Supreme Command | |
---|---|
Comando Supremo | |
Active | June 1941 – 31 May 1945 |
Country | Kingdom of Italy |
Type | High command |
Role | Nominally oversaw: |
Part of | Armed forces |
Headquarters | Rome |
Engagements | |
Commanders | |
Chief of the Comando Supremo | Ugo Cavallero Vittorio Ambrosio Giovanni Messe Claudio Trezzani |
Comando Supremo (Supreme command) was the highest command echelon of the Italian Armed Forces between June 1941 and May 1945. Its predecessor, the Stato Maggiore Generale (General Staff), was a purely advisory body with no direct control of the several branches of the armed forces and with very little staff. Created amidst the exigencies of World War II, Comando Supremo was a large organization with several departments and operational command of the armed forces on the active fronts. At the end of the war, it was reduced to a purely advisory role again.
At the time of Italy's entry into World War II on 10 June 1940, the Italian armed forces were not unified, although Prime Minister Benito Mussolini held the ministries of War, the Navy and Aeronautics concurrently. On 11 June 1940, King Victor Emmanuel III named Mussolini "Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces Operating on all Fronts". The Stato Maggiore Generale (Supreme General Staff), despite its exalted name, had only seven employees and was a purely advisory body to Mussolini. It did not have direct communication with the ministries and no authority over the staffs of the army, navy and air force. It was led by the Capo di Stato Maggiore Generale (Chief of the Supreme General Staff), whose deputy chief was in practice often consulted instead. [1]
Following Italy's disastrous invasion of Greece, the chief of staff, Pietro Badoglio, was dismissed on 6 December 1940. His replacement, Ugo Cavallero, submitted proposals for the Stato Maggiore's complete reorganization to Mussolini on 15 and 19 May 1941. This was implemented in June. The Stato Maggiore Generale was redesignated Comando Supremo. The office of deputy chief of staff was abolished and Comando Supremo was given operational control of the armed forces, standing between them and Mussolini. Comando Supremo acquired the right to command the staffs of the four service branches (army, navy and air force) and of the Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale (Voluntary Militia for National Security), which was previously directly subordinate to Mussolini as the Duce del Fascismo (Leader of Fascism). Each service now had an operations section at Comando Supremo. In addition, Comando Supremo had direct command of most Italian forces operating outside of Italy. [1]
The new Comando Supremo was much larger than the old Stato Maggiore Generale. The chief of staff was served by a secretary and a generale addetto (attached general) and presided over three departments and three coordinating offices. The First Department contained the offices of operations; organization and training; order of battle; and press and propaganda. The Second Department contained the offices of serves; fuel oils and transportation; and war potential. The Third Department contained the offices of personnel; general affairs (statistics, military law and prisoners); code; and general headquarters. It also included a secretaryship of the general staffs. The three coordinating offices not part of the departments were the Servizio Informazioni Militare (Military Intelligence Service), which was taken over from the ministry of war; the Office of War Economy; and the Office of Communications. [1] Comando Supremo did not control research and development or procurement and production, which matters were left to the service branches. [2]
The Comando Supremo represented a complete transformation of the high command. The chief of staff of the armed forces went from being an advisor with responsibility for planning only to being in direct control of operations on most of Italy's battle fronts. Mussolini retained supreme command, but after June 1941 it was mostly exercised through Comando Supremo. The staffs and ministries of the service branches lost much of their competence. The change was opposed by Mussolini's undersecretaries for navy and air, Arturo Riccardi and Francesco Pricolo, respectively. [1]
In November 1941, the Servizio Informazioni Esercito (Army Information Service) was formed at the Ministry of War to cover operational intelligence, leaving only higher-level intelligence to Comando Supremo. In June 1943, the former was renamed Reparto Informazioni Esercito (Army Intelligence Section) and downgraded to operational intelligence collecting, with Comando Supremo resuming its wider remit. [3]
