| Introduction
World War II was the
largest and most violent armed conflict in the
history of mankind. However, the half century
that now separates us from that conflict has exacted
its toll on our collective knowledge. While World
War II continues to absorb the interest of military
scholars and historians, as well as its veterans,
a generation of Americans has grown to maturity
largely unaware of the political, social, and
military implications of a war that, more than
any other, united us as a people with a common
purpose.
Highly relevant today, World
War II has much to teach us, not only about the
profession of arms, but also about military preparedness,
global strategy, and combined operations in the
coalition war against fascism. To commemorate
the nation's 50th anniversary of World War II,
the U.S. Army has published a variety of materials
to help educate Americans about that momentous
experience. These works provide great opportunities
to learn about and renew pride in an Army that
fought so magnificently in what has been called
"the mighty endeavor."
World War II was waged on
land, on sea, and in the air over several diverse
theaters of operation for approximately six years.
The following essay is one of a series of campaign
studies highlighting those struggles that, with
their accompanying suggestions for further reading,
are designed to introduce you to one of the Army's
significant military feats from that war.
This brochure was prepared
in the U.S. Army Center of Military History by
Dwight D. Oland. I hope this absorbing account
of that period will enhance your appreciation
of American achievements during World War II.
JOHN W. MOUNTCASTLE
Brigadier General, USA
Chief of Military History
North Apennines
10 September 1944-4 April
1945
By the end of the first week of August
1944 members of the British Eighth Army stood
on the Ponte Vecchio, bridging the Arno River
in recently liberated Florence, Italy. The Eighth
Army had just completed a campaign, in conjunction
with the U.S. Fifth Army, that had kept Axis forces
in Italy in full retreat, unable to halt the Allied
drive north of Rome that had begun with Operation
DIADEM the previous May. For the first time since
the Italian campaign had begun, Allied leaders
were optimistic that they were on the verge of
pushing the Germans out of the northern Apennines
and sweeping through the Po Valley beyond. After
that, many hoped for a rapid advance into the
Alps, the Balkans, and perhaps into Austria, before
winter and the enemy could stem their advance.
Strategic Setting
The Italian campaign thus far had been
long, arduous, and frustrating. In September 1943
the armies of the United States and Great Britain
and the Commonwealth, fresh from victories in
North Africa and Sicily, invaded the southern
Italian peninsula at three locations. Allied predictions
that the German Army would quickly retreat to
the Alps after Italy left the war on 8 September
proved wrong.
Axis forces tenaciously defended every mountaintop
and valley amid deteriorating winter weather from
behind a series of fortified lines that stretched
across Italy from the Tyrrhenian Sea to the Adriatic.
After spending the winter of 1943-44 stalled at
the Gustav Line and within a small beachhead at
Anzio south of Rome, the U.S. Fifth and the British
Eighth Armies succeeded in overwhelming enemy
defenses in May, advanced up the Liri Valley,
and liberated Rome in June.
Then, in a two-month long summer campaign that
was very uncharacteristic of Italian operations
until that time, Allied forces pushed the enemy
150 miles north to the Arno River by mid-August.
Axis forces, however, began new preparations to
frustrate any continuation of the Allied drive
by building another belt of fortifications, the
Gothic Line. The new line generally consisted
of a series of fortified passes and mountaintops,
some fifteen to thirty miles in depth north of
the Arno River and stretched east from the Ligurian
Sea through Pisa, Florence, and beyond.
Motor transport in northern Apennines. (DA
photograph)
Farther east, along the
Adriatic coast where the northern Apennines sloped
down onto a broad coastal plain, Gothic Line defenses
were generally anchored on the numerous rivers,
streams, and other waterways flowing from the
mountains to the sea. One key to the line appeared
to be the central Italian city of Bologna, a major
rail and road communications hub located only
a few miles north of the defensive belt.
