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The expression Italian Civil War is commonly used, in the international historic community, to define the events that took place between September 2, 1943, the date of the armistice of Cassibile, and May 8, 1945, the date of the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany, including all the troops still fighting in Italy.[1] The war was between the fascist Italian Social Republic of Benito Mussolini, joint with the Axis, and the Italian partisans, helped by the Allies and by what was left of the Italian Royal Army, loyal to King Victor Emmanuel III. Historians studying the Italian civil war have not restricted their analysis to the war itself, but they have also explored the consequences Italy suffered right after the surrender.[2] Contents [hide] 1 Use of the expression in history 2 Factions 2.1 Partisans 2.2 Fascist forces 3 The civil war 3.1 Prologue 3.2 Events 3.3 The end 4 Consequences of the war 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External links Use of the expression in history[edit]

Historian Claudio Pavone, through his famous book Una guerra civile. Saggio storico sulla moralità della Resistenza (A Civil War. Historical Essay On the Morality Of the Resistance), published in 1991, was responsible for making Italian Civil War a widespread term used in Italian[3] and international [4][5] historiography. The term was used before,[6] but not as much as since the early 1990s, when it became a widely accepted historical category. Factions[edit]

Struggles between the two factions had serious consequences on civilians as well. During the Italian Campaign, partisans were supplied by Allied planes with small arms, ammunition and explosives. These air operational units were part of the RAF and USAAF. Allied command did not consider the use of Italian Co-Belligerent Air Force squadrons for this task, as requested by the Italian Co-belligerent Armed Forces themselves, due to the risk of confrontation between Italians. Allied forces and partisans cooperated on military missions, parachuting or landing troops behind enemy lines, often including Italian-American members of OSS (Office of Strategic Services). Other operations were carried out exclusively by secret services members. Whenever it was possible, both sides tried to avoid situations in which Italian units of opposite fronts were involved in combat episodes. In rare cases, though, clashes between Italian partisans and Italian fascists were inevitable. Partisans[edit] The first groups of partisans were formed in Boves (Piedmont) and Bosco Martese (Abruzzo). Other groups composed mainly of Slavic and communist elements sprang up in Venezia Giulia; some also grew around Allied Yugoslav and Russian prisoners of war, released or escaped from captivity following the events of September 8. These first organized units dissolved in a short time because of the rapid German reaction. In Boves the Nazis committed their first massacre on Italian territory. On September 8, hours after the radio communication of the armistice, several notable antifascist organizations converged on Rome. They were led by Ivanoe Bonomi (PDL), Scoccimarro and Amendola (PCI), De Gasperi (DC), La Malfa and Fenoaltea (PDA), Nenni and Romita (PSI), Ruini (DL), Casati (PLI). These political figures formed the first Committee of National Liberation (CLN), with Bonomi taking over the presidency.[7] Notably, the Italian Communist Party was anxious to take the initiative without waiting for the Allies: (Italian) ...è necessario agire subito ed il più ampiamente e decisamente possibile perché solo nella misura in cui il popolo italiano concorrerà attivamente alla cacciata dei tedeschi dall'Italia, alla sconfitta del nazismo e del fascismo, potrà veramente conquistarsi l'indipendenza e la libertà. Noi non possiamo e non dobbiamo attenderci passivamente la libertà dagli angloamericani. - [8] (English) "... It's necessary to act immediately and as widely and decisively as possible, because only if the Italian People actively contribute to push out Germans from Italy and to defeat Nazism and Fascism, they will really be able to get independence and freedom. We can not and must not passively expect freedom to be given to us from the British and the Americans." The Allies did not believe in the effectiveness of local guerrillas, so, initially, General Alexander postponed their attacks against the Nazis. On the 16th of October the CLN issued its first important political and operational press release,[9] – which rejected the offers of reconciliation made by Republican leaders. The CLN Milan called "the Italian people" to arms, asking them "to fight against the German invaders and against their fascist allies".[10] In late November, the Communists created task forces called distaccamenti d'assalto Garibaldi which later would become brigades and divisions[note 1] whose leadership was entrusted to Luigi Longo, under the political direction of Pietro Secchia and Giancarlo Pajetta, Chief of Staff. The first operational order, issued on the 25th of November, read: to attack and annihilate in every way officers, soldiers, material, deposits of Hitler's armed forces; to attack and annihilate in every way people, places, properties of fascists and traitors who collaborate with the occupying Germans; to attack and annihilate in every way war industries, communication systems and everything that might contribute to the war plans of Nazi occupants.