. Exiting the submarine's hole through a
topside hatch, they and their bulky cargo are soon on the casing, that is, the narrow exposed
deck running along the subspine. Meanwhile, the crew below scanned the dark ocean and shoreline for anyone
who might spot them and thereby upend their secret mission.
Once the three crewmen set the tube down, they're dismissed to go back below.
They do so, believing that they carried up secret meteorological equipment.
But that's not the case at all.
Bill and his fellow lieutenants now unscrew the steel canister's bolts, revealing its true contents,
a petrified corpse in an officer's uniform.
Okay, timeout.
Let's get some background.
This top secret mission, Operation Minster's.
mincemeat comes out of the British Naval Intelligence Department, or the NID.
Back in 1939, a young agent named Ian Fleming provided a list of ideas for counterintelligence
missions.
Yes, that Ian Fleming, the same agent who will later garner literary fame for his future spy novels
about Agent 007, or rather Bond, James Bond.
But back to the real operation, Ian's idea to feed the Axis false information through a corpse,
was picked up by two men.
Another spy novelist, the mustachioed Charles Chomley,
and an aristocratic lawyer,
the barely-lived Ewan Montague,
who think this cardavorous ruse could trick the Germans into thinking
the next allied attack will actually consist of two operations,
an American attack on Sicily's western neighbor,
the island of Sardinia,
and a British attack in the Eastern Mediterranean against Greece.
If Berlin takes the bait,
Sicily, the real target, will seem like a diversion.
The plan's brilliant, if it works, of course.
As for the corpse, he's a recently deceased homeless Welshman,
Glenn Duer Michael, who died after accidentally eating bread
that was set out for pest control and filled with rat poison.
Refrigerated and prepped,
Glenn is transformed into Major William Martin,
dressed in a full officer's uniform, carrying ID, letters,
a photo of a girlfriend who's actually an MI5 agent,
and a briefcase with fake secret orders.
And now he's ready to wash up on Spain's coast, looking like the victim of a plane crash,
with hopes that Francisco Franco's neutral but fascist Spanish government will pass his false intel onto the Nazis.
And with that, let's return to the seraph, shall we?
It's now nearly 4.30 in the morning.
Light is starting to appear over the horizon as the three officers fully opened the tube-like coffin.
The smell of the tan, decayed body,
was too much for all but Bill.
As the son of a doctor, this officer knows the stench of death well.
He pays his respects to the posthumously recruited agent,
reciting, as he later described,
what I could remember of the funeral service.
Then, respectfully, he places Glenn's body in the water.
The officers scrambled below, and the sub dives,
pushing the undercover corpse, Major William Martin,
toward the shore with its wake.
With his course now set for Britain's nearby Mediterranean enclave of Gibraltar, Bill sends a message to London.
Mincemeat completed.
Truly a crazy plan.
Will it work?
Shockingly, it does.
Local Spanish fishermen tow the fake down to Allied body in, then alert local authorities.
Glenn, turned William, gets a funeral, and when his briefcase is returned to the British weeks later,
it's clear that all the documents have been read.
More than that, Adolf Hitler proceeds to smugly reinforce all the wrong places.
But this is hardly the time for a victory lap.
Even without greater reinforcements, taking the island of the sun will pose its challenges,
and British senior military minds are hard at it, planning the amphibious invasion of Sicily, or Operation Husky.
On May 11, 1943, as British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and his military chiefs of staff arrive in Washington, D.C., for the Trident
Conference, the British Bulldog is very ready to push forward with this already planned operation
and to look to the future. But there is some consternation among President Franklin Roosevelt's
Chiefs of Staff. See, ever since the Morocco Conference, which is when this invasion was planned,
they've worried that the bespectacled cigarette-holder-loving president is a little too taken by his,
might we say, husky ally. Secretary of War Henry Stimson even writes in his diary that,
I fear it will be the same story over again.
The man from London will arrive and will have his way with our chief,
and the careful and deliberate plans of our staff will be overridden.
Those deliberate plans include U.S. Army Chief of Staff,
General George C. Marshall's longtime focus on a cross-channel landing on the northern shores of France.
George warns Franklin that if Sicily leads to an invasion of mainland Italy,
they'll be short on men and resources for France,
something he believes could make Italy, quote,
More of a liability than an asset, close quote, potentially pushing a cross-channel landing to
1945 or even 46. Oh, and the commander-in-chief of the Navy, or Comich, Ernest King, is constantly
asking for more help in the Pacific Theater. And let's not forget, many Americans view this
war as primarily against the Japanese, the ones who struck at Pearl Harbor, with Germany and
Italy being secondary. Some in Congress are even mumbling that Franklin only does Winston's bidding.