The intense combat operations
of the summer were not destined to continue into
the fall. With the liberation of Rome on 4 June
and the invasion of Normandy two days later (Operation
OVERLORD), Allied resources earmarked for Italian
operations, already considered of secondary importance,
steadily diminished. The Allied invasion of southern
France (Operation ANVIL-DRAGOON) on 15 August
further reduced the limited resources available
for the Italian theater. More important, ANVIL-DRAGOON
stripped the armies in Italy of 7 first-class
divisions,
3 American and 4 French, confirming in the minds
of many Allied soldiers that Italy was a holding
action of little importance.
Once the Allies reached
the Gothic Line, they might have remained there
for the rest of the war. Planners, however, were
convinced that the Axis commanders could hold
their positions with a minimal force, thus freeing
units for duty elsewhere, in particular northwest
Europe. They even surmised that the Germans were
attempting to conduct a reverse
holding action in Italy by tying down a greater
number of Allied troops than they themselves were
forced to commit.
In addition, British Prime
Minister Winston S. Churchill was growing increasingly
alarmed at the speed of Soviet advances on the
Russian Front, which he felt threatened Western
interests in Eastern Europe and, in particular,
British interests in the Mediterranean. During
the summer of 1944, therefore, he called for the
Allies to redouble their Italian efforts, to press
on into the Po Valley, and push east into the
Balkans and north through the Ljubljana Gap, reaching
the Danube Valley, Austria, and Hungary before
the Red Army.
The Americans, however,
remained focused on northwest Europe. While they
agreed to continue Italian operations with a minimum
commitment of U.S. forces, they shared neither
Churchill's concerns about Soviet intentions nor
his zeal for campaigns in Eastern Europe. The
Allies did plan, however, to continue offensive
operations in the northern Apennines in the hope
of breaking through the Gothic Line and advancing
into northern Italy. A continuation of the offensive,
they hoped, would at least prevent the Germans
from transferring their forces in Italy elsewhere.
Operations
In August 1944 Field
Marshal Sir Harold R. L. G. Alexander commanded
the 15 Army Group in Italy, an Anglo-American
force that eventually included troops from sixteen
Allied nations. Within the 15 Army Group was Lt.
Gen. Mark W. Clark's Fifth Army, composed of the
U.S. IV Corps, commanded by Lt. Gen. Willis D.
Crittenberger (three divisions), and the U.S.
II Corps, commanded by Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Keyes
(three divisions).
Clark's forces held the western portion of the
Allied line from the Ligurian Sea at the mouth
of the Arno River to a point just west of Florence.
To the east Lt. Gen. Sir Oliver Leese's larger
Eighth Army, consisting of the Polish 2 Corps
(two divisions), the Canadian 1 Corps (two divisions),
the British 5 Corps (six divisions), the British
10 Corps (two divisions), and the British 13 Corps
(three divisions), held the line from the Florence
area to just south of Fano on the Adriatic coast.
Axis forces in Italy, designated
Army Group C, were under the overall command
of Luftwaffe Field Marshal Albert Kesselring.
Opposing Clark's Fifth Army was Lt. Gen. Joachim
Lemelsen's Fourteenth Army, which contained
ten divisions belonging to the I Parachute
and the XIV Panzer Corps. To the east,
opposing the British Eighth Army, was the Tenth
Army commanded by General Heinrich 5
von Vietinghoff. This army
consisted of twelve divisions belonging to the
LXXVI Panzer and the LI Mountain Corps.
The two other Axis forces in northern Italy,
the Ligurian Army and the Adriatic Command,
controlled four more divisions and generally
performed antipartisan and reserve missions.
Soon after British forces
reached the Arno River on 4 August 1944, General
Leese, noting the Eighth Army's armor superiority
and the Fifth Army's loss of seven divisions,
including the experienced mountain troops of the
French Expeditionary Corps, recommended that his
force attack up the Adriatic coast to Rimini.
Once this attack had drawn Axis units away from
the Fifth Army's front, General Clark could hit
the Gothic Line in a secondary assault from Florence
directly north toward Bologna with his more limited
force. The Fifth and Eighth Armies could then
converge on and capture Bologna and move to encircle
and destroy Axis forces in the Po Valley, putting
Eighth Army forces in a favorable position to
move into the Balkans and the Danube Valley.