[11] Shortly after the Armistice, the Italian Communist Party,[12] the Gruppi di Azione Patriottica ("Patriotic Action Groups") or simply GA, established small cells which operated independently of each other, to be safer in case of arrest or betrayal of individual elements; their main purpose was to unleash urban terror through bomb attacks against fascists, Germans, and their supporters. The success of these attacks led the German and Italian police to believe these cells were composed of foreign intelligence agents. A public announcement from the PCI in September 1943 stated: To the tyranny of Nazism, that aims to reduce to slavery through violence and terror, we must respond with violence and terror. — Appeal of PCI to the Italian People, September 1943 Historical opinion has justified the action of GAP's mission as "justice" against Nazi tyranny and terror, with emphasis on its selection of targets: "the official, hierarchical collaborators, agents hired to denounce men of the Resistance and Jews, the Nazi police informants and law enforcement organizations of CSR", thus differentiating it from the Nazi terror. However, partisan memoirs insist on the "elimination of enemies especially heinous", such as "torturers, spies, provocateurs". Some orders from singular branches of partisans insist on protecting the innocent, instead of providing lists of categories to hit as individuals deserving of punishment. Women also participated in the resistance, mainly procuring supplies, clothing and medicines, doing anti-fascist propaganda, fundraising and helping to maintain communications; at times, they also participated in strikes and demonstrations against fascism. Some women actively took part in the conflict as combatants. The first detachment of guerrilla fighters was born in Piedmont in mid-1944, and it was called the "Garibaldi Brigade Eusebio Giambone". Partisan forces varied due to several factors: seasons, German and fascist repression, and also Italian topography. Their total number never exceeded 200,000 men actively involved, including an important support by residents of occupied territories. Nonetheless, they were an important factor that immobilized a conspicuous part of German forces in Italy, and also helped to keep German communication lines insecure. Fascist forces[edit] When the Italian Resistance movement began accepting the armistice, various Italian soldiers of disbanded units and many young people not willing to be enrolled into fascist troops—around 60,000 soldiers—initially formed the army of the Italian Social Republic (RSI, Repubblica Sociale Italiana), also named republic of Salò because of the city that hosted important offices of the republic. At first it was organized into four regular divisions (1ª Divisione Bersaglieri Italia - light infantry, 2ª Divisione Granatieri Littorio - grenadiers, 3ª Divisione fanteria di marina San Marco - marines, 4ª Divisione Alpina Monterosa - mountain troops), together with various irregular formations and the fascist militia Guardia Nazionale Repubblicana (GNR), that would eventually end up under the control of the regular army in 1944.[13] The fascist republic was forced to fight with the partisans in order to keep control of the territory. The Fascists claimed they had 780,000 men. This is disputed and it is likely there were no more than 558,000.[14] Partisans and their active supporters were up to 82.000 in June 1944.[15] In addition to regular units of the Republican Army and the Black Brigades, various special units of fascists were organized, often spontaneously at first; afterwards, they were formed from regular units that were part of the armed forces of Salò. These formations, composed mostly of criminals,[16] often adopted brutal methods during counterinsurgency operations, repression, and counter-retaliation. Among the first to form was the banda of the Federal Guido Bardi and William Pollastrini in Rome, whose coarse and vulgar methods shocked even the Germans.[17] Later, in Rome the Banda Koc helped to dismantle the structure of the Partito d'Azione. The so-called Koch Banda was led by Peter Koch, and it acted under the protection of General Kurt Maltzer, military commander of the square;[18] the Banda distinguished itself with violent methods against anti-fascist partisans. After the fall of Rome, Koch moved to Milan and, this time under the protection of the Minister of the Interior Guido Buffarini Guidi, continued his brutal repression of various police forces of the Republic.[19] In Tuscany and Veneto operated the Banda Carità, a special unit constituted within the 92th[clarification needed] Legion Blackshirts, which became famous for its violent repression, such as the "killing of Piazza Tasso" in 1944 in Florence. In Milan, the Squadra d'azione Ettore Muti (later Legion Autonomous Mobile Ettore Muti) operated under the orders of the former army corporal Francesco Colombo (it), already expelled from the PNF after twenty years of service for embezzlement. Considering him dangerous to the public in November 1943, the Federal Aldo Resega wanted to depose him, but was killed in an attack of the GAP; Colombo kept his role, despite several complaints and inquiries.[20] The squadrists of Muti and the GNR were the perpetrators of the massacre of Piazzale Loreto in Milan, which happened on the 10th of August, 1944, and whose victims were fifteen anti-fascist rebels picked at random. The reason was retaliation for an assault against a Nazi German truck. Following the massacre, the mayor and chief of the Province of Milan, Piero Parini (it), resigned in an attempt to strengthen the cohesion of moderate forces, undermined by the heavy German repression and various militias of Social Republic.[21] The chain of command of the National Republican Army, comprised Marshal Graziani and his deputies Mischi and Montaigna. They controlled the repression and coordinated most of the anti-partisan actions carried out by the regular troops, the GNR, the Black Brigades and various semi-official police corps, together with the Germans, who were often provided information on individuals and groups of resistance fighters; Germans then made reprisals. The Republican Army was an operational tool also thanks to the famous and draconian Graziani call-up for conscription that impressed several thousand Italians. It should be noted though that Graziani only nominally involved armed forces under the apolitical CSR.[22] The civil war[edit]