Oof, with all this going on, it's probably for the best that Comrade Joseph Stalin won't be
attending. What we can sense will be a tense meeting. With the war effort, pride, and lives on the
line, let's join this Trident conference and see who blinks first. It's 2.30 in the afternoon,
May 12, 1943. We're on the second floor of the White House, and the world. We're on the world. We're
World Map-covered oval study, where President Franklin D. Roosevelt often likes to work on his
stamp collection. But today isn't a day for stamp enthusiasts. No. Today, FDR and his buddy,
Prime Minister Winston Churchill, have an important meeting on the books. Franklin kicks things
off by reminding the Brits that it's been a year since they first planned Operation Torch,
that is, the amphibious landing in French North Africa. Six months ago, the invasion of Sicily,
Operation Husky was planned.
Now, it's time to consider the next move.
Winston agrees, as he puts it,
Torch is over, Husky is near.
What should come next?
I would like to put forward for consideration a number of objectives.
The great prize is to get Italy out of the war.
The collapse of Italy will cause a chill of loneliness over the German people
and might be the beginning of their doom.
All right, the opening moves have been played.
The pawns are in an attacking position, if you will.
But now, to continue the chessboard analogy,
Franklin's chiefs of staff are all wondering,
will the president play aggressively,
or will he be wooed into tipping his king,
conceding to his buddy, Winston?
thanking the portly PM for being frank on his objectives,
Franklin responds, starting with the same question Winston rhetorically posed.
Where do we go from Husky?
I have always shrunk.
from the thought of putting large armies in Italy.
This might play into Germany's hand.
There is not much time in 1943
because planning future operations is a lengthy procedure.
The question to be decided quickly
is how to use the Mediterranean troops this year.
Conditions in Italy are known to be precarious.
Italy might drop into the lap of the United Nations,
who will then have the responsibility
of supplying the Italian people.
Franklin goes on to suggest that
perhaps taking Sicily, or even just the heel and toe of Italy,
may be enough to check Benito Mussolini's regime.
And while everyone agrees that it's not possible for an invasion of France in 1943,
Franklin says that if it's going to happen in 1944,
planning needs to start now.
Hmm, so, night to D2, it seems.
The president's men silently feel a sense of relief.
I can only assume the British Bulldog is conflicted here.
While he's long hated Benito Mussolini, calling Il Ducce a
Whipped Jackal of Hitler, he does see that strategy is more important than grievances.
Coming around to agree with Franklin, Winston says,
I do not feel that an occupation of Italy is necessary.
And with that, the big two call it a day.
Franklin and Winston head to FDR's Allegheny retreat, Shangri-R.
While the British and U.S. chiefs of staff hammer out the details of
what Winston calls mere questions of emphasis and priority.
As they do, George Marshall ends up in a shouting match with British officer Alan Brooke,
who says a French invasion won't happen for another two years.
With a pause to visit Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia, a visit that, alas, did not include
taking stockade photos, as far as we know.
The chiefs of staff tried to answer Winston's questions of emphasis and priority over the coming week.
By May 25, 1943, they have their answer.
the British promised to aim for a landing in northern France by spring of next year, 1944.
Right now, however, the priority will be to move from Sicily to the toe of Italy's boot.
But let's not allow the leaders to count their chickens before they're hatched.
The invasion of Sicily is still yet to happen.
So, what is the plan for Operation Husky?
Our dear friend, Supreme Commander Dwight Eisenhower, will oversee it.
On the ground, British General Harold Alexander, or Alex,
as his friends call him, will command the 15th Army Group, which includes British General
Sir Bernard Montgomery's 8th Army landing on the southwest coast, and U.S. Lieutenant General
George Patton's 7th Army, striking the center and southeast, as well as paratroopers dropping
behind the Axis lines. Altogether, this force comes to roughly 150,000 or more ground troops,
3,000 ships, and 4,000 aircraft. And so, with the surrender of Axis forces in Tunisia early that May,
and Adolf, fooled by Operation Mincemeat,
and are reinforcing the incorrect locations.
Prospects are strong for Operation Husky.
Things only look better still in June,
as Nazi intelligence continue to believe
that Greece and Sardinia are the real targets,
even after the Allies capture
the minuscule Italian island of Pantelleria
just to the southwest of Sicily.