The proposal, code-named
Operation OLIVE, appealed to Alexander, who had
advocated similar "one-two punches" in the past.
Clark, however, desiring a more independent and
decisive role for the Fifth Army, initially agreed
but asked for control of the British 13 Corps
to enhance his main effort. His request revived
hard feelings that stemmed from previous differences
with General Leese, and the latter vehemently
protested placing British troops under American
command. Alexander, however, overrode his countryman's
objections, and the Allies set to work ironing
out several major operational problems.
The biggest dilemma facing
the Allies concerned deception. As British forces
were moved from positions in central Italy to
prepare for the coastal offensive, Fifth Army
units had to maintain pressure on the enemy to
convince Axis commanders that the main thrust
was still coming in the Florence area, while simultaneously
extending their own lines to occupy positions
vacated by the Eighth Army without attracting
attention. The shift of British forces over battle-damaged
and circuitous mountain routes began on 15 August.
While this movement was made easier by the almost
total lack of enemy air reconnaissance, it took
the Eighth Army eight days, until 22 August, to
redeploy eleven divisions and nine separate brigades
on a 25-mile-wide front anchored on the Adriatic.
To mask the true nature
of Operation OLIVE, Alexander decided to make
it appear that the Fifth and Eighth Armies were
making a routine noncombat approach up to the
Gothic Line rather than launching an all-out offensive.
When the Polish 2 Corps neared the Gothic Line
on the coast, Alexander's reserve
forces marshaled behind the Poles were to launch
a sudden, lightning attack through Polish positions
and break the enemy defensive line. As soon as
this happened, Fifth Army forces, which would
have already crossed the Arno and closed on the
rugged northern Apennines, would attack the Gothic
Line north of Florence.
German radio communications
and order-of-battle reports, intercepted and decrypted
by ULTRA code-breaking operators in July and August,
revealed to Alexander, Clark, and Leese that neither
Kesselring nor any of his subordinates had detected
the eastward shift of Fifth Army and Eighth Army
units. Similarly, the Axis command did not realize
that a change in Allied operational strategy had
occurred or that an attack along the coast was
imminent.
Operation OLIVE commenced
on 25 August 1944 as the British 5 Corps and Canadian
1 Corps attacked through two Polish divisions
on a seventeen-mile-wide front along the Adriatic.
The offensive, supported by the British Desert
Air Force, rapidly gained ground with the Canadian
5th Armored Division moving far forward against
light resistance.
Originally believing that
the Eighth Army assault was a diversion to draw
troops from central Italy, Kesselring delayed
steps to reinforce units on the coast for four
days, even though the Poles and Canadians had
penetrated the Gothic Line near the coastal town
of Pesaro on 30 August, threatening to turn the
entire Axis front. Yet, taking advantage of the
time provided by the Eighth Army's well-known
proclivity for slow-moving, set-piece battles,
and taking additional advantage of its failure
to provide adequate armored reserves to exploit
the unexpected breakthrough, Kesselring soon managed
to plug the breach with the 26th Panzer, 29th
Panzer Grenadier, and 356th Infantry Divisions.
Maximizing the defensive
advantages provided by inclement weather and numerous
rivers and ridges, Axis units inflicted a total
of 8,000 casualties on the attackers and stalled
Eighth Army forces short of their Rimini and Romagna
Plain objectives by 3 September. Despite the failure
to exploit Canadian 1 Corps gains and perhaps
end the war in Italy, Alexander was optimistic
that Fifth Army's second punch would succeed.
General Clark planned to
open his phase of Operation OLIVE on 10 September
1944 with an assault by all three corps under
his command. In preparation, he had extended the
front of his IV Corps (consisting of Task Force
45, the U.S. 1st Armored Division, and the South
African 6th Armored Division) eastward from the
Ligurian coast to approximately five miles west
of Florence while anchoring the eastern wing of
the British 13 Corps (with the British 1st, the
Indian 8th, and the British 6th
Armored Divisions) east of Florence. In between
was the U.S. II Corps, comprising the U.S. 34th,
91st, 85th, and 88th Infantry Divisions, concentrated
on a narrow five-mile front.