Comando Supremo followed a different trajectory from its German counterpart, Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW). Whereas the German leader Adolf Hitler exercised increasing control over his armed forces as the war progressed, limiting OKW's influence on the Eastern Front, Italy's early defeats forced Mussolini to accept more and more the advice of Comando Supremo. By 1 January 1943, it had direct command of Italian forces operating in Africa, Albania, Croatia, Dalmatia, the Dodecanese, Greece, Montenegro, Slovenia and the Soviet Union. [1]
Under Cavallero, Comando Supremo maintained good relations with Oberbefehlshaber Süd , the command of German forces in Italy. The German military attaché in Rome, Enno von Rintelen, was seconded to Comando Supremo. By early 1943, Cavallero's subservient attitude to the Germans was an embarrassment. On 1 February 1943, he was replaced by Vittorio Ambrosio. On 11 March, Ambrosio reinstated the office of deputy chief of staff and appointed Francesco Rossi . He appointed Giuseppe Castellano as his generale addetto. Although he told Mussolini in their first meeting that he intended to lighten the Comando Supremo's load, its structure remained mostly as it had been under Cavallero. [1]
The division of command between Comando Supremo and the army general staff ceased to have a functional basis in 1943, with the end of active Italian participation on the Eastern Front, the loss of Africa and the Allied invasion of Sicily. According to the division, the defence of Italy fell to the army. Ambrosio did get his nominee, Mario Roatta, appointed chief of the army general staff, but the two were at odds over Germany. Ambrosio wanted to limit German forces in Italy, while Roatta called for reinforcements. [1]
The overthrow of Mussolini on 25 July 1943, was planned in Comando Supremo by Castellano. When Victor Emmanuel approved the plan on 20 July, he informed Ambrosio, who made arrangements to arrest Mussolini and bring more troops to Rome. After the appointment of Badoglio as prime minister, the king resumed his command of the armed forces and Comando Supremo became directly subordinate to him. Although Roatta was later to describe this as a return to normality, in fact the situation was entirely new, since nothing like Comando Supremo had existed in Italy before the king delegated his command to Mussolini. The situation was also unusual in that Badoglio disclaimed any authority in military affairs, leaving military matters almost entirely to Comando Supremo. The result was a government in which Ambrosio was the de facto equal of the political head of government, both under the king. [1]
After the signing of the armistice with the Allies on 3 September 1943, Comando Supremo made no effort to notify the other staffs, ministries or headquarters under its command prior to the armistice's publication on 8 September. [1] It had apparently convinced itself that the announcement would come on 12 September. [4] On 9 September, Comando Supremo, along with the king and the government, abandoned Rome for Brindisi. [1]
Most of Comando Supremo's records fell into the hands of the Italian Social Republic in September 1943. As a result, many of them were lost in April 1945. [3] On 18 November 1943, Ambrosio was replaced by Giovanni Messe. [5]
On 1 May 1945, Messe was replaced by Claudio Trezzani. On 31 May, on the advice of the minister of war, Alessandro Casati, the lieutenant-general of the realm, Prince Umberto, issued a legislative decree reducing the chief of staff of Comando Supremo to a purely advisory role. [6] This was renamed Stato Maggiore della Difesa (Defence General Staff). [3]
No. | Portrait | Chief of the Comando Supremo | Took office | Left office | Time in office | Defence branch | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ugo Cavallero (1880–1943) | GeneralJune 1941 | 1 February 1943 | 1 year, 8 months | Royal Italian Army | – | |
2 | Vittorio Ambrosio (1879–1958) | General1 February 1943 | 18 November 1943 | 9 months | Royal Italian Army | – | |
3 | Giovanni Messe (1883–1968) | General18 November 1943 | 1 May 1945 | 1 year, 5 months | Royal Italian Army | – | |
4 | Claudio Trezzani (1881–1955) | General1 May 1945 | 31 May 1945 | 30 days | Royal Italian Army | – |
Pietro Badoglio, 1st Duke of Addis Abeba, 1st Marquess of Sabotino, was an Italian general during both World Wars and the first viceroy of Italian East Africa. With the fall of the Fascist regime in Italy, he became Prime Minister of Italy.
Ugo Cavallero was an Italian military commander before and during World War II. He was the first Chief of the Comando Supremo on June 1941. He was dismissed from his command due to his lacklustre performance, and was arrested upon the fall of Benito Mussolini's regime. Cavallero was later freed by the Germans, but refused to collaborate and was found dead the following day.