Nonetheless, Sicily is held by perhaps 300,000 Axis troops,
mostly Italian and poorly supplied, but still twice that of the Allies' ground forces.
And of course, that's to say nothing of yet another player in this and every war,
a precarious participant that is so very influential in amphibious operations
and can be an ally or an enemy.
The weather.
Hey, everyone, it's Professor Jackson.
A quick update about the Caribbean cruiser planning May 18th through the 22nd.
I'm excited to announce that my friend, Dr. Ben Sawyer,
host of The Road to Now podcast, we'll be joining us as a special guest. It just adds to all the great
history-centric activities we're planning while sailing from Fort Lauderdale to Key West and the Bahamas
aboard the beautiful celebrity reflection. If you haven't heard, I've been working on a book for two
years and I wanted to do something different. Something special to celebrate its publication.
We're not only going to have the Ultimate Book Club meeting, where each guest will get an
advanced signed copy of the book. I'm also going to give a special private performance of my live
show, Ben and I will record a live podcast. We'll host a fun history trivia night contest where you can
compete and test your knowledge with us. There will be nightly group dining, where you can meet other
history aficionados, plus the usual excitement and relaxation that celebrity cruises is known for.
We only have a limited number of cabins left, and right now we're offering $100 off per cabin
when you use the code htdds to check out. Go to hddskruise.com and use the code htdds for
hundred dollars off. Hope to have you aboard this spring for the history cruise that doesn't suck.
It's late at night, July 9, 1943. Flying out of Tunisia in V formations, 227 Douglas C-47s cut through
the dark skies over the Mediterranean at a low 500-foot altitude to avoid radar. In the dim cargo
hold of one plane carrying 16 soldiers, sits the commander of the 82nd Airborne Division's 5005th
Parachute Infantry Regiment, Colonel James M. Gavin. Dressed in full combat gear, James,
or Jump in Jim, as the men prefer to call their 36-year-old, Brooklyn-born, and Pennsylvania
Coalfield's raised leader, described as having, quote-unquote, magnetism for attractive women,
sits under the hold's faint light. His face is covered in a camouflage of burnt coal, just like
his men, all waiting to jump when the plane reaches their designated drop zone, or D.ZZ.
Z over the city of Jella on the southern shore of Sicily.
They are then to secure crossroads against Axis counterattacks,
thereby opening the way for General George Patton's 7th Army landing on the beaches.
The orders are plenty dangerous, yet, at this precise moment,
it isn't German and Italian bullets that have Jim worried as he stares at the red light.
It's the weather.
He knows the whipping 35-mile-per-hour winds must have pushed the planes off course,
not to mention the danger for his well-trained but green paratroopers.
But Jim does his best to put all this out of his mind.
These worries are of no help.
As he'll later recall, there was nothing I could do about it.
We couldn't change plans now.
Reaching the DZ, Jim stands and shouts out,
stand up and hook up.
Covered in guns, grenades, knives, water, and heavy parachutes,
the men hooked their static lines to the anchor cable.
A bell rings.
the light turns green and the door is yanked open.
A flood of wind rushes into the cargo hold.
Each man jumps in quick succession.
His shoot automatically deploying as his static line
hooked to the anchor cable gives way
and at least some yelling the World War II paratroopers war cry.
Geronimo!
The plane soon disappears into the black.
Axis bullets whizz by as jumping Jim and his men descend
utterly subject to the whims and mercy of their shoots and the harsh winds.
The night's sliver of a moon only faintly lights the terrain below.
But soon, Jim can see that his worst fears are realized.
They're way off course.
He recognizes nothing below.
Is this even Sicily?
Whatever it is, it's coming at him fast.
Jim hits the ground and rolls like a pro.
He's fine, but this isn't the landing they expected.
Men drop on rocks, trees, even buildings.
On the ground, Jim peers into the darkness, searching for his regiment.
He in a small group call out the password.
George, expecting to hear, Marshall.
It works for some, but others scattered into the British sector face friendly fire.
A painful lesson on sharing passwords,
one the paratroopers pay for as they regroup to secure roads and trails.
Despite the mayhem, the invasion miraculously comes together.
By the morning of July 10th, Jump and Jim and his paratroopers have come
cut access communications and captured concrete bunkers called pillboxes that would have
otherwise threatened George Patton's 7th Army.
Employing an oft-used military term, snafu, which means systems normal, all, let's say,
fouled up.