From ULTRA intercepts, Clark
knew that the German High Command had ordered
Kesselring to prepare for an attack on the Futa
Pass in the center of the defending
Fourteenth Army's line. The American general
thus ordered an initial northward advance by his
two flank corps across the Arno River to the Gothic
Line in the wake of the now retreating Axis forces.
Meanwhile, the U.S. 34th,
91st, and 85th Divisions of II Corps would follow,
moving north along Highway 65, 9 Map:
II Corps Attack on the Gothic Line the
main road to Bologna through the Futa Pass. When
the expected enemy resistance was encountered
the 34th Division would launch a strong diversionary
attack west of the Futa Pass, while the remaining
II Corps units, led by the 91st Division with
support from the 85th Division,
would bypass the Futa Pass to the east and attack
the lightly defended Il Giogo
Pass on Route 6524 near the boundary of the Fourteenth
and Tenth Armies.
Once the Il Giogo Pass was
taken, pressure would be put on the German flank
at the Futa Pass, forcing the enemy to withdraw.
The II Corps could then resume the advance north
up Highway 65 to Bologna supported by all Fifth
Army forces now totaling nearly 250,000 men.
As expected the Germans
began withdrawing to the Gothic Line days before
Fifth Army began its advance on 10 September.
Initial resistance was thus light, but as the
advancing forces reached the mountains, the intensity
of combat increased. The Eighth Army's attack
in the east had succeeded in diverting most enemy
units away from the Futa Pass and II Giogo Pass
areas except three regiments of the I Parachute
Corps' 4th Parachute Division. In the west
only the 362d and 65th Infantry Divisions
faced the U.S. IV Corps, while just a single
division, the 715th Infantry, opposed the
British 13 Corps attack.
The U.S. 34th and 91st Divisions,
with support from corps artillery, assaulted the
Gothic Line on 12 September. The fighting was
typical of the Italian campaign. The terrain facing
Fifth Army units consisted of numerous mountain
peaks, streams, deep valleys, broken ridges, and
rugged spurs, all offering excellent defensive
positions to the enemy. Although significant numbers
of troops were involved on both sides, small unit
actions predominated and rarely were units larger
than a battalion engaged at any one time. The
compartmented terrain tended to erode the Allies'
three-to-one advantage in manpower, and whatever
successes were gained were due largely to the
individual soldiers' valor, resilience, and determination.
Although the Germans had
heavily fortified the Futa Pass, they were surprised
by the 91st and 85th Divisions' attacks against
the Il Giogo Pass and nearby Monticelli Ridge
and Monte Altuzzo.

"Ebb and Flow of War, Monte Altuzzo,
Italy, " by Harry A. Davis.
(Army Art Collection)
During 11 six days of intense
fighting between 12-18 September 1944, the 91st
Division seized the Il Giogo Pass and Monticelli
Ridge, while the 85th Division secured Monte Altuzzo.
These successes outflanked the Futa Pass but cost
over 2,730 II Corps casualties. Seeing the futility
of continuing to defend that portion of the Gothic
Line, the I Parachute Corps withdrew to
the next set of ridges to establish another defensive
line. Encouraged at having breached the Gothic
Line in at least one sector, the Americans began
a sustained mountain-by-mountain, ridge-by-ridge,
and valley-by-valley drive toward Bologna. In
response, the enemy tenaciously defended each
position in a series of short, intense, small
unit actions.
In such operations, the work of small
combat units was pivotal. For example, the actions
of Company B. 363d Infantry, U.S. 91st Division,
led to the capture of II Giogo Pass. Forming the
left flank of the 91st Division assault, Company
B had inched up the Monticelli Ridge overlooking
the pass on 14 September, using every scrap of
sparse cover available. The two platoons leading
the attack were soon stopped by enemy fire at
twilight. Later that evening, one officer and
six men crept forward, found the enemy gun position,
and reported its location back to Company B.