Ettore Bastico was an Italian field marshal who served as the commander of Axis forces in North Africa from 1941 to 1943 during World War II. In addition to being a general of the Royal Italian Army, he served as the governor of the Italian held Aegean islands and of Libya. After his time in the army, he became a military historian and published several books.
Vittorio Ambrosio was an Italian general who served in the Italo-Turkish War, World War I, and World War II. During the last phase of World War II Ambrosio supported the fall of Benito Mussolini and Italy's eventual renunciation of the German alliance.
The Ministry of Defence is the government body of the Italian Republic responsible for military and civil defence matters and managing the Italian Armed Forces. It is led by the Italian Minister of Defence, a position occupied by Guido Crosetto since October 2022.
Ubaldo Soddu was an Italian general and politician who held the position of Deputy Chief of Staff of the Army and Undersecretary of State for War during the initial phases of World War II. On 13 June 1940, immediately after the outbreak of hostilities with France and the United Kingdom, he assumed the position of deputy chief of the General Staff. Promoted to army general, he replaced general Sebastiano Visconti Prasca as commander of the Albanian Higher Troop Command during the Greco-Italian War on 8 November 1940. Because of the defeat Italian troops suffered between 22 and 23 November 1940, he was replaced after four weeks in command by the Italian Royal Army's chief of staff, General Ugo Cavallero.
Sebastiano Visconti Prasca was an Italian general. A veteran of the Italo-Turkish War of 1911–1912 and World War I, he led the initial offensive of the Greco-Italian War in 1940 during World War II, but was relieved of his command after two weeks for incompetence and relieved by General Ubaldo Soddu.
The Bollettino della Vittoria is the official document after the Armistice of Villa Giusti with which General Armando Diaz, the supreme commander of the Royal Italian Army, announced, on November 4, 1918, the surrender of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the victory of the Kingdom of Italy in World War I.
Mario Roatta was an Italian general. After serving in World War I he rose to command the Corpo Truppe Volontarie which assisted Francisco Franco's force during the Spanish Civil War. He was the Deputy Chief of Staff of the Italian Army from October 1939 to March 1941 and from March 1941 to January 1942 its Chief of Staff and helped in preparing for the invasion of Yugoslavia. Roatta would gain the nickname "Black Beast of Yugoslavia” due to his brutal methods of repression.
Operation Achse, originally called Operation Alaric, was the codename for the German operation to forcibly disarm the Italian armed forces after Italy's armistice with the Allies on 3 September 1943.
The Italian Military Information Service was the military intelligence organization for the Royal Army of the Kingdom of Italy from 1925 until 1946, and of the Italian Republic until 1949. The SIM was Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini's equivalent to the German Abwehr. In the early years of the war, the SIM scored important intelligence successes. Rommel’s successful military operations in North Africa in 1942 were substantially facilitated by the SIM through the securing of the U.S. Black Code used by Colonel Bonner Fellers to communicate plans for British military operations to his Headquarters in Washington.
The Chief of the Defence Staff of Italy is the service head of the Italian Armed Forces.
Pietro Pintor was an Italian general during World War II. Pintor was the uncle of the antifascist journalist Giaime Pintor.
Operational Land Forces Command is the Italian Army's major command tasked with the operational and administrative control of most of its combat forces. COMFOTER reports directly to the Chief of Staff of the Italian Army. The command is based in Rome.
Supermarina was the headquarters of the Italian Royal Navy established on 1 June 1940, just before Italy entered the Second World War. The Army and Air Force equivalents were Superesercito and Superaereo, which were subordinate to Comando Supremo the Supreme Command of the Italian armed forces.
Quirino Armellini was an Italian military officer, who served as a general in both the Royal Italian Army and the Italian Army.
The following is the structure of the Italian Navy as of June 2020. It is considered a multiregional and a blue-water navy.
Taddeo Orlando was an Italian general who served in the Italo-Turkish War, World War I, and World War II.
Luigi Marchesi was an officer in the Royal Italian Army during World War II, most notable for his involvement in the events surrounding the Armistice of Cassibile.
The expression Failed defense of Rome refers to the events that took place in the Italian capital and the surrounding area, beginning on 8 September 1943, and in the days immediately following the Armistice of Cassibile and the immediate military reaction of the German Wehrmacht forces deployed to the south and north of the city, in accordance with the operational directives established by Adolf Hitler in the event of Italian defection.