It will, in time, become unattributable conventional wisdom that the first action of Operation
Husky was, and I quote, the best executed snafoo in the history of military operations.
A very fair take, yet the commander of the 82nd Airborne, General Matthew Ridgeway,
will note that he prefers Colonel Jim Gavin's description better.
To quote Jumpin' Jim of the 505th, this was a saffoon, a self-adjusting foul-up.
The day ends with some serious combat in the American Center lines,
but the primary enemy isn't the axis, it's logistics.
Just getting all the men and equipment onto the island makes day one feel like a victory.
That said, the fighting heats up the next day, July 11th, when the Germans push on the American
Center Line at Jella Beach.
Yes, right where a jumping gym and the 505th parachute infantry regiment was supposed to land.
He and his formerly lost boys joined troops from the 45th Division and managed to repel a German
attack of 700 infantry and a company of tiger tanks.
But the fighting here and across the island takes its toll.
The Allies suffer 2,300 casualties by the day's end.
Trying to replenish forces, General George Patton calls for 2,000 more paratroopers to drop in from the 5004th Regiment.
But after a full day of strafing fire from the German Luftwaffe, the incoming Allied transport aircraft are mistaken for a German air raid.
Firing anti-aircraft into the dark night sky, Allied friendly fire takes down 23 of their own planes and damages 37, leaving 88 dead, 162 wounded, and 69 missing in action.
Even as the situation improves on the American front, the British 8th Army gets bogged down on the southeast coast.
One of the corners of the triangle, that is Sicily, if you will.
General Bernard Montgomery, or Monty, as we know, this discerning Brit with a well-trimmed mustache and aquiline nose,
requests a shift in his boundaries to allow him to move up through central Sicily.
British General Harold Alexander, or again, just Alex, is cool with it.
But you know who isn't?
Good guess if you said General George Patton.
In George's mind, this is relegating American forces to mere backup,
guarding the British Eighth Army's flank.
To be fair, he's right.
And it's no secret that the British haven't forgotten the mess
at Tunisia's Cassarin Pass back in February,
a snafu we covered in the last episode, as I'm sure you recall.
And the truth is that Alex, who I'll remind you,
is calling the shots on the ground,
trusts the still better seasoned British 8th Army far more than the Americans.
But you know, George, old blood and guts, this man of temper and action, unwilling to let this
assumption-made plan take him out of the action, he persuades Alex to let him do some
reconnaissance toward the city of Agrigento. That done, old blood and guts, then takes things one
step further. He captures Agrigento on July 15, 1943. From there, he's
He argues to Alex that he should drive to the northwestern coast of Sicily, while Monty
and the 8th Army work at getting to the essential port of Messina over at the tip of the
island's northeastern coast and all but touching the toe of Italy's boot.
In short, George wants to split and do his own thing.
Alex initially agrees, but after reflection, he reverses the go-ahead.
Well, George just ignores the revocation, saying that the message was, quote-unquote, garbled
when transmitted. The U.S. 7th Army sweeps northwest from the center of Sicily, covering over
100 miles and three days to take some 53,000 Italian troops captive and to capture the island's capital
of Palermo. As George and his army roll in on July 22nd, the city's many non-fans of
Benito Mussolini welcomed the Americans with a spontaneous outpour of cheers and flowers.
Nor are the people of Palermo the only Italians fed up with the Luce.
While he won adoration, building an empire, and seeming to outwit and outplay the League of Nations,
and heavyweight nations like Britain in the 1930s, all of which we saw while meeting Yilducci
back in episode 183, World War II's losses of Ethiopia, more recently Libya, and now perhaps
Sicily, which could open the way to an invasion of mainland Italy, are costing the fascist dictator
his popularity. In the succinct words of his biographer Jasper Ridley, quote,
Mussolini had committed the one unparonable crime of the dictator.
He was losing a war.
Close quote.
And so, only days after George Patton takes Palermo in a meeting that drags from the evening
of Saturday, July 24th, into the early hours of the 25th, the Grand Council of Fascism
votes 19 to 7 to urge King Victor Emmanuel III to take command of both the military and the government,
effectively to remove Benito from his position as Prime Minister.
But Benito is sure this vote will do nothing.
I mean, the Grand Council is a faux parliament of his own making after all.
He leaves confident that he can put this annoyance behind him quickly
and wakes the next morning just as certain that he can set things right in his next meeting with the king.