Top of Il Giogo Pass in the Gothic Line, looking
toward the north. (DA photograph)
The next morning, 15 September,
artillery destroyed the strongpoint, allowing
the company to resume its advance to a position
just short of the ridge. At the time the unit
had drawn ahead of its flanking units and consequently
was receiving enemy fire from three sides. Fearing
that the enemy would pin his unit down if the
assault slowed, the platoon leader on the left
flank decided to lead a bayonet charge to the
summit fifty yards away. While enemy attention
was momentarily focused elsewhere, the platoon
charged and captured the northwest end of the
ridge from the surprised German defenders. However,
by the time the entire company had reached the
summit, it had only seventy men and limited amounts
of ammunition remaining.
The Germans counterattacked
three times but were driven off with heavy casualties
by well-placed artillery fire and the determined
resistance of Company B. During the night sporadic
enemy small-arms fire peppered the summit, wounding
the company commander but failing to halt American
resupply activities. For the next two days the
Germans attempted to recapture the ridge through
repeated counterattacks on Company B's left flank,
an area held by fewer than twenty-five men. Again
they failed.
Infantry pack teams bring supplies to units fighting
in the
Gothic Line near Futa Pass.
(DA photograph)
For the stubborn defense,
much credit went to Pfc. Oscar G. Johnson. Located
in an advanced position with five other soldiers,
Johnson directed devastating direct fire against
each enemy attack with ammunition and weapons
gathered from the dead and wounded, cannibalizing
damaged weapons to repair malfunctioning ones.
Even after enemy fire had killed or wounded his
entire squad and others sent to assist, Johnson
held his position. Early in the morning of 17
September, the enemy attacks stopped. Johnson
received the Medal of Honor for his actions. But
Company B, now reduced to fifty men with all company
officers dead or wounded, was too weak to clear
the remainder of the ridge and was consolidated
with Company G. Through such actions, II Corps
units broke through the Gothic Line on a seven-mile
front, attaining Fifth Army's objective of outflanking
the Futa Pass.
As the Fifth Army continued
its offensive, the British Eighth Army resumed
Operation OLIVE on 12 September. In a classic
demonstration of attrition warfare that took full
advantage of overwhelming Allied
air, armor, and infantry firepower, the British
5 and Canadian 1 Corps smashed through defenses
manned by the 29th Panzer Grenadier and
1st Parachute Divisions to capture Rimini,
the gateway to the Romagna Plain on 21 September.
Yet the Eighth Army had advanced only thirty miles
in twenty-six days in the face of stubborn resistance,
heavy rain, flooding, and mud. Nevertheless, despite
the strain on its troops, on 22 September the
Eighth Army pressed its attack northward beginning
a three-month-long operation known as the "battle
of the rivers." During this series of engagements,
the Eighth Army, again taking advantage of its
overwhelming materiel superiority, moved from
river to river, under extremely adverse weather
conditions, only gradually overcoming heavy Axis
resistance.
On the Fifth Army front,
the capture of the Il Giogo and Futa Passes ended
the American phase of Operation OLIVE. Meanwhile,
General Clark weighed two future courses of action.
He could follow his original plan and attack north
up Highway 65 to Bologna or further exploit the
boundary of the Fourteenth and Tenth
Armies by driving northeast toward Imola with
two divisions supported by armor and artillery.
He decided upon the latter option since it would
exploit German organizational confusion and better
support the Eighth Army's continuing offensive
by threatening to squeeze the enemy between the
two Allied forces.
After surveying Route 6528
to Imola, however, Clark realized that the narrow
road could not support more than a single division
under combat conditions. Therefore, he decided
to send the U.S. 34th, 91st, and 85th Divisions
north up Highway 65 as originally planned. But
not wanting to give up the possibility of accomplishing
a breakthrough between the Fourteenth and
Tenth Armies, he also ordered the U.S.
88th Division, supported by the U.S. 1st Armored
Division's Combat Command A (CCA), along Route
6528 toward Imola.
Recognizing the drive on
Imola as the more dangerous threat, the German
command reinforced the elements of three divisions
already in the area with the 715th Infantry
and Austrian 44th Reichsgrenadier Divisions.