Prologue[edit] On July 25, 1943 Mussolini was deposed and arrested and King Victor Emmanuel III appointed Pietro Badoglio as Prime Minister. At first, the Italian government declared the continuation of war together with the Axis, and some demonstrations of citizens exulting for the presumably regained liberty were repressed with violence. Italy surrendered to the Allies on September 8, and King Victor Emmanuel III left Rome with his Cabinet, leaving the Italian Royal Army without orders. Up to 600.000 Italian soldiers were taken as prisoners by the Nazis and the greatest part of them (about 95%) refused allegiance to the newly established Italian Social Republic (RSI), a fascist state with Benito Mussolini as Head of Government created on September 23. This was made possible by the German occupation of the greater part of the Italian peninsula with Operation Achse, planned and headed by Erwin Rommel. During this period, not only there were military and terrorist episodes, but also many new political rivalries between the various components of the antifascist front started to arise. After the armistice with Italy, British forces had two influences: that of liberals, who wanted to support the democratic parties to overthrow the monarchy, and that of Churchill, who had confidence in being able to benefit more from a defeated enemy than from a true, even if newly recruited, allied one.[23] The parties were reconstituted after September 8. Many were skeptical about the collaboration with the monarchy, compromised as it was with the last regime. Also, "over the months the life of the parties was very difficult in the South during years 1943 and 1944 and above all, they (the parties) were scarcely able to break through apathy that characterized local populations";[24]furthermore, "the great majority of farmers referred to the parish structures".[25] For these reasons, many of the available resources were concentrated on the propaganda among the masses in the Liberated Areas.[26] In confirmation of this phenomenon we can find various reports of the prefectures, where the recruitment of many former fascists in the ranks of newly constituted parties is demonstrated.[27] Events[edit]

Wolff's proxy for the surrender of Caserta In various cases, fascist and partisan units struggled for the control of territory, and fascists were often sustained by German armed forces with air units, intelligence, and where possible tanks and infantry fighting vehicles. Fascists predominated in cities and plain zones, where heavy arms were proficiently used, while small units of partisans, tactically linked or acting in autonomy, were predominant in mountains where natural cover was possible and large formations could not maneuver with the necessary cohesion to overwhelm the enemy. Many episodes of violence followed, sometimes even involving intra-divisional fighting (i.e. fascists against fascists and partisans against partisans). Well known among these is the Porzûs massacre: some communist partisans of the division Natisone (the SAP brigade 13 martiri di Feletto), together with the Yugoslavian XI Corpus,[28] massacred 20 partisans and a woman, with the accusation of being "German spies". This happened after they reached the command of an Osoppo Brigade (there were many brigades under this name, with a territorial unified command, in Friuli). Among the members of the brigade there were commander Francesco De Gregori, uncle of famous Italian singer Francesco De Gregori, and Gastone Valente, commissioner of the brigade.[29] The end[edit] Fascist forces surrendered on May 2, 1945, following Germany's surrender to the Allies. Consequences of the war[edit]

Following the end of the civil war, many soldiers, executives and sympathizers of the fascist Repubblica Sociale were subjected to quick show trials and executed. Others were killed without a proper trial. Civilians were also killed, sometimes due to the wrong accusation of being fascist collaborators; people, in fact, took the chance to solve some private grudges through accusations of this kind. The Minister of Interior Mario Scelba estimated the victims of these executions to be 732,[30] but historians dispute this estimate. According to German historian Hans Woller, about 12,060 people were killed in 1945 and about 6,027 in 1946. Ferruccio Parri said in an interview that there could possibly have been about 30,000 victims.[31] Violence decreased after an amnesty was issued on behalf of the Italian government, the so-called Togliatti amnesty, issued in 1946.[32]