And wouldn't you know, his majesty would like to see El Ducce today?
It's about 5 o'clock in the afternoon, Sunday, July 25th, 1943.
A sleek Lancia Asura.
or perhaps an Alpha Romeo, is just pulling off the Via Salaria and onto the stunning grounds
of the Italian royal estate in northeastern Rome, known as Via Savoyo.
The vehicle continues along the gravel, passing the ancient pines and palm oaks,
the breathtaking gardens, and finally coming to a stop at the royal residence.
The yellow-hued Palazina Real, smartly dressed in a dark blue suit and brown fedora,
Il Ducce steps out of the car with his leather briefcase in hand.
Telling his bodyguards to stay put, he walks on alone,
taking little note of the extra-armed guards, or carabiniini behind the hedges.
Reaching the door, Benito is greeted by an immaculately mustachioed man,
dressed in a marshal of Italy uniform.
That's right.
It's the king of Italy himself, Victor Emmanuel III.
The two men head into a small drying room.
And even after 20 years at the head of Italy's government, what an odd sight they make.
Standing at 5'7-on-a-good-day, 61-year-old stocky, barrel-chested Benito,
towers over 73-year-old Victor's barely five-foot and lithe frame.
Centuries of royal inbreeding have left this proud relic with misshapen legs.
Anyhow, once situated, Benito begins, as he always does in their meetings,
with an update on the military and domestic situation.
but Victor breaks from the usual procedure by cutting him off.
My dear Ducce, it's no longer any good.
Italy has gone to bits.
Army morale is at rock bottom.
The soldiers don't want to fight anymore.
The Alpine regiments are singing a song
which says they don't want to make war on Mussolini's account any longer.
You can certainly be under no illusion
as to Italy's feelings with regard to yourself.
At this moment, you are the most hated man in Italy.
You have one friend left, and I am he.
That is why I tell you that you need have no fears for your personal safety,
for which I will ensure protection.
Benito is completely caught off guard.
Victor will later say the conversation strikes Ildece,
like the shell from a 305 howitzer.
The king repeats over and over,
I'm sorry, I'm sorry, until finally the dictator is able to respond.
You are making an extremely grave decision.
A crisis at the moment would mean making the people think that peace is in sight.
I realized the people's hatred.
I had no difficulty in recognizing it last night in the midst of the Grand Council.
One cannot govern for such a long time and impose so many sacrifices without provoking resentments.
In any case, I wish good luck to the man who takes the situation in hand.
As always, Benito towers over Victor.
But according to the now-deposed Duce's later recollections of this moment,
the king looks smaller than ever, almost dwarfish.
All the same, the two men shake hands, ending the meeting.
Back outside the yellow-hued palace, Benito is nearly to his bodyguards, chauffeur and car.
When the captain of the Carvinieri approaches, he calls Benito,
Ducce, I have been ordered by the king to protect your person.
An officer grabs the longtime dictator by the arm and tells him,
You must get into this.
Benito isn't fully grasping reality yet, but he's just been arrested.
His 21-year dictatorship is over.
That very night, July 25, 1943,
speakers shout the news into Rome's famous thoroughfare.
Villes del Tritone.
Citizens, wake up. Mussolini is finished.
The cobblestone piazza fills with dante, laughter and tears, and even bonfires,
burning furniture from the fascist party headquarters.
And all night long, the city reams with shouts of,
Viva L Italia!
It's true.
Benito Mussolini is out of power and a prisoner,
though the narrative is protective custody.
And it seems the Italian people largely love it.
But just because Il-Ducce is out, doesn't mean that Italy is out of the war.
The Pact of Steel signed by Germany and Italy in 1939 remains very much in place,
which is why Benito's successor as Prime Minister, Marshal Pietro Badoyo, announces that the war will continue.
This is the Italian government's official position, and the key word there is official.
At the very same time, the Italian government is quietly opening people.
talks with the Allies far away from Germaniers in neutral Portugal. And so, even as news of
Idouche's downfall rocks the world and puts Italy on a discreet path towards an armistice,
the fight for Sicily must continue. General George Patton of the U.S. 7th Army gets new orders
to turn from his northwestern position in Polermo and drive on to the same place that General
Bernard Montgomery's British 8th Army is headed, eastern Sicily's coastal city of Messina.
That's right. It's a right. It's a
race. As George puts it, this is a horse race in which the prestige of the U.S. Army is at stake.