The American advance thus rapidly degenerated
into a series of small unit actions contesting
each mountaintop and ridge line. However, the
88th Division moved steadily forward, and by 27
September the Americans had advanced halfway to
Imola, capturing in the process all of the high
ground surrounding their positions with the exception
of one peak.
Yet taking ground did not
always mean that the territory was permanently
secured. For example, although the 2d Battalion,
350th Infantry, U.S. 88th Division, with the aid
of Italian partisans, had easily
taken the summit of 2,345-foot-high Monte Battaglia
east of Route 6528 on the afternoon of 27 September,
the enemy immediately shelled the battalion's
position and mounted repeated counterattacks to
retake the mountain.
When a determined regimental-size
attack by troops of the 44th Reichsgrenadier
Division threatened to either
push the 2d Battalion from the summit or annihilate
it, the commander of Company G. 350th Infantry,
Capt. Robert E. Roeder, provided inspiration to
the defenders. Constantly moving among his men,
encouraging them and directing their fire against
the enemy, he held his unit together during an
almost continuous series of battles. During the
sixth counterattack, the enemy, using flamethrowers
and taking advantage of a dense fog, nearly succeeded
in overrunning Company G's position.
But Roeder led his men in
a fierce battle at close quarters to beat back
the enemy attack with heavy losses. The following
morning, while repulsing yet another counterattack,
Roeder was seriously wounded by shell fragments,
rendered unconscious, and carried back to his
company command post. There he refused medical
attention, and instead dragged himself to the
door of the command post to defend it, firing
his weapon at the advancing enemy, and shouting
words of encouragement and issuing orders to his
men before being killed by shell fragments. Captain
Roeder's courageous leadership galvanized the
spirit of his men and was recognized by the posthumous
award of the Medal of Honor.
After receiving reinforcements
and massive artillery support that overwhelmed
the attacking enemy units, the 2d Battalion finally
secured "Battle Mountain," as Monte Battaglia
was now called. Although more German counterattacks
came in the days that followed, all were repulsed,
and the remnants of the 2d Battalion were finally
relieved by the British 1st Guards Brigade on
5 October.
While the 88th Division was struggling
to punch through the German units blocking the
road toward Imola, the remaining three divisions
of the II Corps continued their advance along
Highway 65 toward Bologna. After securing the
Futa Pass, the 85th, 91st, and 34th Divisions,
in line abreast from east to west, moved out to
capture the Radicosa Pass, ultimately seizing
three major peaks on the ridge. These successes,
along with the capture of Battle Mountain, forced
the Germans to withdraw from their
outflanked positions.
Highway 65 at Futa Pass.
(DA photograph)
But the journey had been
difficult for the American units. From 22 September
to the end of the month, II Corps units had pushed
only six to eight miles closer to the Po Valley.
The inclement weather that had already slowed
Eighth Army's advance farther east now diminished
the intensity of Fifth Army's attack. Fog and
mist drastically decreased visibility while torrential
rains swelled streams, washed out bridges, and
created quagmires that made troop and supply movements
over mountain trails difficult and treacherous.
When faced with the additional factors of stiffening
enemy resistance and the immediate lack of replacements
to make up for the 2,105 casualties suffered by
the three regiments of the 88th Division alone,
Clark decided to abandon the attack toward Imola
on 1 October. He moved the division toward Highway
65, replacing it with elements of the British
13 Corps.
Determined to maintain steady
pressure on the enemy, Clark then ordered the
II Corps to advance up Highway 65 with its entire
four-division force, with the 85th and 91st Divisions
in the lead followed by the 34th and 88th. The
6th South African Armored Division and Combat
Command B (CCB), U.S. 1st Armored Division, would
support the left flank of the assault, and the
British 78th Infantry Division was transferred
from the Eighth Army to support the right flank.
The advance began on 1 October and gained four
miles in three days with the
91st Division bearing the brunt of the attack
directly along Highway 65. Visiting the headquarters
of the 91st Division on the first day of the attack,
Clark saw the Po Valley and the snow-covered Alps
beyond and believed that both were now within
his grasp.
