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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
German war crimes in Italy: part one
Sixty years since the massacre at Sant Anna di Stazzema
By Elisabeth Zimmermann
7 October 2004
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This three-part series of articles is based on two books
that appeared in the 1990s: Friedrich Andraes Auch Gegen
Frauen und KinderDer Krieg der Deutschen Wehrmacht Gegen
die Zivilbevölkerung in Italien 1943-1945 [Against Women
and Childrenthe German Wehrmachts War Against the
Civilian Population in Italy, 1943-45] (Piper Verlag München,
Zürich, 1994); and Gerhard Schreibers Deutsche
Kriegsverbrechen in ItalienTäter, Opfer, Strafverfolgung
[German War Crimes in ItalyPerpetrators, Victims, Punishment]
(Becksche Reihe, Verlag C.H. Beck, München, 1996).
Last month marked the 60th anniversary of one of the most brutal
war crimes committed by German soldiers and SS troops during the
Nazi occupation of Italy. Over the course of a few hours, at Sant
Anna die Stazzema, 560 women, children and men, unable to flee,
were murdered in a bestial manner.
On August 12, 1944, as part of a so-called cleansing
operation, the intelligence unit of the 16th tank division
Reichsführer SS, led by SS leader Walter Reder, invaded the
Stazzema region of Lucca province, leaving behind a trail of devastation.
The German army had ordered the evacuation of the city of Sant
Anna a week earlier, but only part of the population followed
the order. Moreover, after the initial evacuation, many women
and children returned to their homes. Also residing in the city
were refugees from other regions, whose evacuation had previously
been ordered on August 8.
German Army and SS troops, along with Italian SS troops, moved
in four columns towards Sant Anna, committing several massacres
along the way. In Vaccareccia, the troops trapped 70 captured
people in a stable, decimated them with hand grenades and machineguns,
and finished up with flame-throwers, virtually cremating the entire
site. They followed the same procedure in Franchi and Pero. Whoever
could not flee in time was butchered.
Gerhard Schreiber describes these events: In Sant
Anna, Himmlers tank grenadiers forced the residents and
refugees into a walled-in area in front of the church. The people
found themselves in a trap, since there was only a single exit.
The murderers began their work, and afterwards formed a mountain
of corpses from the remains of 132 men, women, children, and infants.
Once more the flame-throwers were used, so that the dead could
not be identified. When the unit later proceeded into the valley
beyond Valdicastello, the SS troops left behind 560 murder victims,
including 14 in Mulino Rosso and 6 in Capezzano di Pietrasanta.
Afterwards, the authorities could identify only 390 of the dead,
among whom they found children up to 10 years old. The youngest
victim was 3 months old, the oldest was 86 years old.
As bad as it was, the massacre at Sant Anna die Stazzema
was by no means exceptional. It was only one of numerous war crimes
and crimes against humanity committed by the German Army, SS troops,
and other German units in Eastern Europe and other territories
occupied during the campaign against the Soviet Union in the Second
World War. This massacre was just one of countless other war crimes,
which became more brutal and gruesome as German troops faced increased
danger from the Allied advance and partisan resistance.
Historical background
After the end of the Second World War, silence shrouded the
rampages carried out by German troops in Italy. Hardly any of
those responsible for these gruesome war crimes were brought to
account, including those who bore responsibility for the massacre
at Sant Anna di Stazzema.
The reason was the Cold War against the Soviet Union. Processing
German war crimes could not be allowed to interfere with the rearmament
of Germany and the admission of the Federal Republic (West Germany)
into NATO. The Italian judiciary quickly put an end to any investigation
of the crimes, while the German side showed no interest in the
issue.
Only over the past ten years have these events received wider
publicity. Independently of one another, in 1994 and 1996, the
historians Friedrich Andrae and Gerhard Schreiber published studies
supported by military archives, war diaries, and witness descriptions.
Various journalists and survivors have also undertaken investigations
in an attempt to identify and prosecute those responsible.
On April 20 of this year, the La Spezia military tribunal brought
a case against three members of the SS: Gerhard Sommer, Ludwig
Sonntag and Alfred Schönenberg. The trial dealt with officers
of the 16th tank division Reichsführer SS who were responsible
for the massacre at Sant Anna di Stazzema. However, the
elderly defendants never appeared before the court, and it is
highly unlikely that they will be extradited to Italy or be brought
to trial in Germany.