But this time, George won't cover 100 miles in three days. Unlike that swift movement over poorly
protected and gentler terrain, this time, old blood and guts and his yanks are facing the
same obstacles as Monty and his Brits, the jagged, rough ground that forms the base of Mount
Etna and fierce German fortifications. In other words, both racing armies are equally stalled.
But little do George Romante know that the German forces here are not aiming to hold out as we saw the Americans do in the Philippines in episode 197.
No, this is more of a less intense reverse Dunkirk action in which the Germans are still fighting while secretly evacuating men from Sicily to the Italian boot.
This serves a dual purpose. It ensures these German soldiers survive to fight another day and positions them to hold Italy if, as Adolf Hitler now suspects, his Axis ally, Italy,
waivers on its dedication to the Pact of Steel.
With the high ground in their favor,
the Germans defend the four roads to Messina
as the summer heat and malaria sap thousands of Allied soldiers
before they even reach the fight.
Meanwhile, starting on July 31st, 1943,
the famous First Division that we heard so much about
in our First World War episodes.
Yes, the Big Red One,
faces hard fighting,
trying to take Troina in central Sicily.
The hilltops and rocky crags
provide excellent cover for the action.
Texas forces. As for the Yanks, their path up the expansive and open, undulating hills below,
make them easy targets. Mid the fighting, Private James William Bill Reese's mortar squad
pummels advancing Germans. When the squad gets down to its last three shells, Bill, as the private's
friends call him, orders them back. But he doesn't join them. Instead, advancing alone to single-handedly
use these last projectiles to take out a German machine gun nest. He then continues to fight with his rifle.
But alas, this is real life, not a movie.
The Germans riddle the brave Pennsylvania with bullets.
Posthumously, he will be honored for his excellence and bravery with the Medal of Honor.
After a week of fighting, the Americans have victory.
Troina is theirs.
But all the death and destruction that comes with driving out the retreating Axis forces
is enough to drive anyone to anger, tears, and worse.
Even a commanding officer.
It's about 1.30 in the afternoon.
August 10, 1943.
General George Patton is inside the 93rd evacuation hospital,
stationed near Santo Stefano on Sicily's northern coast.
He's here to visit his injured soldiers.
Seeing their general means a lot to these men,
and his words of encouragement and respect mean even more.
As he walks through the receiving tent,
George comes across private Paul G. Bennett.
The 21-year-old South Carolinian Gunner
and the 17th Field Artillery is sitting up on his bed,
shivering, still wearing his uniform and helmet.
George approaches the young man,
so deeply shocked after witnessing a friend's severe wounding.
Though he begged not to be removed from his unit,
it's clear that Paul can't return to the front without care.
George focuses on the listless artilleryman
and asks what his trouble is.
Looking up at the hard face but concerned general,
Paul responds,
It's my nerves!
And with that, Paul breaks down, sobbing.
Sterling, George answers the sodden soldier.
What did you say?
Paul manages another sputtered response.
It's my nerves.
I can't stand the shelling anymore.
A switch flips in the general.
He shouts,
Your nerves!
Hell, you just a goddamn coward, you yellow, son of a bitch!
With that, George slaps Paul across the face, then shouts,
shut up that goddamn crying.
I won't have these brave men.
men here who have been shot at seeing a yellow bastard sitting here crying.
The general strikes the young soldier again, this time so hard that Paul's helmet flies off
landing outside of the tent.
Doctors and nurses alike can't believe what they're seeing.
George turns to an astonished medical officer and shouts,
Don't admit this yellow bastard.
There's nothing the matter with him.
I don't have the hospitals cluttered up with these sons of bitches who out got the guts to fight.
Paul tries to stop the tears and pulls himself up standing at attention even if quaking.
George charges at Paul raging at him.
You're going back to the front lines and you may get shot and killed, but you're going to fight.
If you don't, I'll stand you up against a wall and have a firing squad kill you on purpose.
And with that, the furious general pulls his revolver out of its holster and thrusts it into Paul's face while telling him the shaking soldier through gritted teeth,
In fact, I ought to shoot you myself, you goddamn whimpering coward.
A nurse lunges at the general, but is held back by the doctor.
George then slaps Paul one last time before storming out of the tent.
Minutes later, in another ward, the general breaks down as he looks at him suffering from physical injuries.
Speaking to his own violence, but a moment ago, George addresses these wounded warriors through sobs.
I can't help it.
It breaks me down to see you brave boys.
George pauses for a moment.
He then continues in a mix of anger and tears.