But the Germans still proved
stubborn foes. The tactics, terrain, weather,
and the severity of enemy resistance in early
October closely resembled most of Fifth Army's
earlier battles. The soldiers of 85th Division
must have recognized these similarities as soon
as they encountered the German defenders. One
squad, under Sgt. Christos H. Karaberis, Company
L, 337th Infantry, 85th Division, had just cleared
the way for his company's advance east of the
Livergnano Escarpment when his platoon was pinned
down by enemy mortars and withering machine-gun
fire. Karaberis, moving alone in advance of his
squad, rapidly eliminated the first enemy machine
gun, taking eight prisoners in the process.
Sighting a similar position,
Karaberis leapt to his feet and ran in a crouched
position, killing four crew members while forcing
a fifth man to surrender. With his unit still
taking fire from three other machine guns, Karaberis
rushed the first gun with a nerve-shattering shout
and a burst of fire that prompted the four members
of the stunned and frightened crew to surrender
immediately.
Moving on, Karaberis rushed
the next gun, killing four men and capturing three
others. Witnessing the rapid dispatch of their
comrades and Karaberis' fearlessness, the six
members of the final enemy machine-gun crew quickly
surrendered. For his solitary actions in clearing
the ridge and enabling his unit to move forward,
Sergeant Karaberis was awarded the Medal of Honor.
In spite of such individual
acts of bravery, however, the combined factors
of difficult terrain, worsening weather, stubborn
enemy resistance, and over 1,730 American casualties
sustained in just four days brought the 91st Division
advance to a halt on 4 October. When the second
phase of the assault began the next day, with
the 85th Division now leading, enemy resistance
failed to diminish. Between 5-9 October Fifth
Army units advanced only three more miles, taking
an additional 1,400 casualties.
Enemy losses were also high,
especially during the frequent counterattacks
mandated by German defensive doctrine. Running
dangerously short of reserves, Kesselring ordered
his subordinates to conserve their manpower by
minimizing efforts to retake lost mountaintops
and, instead, to dig in and conduct a defense
in depth. To bolster his depleted frontline units,
he transferred the previously uncommitted 65th
Infantry Division from the U.S. IV Corps to
the II Corps front. The German theater commander
knew that if the 19 Map:
II Corps Attack on the LivergnanoEscarpment
Americans advanced out of
the Apennines and entered the Po Valley before
winter, Axis forces in Italy would be doomed.
The third and final phase
of the II Corps' assault began on 10 October against
the ten-mile-long Livergnano Escarpment, a steep
eastwest line of solitary mountain peaks constituting
the enemy's strongest 20
natural position in the
northern Apennines. The 85th Division led the
primary attack against Monte delle Formiche in
the center of the escarpment, while the 91st and
88th Divisions maintained pressure on the enemy's
flanks. For the first time in a week the weather
cleared sufficiently to allow the Fifth Army to
effectively use fighter-bombers and medium and
heavy bombers of the Mediterranean Allied Tactical
and Strategic Air Forces (MATAF and MASAF) against
the defending 4th Parachute, 94th, 362d,
and 65th Infantry Divisions in a series
of air strikes named Operation PANCAKE.
In the subsequent heavy
ground actions the 85th Division succeeded in
taking Monte delle Formiche on 10 October, while
the 91st Division outflanked the Livergnano Escarpment
from the west, forcing the Axis units in the area
to withdraw on 13 October. Here, as elsewhere,
however, sustained Axis resistance, American troop
exhaustion, rugged terrain, and poor weather halted
the II Corps' advance ten miles south of Bologna.
Field Marshal Alexander
now decided to make another attempt at capturing
Ravenna and Bologna using the Fifth and Eighth
Armies in concert. Under his plan, Clark's Fifth
Army would break out of the Apennines and encircle
the Tenth Army from the northwest, while
Leese's Eighth Army continued the "battle of the
rivers" to the east along the Adriatic. Success
appeared problematic, considering the high casualties
suffered during prior operations that were similar
and the difficulties encountered with supply lines
that stretched over rugged terrain, which was
adversely affected by wintry weather.