The question remains as to why these gruesome war crimes and
massacres were committed against the civil population?
Fascist Italy, under its leader Mussolini, was closely allied
with Nazi Germany. Together with Japan, Italy and Germany formed
the Axis Powers. By the summer of 1943, it was already apparent
that the Axis powers were confronting defeat. Allied troops began
an attack on German and Italian positions in North Africa in October
of 1942. On November 2, 1942, they broke through Axis lines at
El Alamein.
A short time later, British and American troops landed in French-occupied
North Africa. After facing initial resistance, they overcame the
troops of the pro-German Vichy government. By the end of January
1943, they had Morocco and Algeria under their control. On May
13, the Axis Powers last resistance in North Africa was
broken. General von Arnim capitulated at Tunis, and 250,000 German
and Italians were taken prisoners of war.
At about the same time, the Red Armys counteroffensive
began to the south of Stalingrad, and the German 6th army was
surrounded on all sides. On February 2, 1943 Field Marshall Paulus
capitulated with the rest of his army in the destroyed city.
In the summer of 1943, British troops landed in the southeast
of Sicily. American troops landed further to the west in the Gulf
of Gela. The Italian elite tried to save their skins by deposing
and arresting Mussolini on July 25, 1943, ending his 20-year dictatorship.
King Vittorio Emanuele III named Marschall Badoglio as the successor
to the office of minister president. General Castellano signed
Italys capitulation on September 3, 1943.
However, the German command was not ready to withdraw from
the Italian front. It reacted furiously to the Italian capitulation,
which it viewed as a betrayal. On the evening of September 8,
1943, following directions from Hitler via an adjutant, the head
of the German Army staff, General Jodl, issued the codeword for
operation Axe. Italy, which had wanted to withdraw from the fighting,
now became a theatre of war.
In the ensuing days, Hitler discovered Mussolinis place
of imprisonment and engineered his spectacular escape. However,
it was made clear to Mussolini that he was under the surveillance
of the SS. On September 22, 1943 Mussolini founded the new Italian
Social Republic, although it controlled only the northern part
of Italy occupied by German troops.
Repression against Jews, civilians, and members
of the Italian Army
In the region controlled by Mussolini, the German troops and
SS units were free to perpetrate their terror against the civilian
population. Amongst their war crimes was the arrest and deportation
of Jews from Rome. In his book, Friedrich Andrae describes the
actions that took place under the cover of darkness in October
1943:
At about 4 oclock in the morning on October 16,
the Jewish Feast of the Tabernacle had just begun. One of three
companies of German special forces secretly and quietly surrounded
the ghetto in Rome, closed all exit points, and then combed through
the ghetto house by house for ten hours. Of about 8,000 Jews in
Rome, not all of them from the ghetto, 1,259 were arrested. Of
these, 1,007 were deported to Auschwitz, where they arrived on
October 23.
Operation Axe included the demobilization and disarmament of
the Italian Army. Because of widespread war fatigue, these actions
met little resistance at first. Then came the enormously brutal
actions of the German forces. The high German command, as
well as Field Marshals Rommel and Kesselring in Italy wrote
Friedrich Andrae, roused the troops with viciously violent
orders which contravened international law.
The German high command issued an order on September 15, 1943
explaining what should be done with disarmed Italian soldiers.
The motto was simply: Whoever is not with us is against
us. Three groups were distinguished: first, those who were
loyal to the alliance and continued to fight alongside Germany;
second, those who no longer wanted to fight; third, soldiers who
aided the resistance or had entered into a pact with the enemy.
The officers of the last group were to be shot, and the rest were
to be used as workers, or else deported to the Eastern Front.
A particularly brutal war crime was committed when Italian
soldiers were disarmed on the Greek island of Kefalonia. On September
18, 1943, the German high command overrode the order of September
15, and ordered that no more prisoners be taken on Kefalonia.
As a result, 5,170 Italian soldiers were slaughtered, even though
they had not resisted. Other prisoners were transferred to the
mainland in overcrowded ships that were not marked as prisoner
of war transports. Another 13,288 Italians died when enemy fire
sunk the ships, and the Germans refused to initiate any rescue
procedures.
In their retreat from Allied forces in Italy, German units
adopted a scorched earth policy. On September 12, 1943, a few
days after the Italian capitulation, Hitler ordered that the Allied
advance be delayed so as to allow time for mass deportations,
killings and destruction. The goal was to leave a wasteland behind
for the enemy.
To be continued
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