It makes my blood boil to think a yellow bastard being baby.
This slapping incident is George's second within a week's time.
On the earlier occasion, the enraged 8th Army commander slapped a soldier diagnosed with what the hospital called a, quote,
psychoneurosis anxiety state, close quote.
Only with the help of friends did the soldier escape more wrath.
What on earth?
What fuels George Patton's awful, inexcusable cruelty to these men,
clearly suffering from PTSD or shell-shock to use the era's term?
The answer, perhaps, can be found in George's explanation of his horrific behavior
to Supreme Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower.
He writes to Ike that,
During the First World War, a close friend of his suffered from shell shock.
That friend continued to suffer for years until he committed suicide.
But before that tragic moment, George explains that, quote,
Both my friend and the medical men with whom I discussed his case assured me
that had he been roundly checked at the time of his first misbehavior,
he would have been restored to a normal state, close quote.
Yes, the cruel violence is best explained.
as a result of George Patton's gross misunderstanding of shell-shot,
created by incorrect medical opinions,
mixing with his own trauma of losing a dear friend to it in the last war.
No wonder then that,
after smacking around poor Paul Bennett,
George writes in his journal,
I may have saved his soul if he had one.
Worried about the war first and foremost,
reporters let these incidents lie low for the moment.
But they will make the news later,
and cause quite a stir.
As for Ike, he's deeply bothered, but sees George's contrition and chooses not to relieve him of command.
That said, Ike also knows that he'll never elevate old blood and guts to a higher level.
Continuing into the messier aspects of George Patton's command on Sicily, we also have to ask,
does he bear responsibility for illegal executions?
While American GIs largely conduct themselves well and lawfully on the island,
it appears that American forces killed 75 POWs at Biscarie Airfield.
Colonel George Martin, chaplain of the 45th Division later describes coming across,
quote, three mounds of bodies, stacked like cordwood.
There was no doubt in my mind but that they had been prisoners of war,
slaughtered while being moved to the rear.
Close quote.
The next best documented massacre happens in the city of Kanikati,
where Lieutenant Colonel George Herbert McCaffrey responds to military police
refusing to shoot looters by pulling his pistol and blasting eight civilians dead on the spot.
Several men tried for war crimes on Sicily will later attest that George Patton had given speeches
about taking no prisoners, that more POWs meant drained resources.
To quote Captain Howard Cry of the 180th combat team, he said to kill and continue to kill,
and that the more we killed, then the less we'd have to kill later.
Some men are acquitted, others not, while the Kani Kanti Massacre is,
kept quiet for a full 60 years. These incidents are all black marks on George's career,
even if they don't end it. But we'll leave George's legacy there for now. His story's end is one
for another day. By August 11, 1943, the German commander on Sicily, Hans Huba, is in full-scale
evacuation mode. Allied Army engineers work swiftly to clear minefields and repair bridges
in hopes of catching him, but when American infantry from the 7th Regiment enter Messina on
August 17th, they missed the axis by mere hours.
George Patton arrives to accept the surrender of the city. Shortly thereafter, a line of British
cars pull up. Yeah. The Yanks won, and the Brits know it, and are good sports about it.
The senior British commander on the scene approaches George and shakes his hand, saying,
It was a jolly good race. I congratulate you. It's taken just over a month and cost the
Allies about 25,000 casualties, including roughly 5,000 dead. But Operation Husky is officially a success.
Sicily is in Allied hands. But Italy as a whole is in limbo. Benito Mussolini is gone, and the new
Italian Prime Minister, Pietro Badoyo, seeks an armistice. Yet, the Pact of Steel binds his
nation to Germany. At the same time, the Allies planned landing on the toe of Italy, Operation
avalanche will proceed more smoothly without Italian resistance, which is more likely with
lenient terms. Yet, Dwight Eisenhower faces pressure for unconditional surrender from the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. And it's amid all these factors that August 1943 becomes, in British diplomat
Harold McMillan's words, plots, plots, counterplots, and cross plots. But eventually, someone must
yield. It's a little after nine on a hot summer's morning, August 31st.
1943. We're at the Allied Force headquarters near Casibule, Sicily, where high-ranking American
and Italian officers are gathering in a canvas tent among all of trees. Two men of note dominate
the discussion. Ike's 47-year-old Clef-chinned chief of staff, General Walter Baudell Smith,
a.k.a. Beatle, and a 49-year-old Italian general with black, receding hair as slick as his
political maneuvering, Giuseppe Castellano. Having communicated in secret with
Giuseppe in recent weeks, Beatle gets right to the point, asking if the Italian general,
dressed in a double-breasted suit, has the power to sign this armistice, which demands Italy's
surrender, its quote-unquote best endeavors against the Germans and other aspects of aid to the
allies, like the use of airfields and naval ports.
Giuseppe responds that he doesn't. He then reads a memorandum from his superiors to the Americans.
If the Italian government were free, it would accept and announce the armistice.
as demanded by the Allies, because it is not free, but under German control, Italy cannot accept.
Going on to explain that the Italian army isn't equipped to beat the extensive German forces then in Italy.
Giuseppe demands guarantees that the Allies will land in northern Italy with sufficient strength to protect the king and government in Rome
before Germany can seize the city.
Biedel refuses to bend. The terms are as generous as,
Supreme Commander Dwight Eisenhower will allow. He answers, the Italian government has two
alternatives. It can't accept the conditions or refuse the armistice. The allies intend to invade
the Italian peninsula with or without Italian aid, and the Italians themselves will have to
decide whether the struggle will be long and devastating or relatively grief. Flustered, the well-dressed
Italian general changes tactics. He threatens that the Italian fleet will attack Allied convoys
before the official armistice is declared.
But Beetle makes it clear that he's not afraid to play chicken.
He replies sternly,
Nothing can prevent Italy from becoming a battlefield,
but the Italian government might shorten the duration of the battle
by accepting completely the allied conditions.
Nothing is signed on August 31st,
not because Italians want to fight the Allies,
but because they're terrified of the Germans.
Yet, despite those fears,
Rome caves in the day's fall.
following. On September 3rd, 1943, as British and Canadian troops cross from Sicily to the toe of the
Italian boot, General Giuseppe Castellano returns to the Allied Force headquarters in this
canvas tent in a Sicilian Olive Grove and signs the armistice. He, Beatle, and the rest of the team,
then celebrate with shots of whiskey. But only days later, on the eve of the armistice's planned
announcement of September 8th, a new wave of fear of German reprisals hits the Italian government.
Prime Minister Pietro Badoyo sends the Allies a message rescinding his agreement.
Dwight Eisenhower is livid. Face flushed, he snaps pencil after pencil as he curses the Italian
Prime Minister, or as a British officer in the room later puts it, he expressed himself with
great violence. The furious Allied Supreme Commander in the Mediterranean dictates a force
response. If you or any part of your armed forces fail to cooperate as previously agreed,
I will publish to the world a full record of this affair. Failure now on your part to carry out
the full obligations of the signed agreement will have the most serious consequences for your country.
At 6.30 the following night, September 8th, Ike takes to Radio Algiers as formerly agreed upon
and announces the armistice. He states, the Italian government has surrendered its armed
forces unconditionally. As Allied commander-in-chief, I have granted a military armistice.
All Italians, who now act to help eject the German aggressor from Italian soil, will have
the assistance and support of the United Nations. Only 15 minutes later, Reuters' coverage
of Ike's announcement reaches the Italian government. Its leaders are terrified, sick to their
stomachs. What can they do? Finally, King Victor Emmanuel laments that Italy cannot change sides
for a third time. Pietro broadcasts Italy's acceptance of the armistice. Hearing this,
German General Erwin Rommel writes to his wife, Italy's treachery is official. And so,
Italy is defeated, yet nonetheless poised to become a battleground between the Nazis and the
allies. But with more than a year and a half of fighting ahead, the Italian campaign is a story
for a much later day. There's still so much to cover about these early months of the
European theater, including the Nazi's ongoing mass killings, particularly their drive to
systematically murder millions of European Jews. Yes, it's time to return to that bleak aspect of
this, the most devastating war in human history that we first broached in episode 185.
Next time, we return to the Holocaust.
History That Doesn't Suck is created and hosted by me, Greg Jackson.
Episode researched and written by Greg Jackson and Will King, production by Air,
Airship. Audio editing by Muhammad Shazade. Sound design by Molly Bot. The music composed by Greg Jackson.
Arrangement and additional composition by Lindsay Graham of Ayrshire. For a bibliography of all primary and secondary sources consulted in writing this episode, visit htbspodcast.com.
H.TBS is supported by fans at htdspodcast.com slash membership. My gratitude to
kind souls providing funding to help us keep going. Thank you. And a special thanks to our patrons, his monthly gift puts them at producer status.
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