Meanwhile, across the lines,
Kesselring's staff pressed their commander to
fall back to the more easily defended Alps. Hitler,
however, facing Red Army gains on the Eastern
Front and mounting pressures in northwest Europe,
was loath to cede any territory voluntarily and
ordered Kesselring to hold his current line. The
field marshal, fearing to oppose Hitler, complied
and placed two units from his reserve, the 16th
SS Panzer Grenadier and 94th Infantry Divisions,
in front of II Corps, giving the defenders
six understrength divisions against four larger,
but tired, American ones.
The U.S. 34th Division launched
the American phase of Alexander's plan by continuing
attempts to break through to Bologna on 16 October
1944. The attack was quickly stopped by a combination
of rugged terrain and stiff enemy opposition.
Then, while the British 13 Corps tied down the
334th, 715th, and 305th Infantry Divisions,
U.S. 91st Division units moved forward on
II Corps' left flank, supported by the U.S. 1st
Armored Division. But again the intensity of the
enemy's resistance halted both units.
Elsewhere, however, the
85th Division moved ahead, giving the Americans
brief cause for optimism, but the II Corps had
no reserves to exploit its gains or to reinforce
the other stalled units. All hope of effecting
a quick breakthrough finally ended when Kesselring
began shifting the 29th and 90th Panzer
Grenadier Divisions to the threatened front.
Undaunted, General Clark
ordered another attempt to break the Axis line
on 19 October. The German defenses just south
of Bologna were anchored, east to west, on Monte
Adone, Monte Belmonte, and Monte Grande. The plan
called for the II Corps' 85th and 88th Divisions
to launch an attack toward Monte Grande with the
IV Corps and British 13 Corps providing pressure
on the flanks. Simultaneously, the U.S. 91st and
34th Divisions would renew their advance in secondary
assaults on Monte Belmonte and Savenna Creek.
The attack opened on the night of 19 October in
a driving rain after an intense artillery bombardment.
The 88th Division captured Monte Grande, but the
34th Division failed to seize Monte Belmonte.
Clark, sensing an enemy buildup on II Corps' left
flank, decided to attack on the right flank where
he believed the German resistance would be weaker.
On the night of 22 October, both the 85th and
88th Divisions attacked from Monte Grande, but
they were stopped by heavily reinforced German
units. On 26 October torrential rains washed out
bridges, cutting Fifth Army's already strained
and overburdened supply lines. The severed supply
lines and high casualty rate prompted General
Keyes, the II Corps commander, to order his units
to fall back to more easily sustainable positions
between Monte Grande and the Monterumici hill
mass in the west.

Soldiers work on a trail near
Monte Grande, while an Indian pack mule convoy
returns from taking supplies to the front line.
(DA photograph)
As the Americans battled
their way from mountain to mountain, Polish, Canadian,
Indian, and British units of the Eighth Army attacked
north of Rimini on 15 October in a continuation
of the "battle of the rivers." Despite grueling
combat which lasted until the end of the month,
Eighth Army units failed to break through anywhere
along their 30-mile front. They did manage, however,
to create a new line from a point just south of
Ravenna on the Adriatic coast through Forli and
west to Faenza on the Fifth Army's right flank.
On 27 October, General Sir
Henry Maitland Wilson, the Supreme Allied Commander
in the Mediterranean, ordered a halt to these
offensives. Many factors played a role in his
decision, including increasingly stiff enemy resistance,
Allied munitions and shipping shortages, troop
exhaustion, the lack of replacements, and the
even more rapidly deteriorating weather conditions.
When combined with the continued Allied emphasis
on combat operations in northwest Europe and southern
France and the priority given those areas in terms
of manpower, munitions, and supplies, Wilson had
little choice.
German defensive position: camouflaged log bunker.
(DA photograph)
The intensity of the combat
of September and October 1944 had a detrimental
effect on the morale, readiness, and capability
of the Allied forces in Italy. The already critical
manpower shortages in Fifth and Eighth Armies
were becoming so severe that their commanders
predicted that if they continued to lose men at
the same rate, both armies would have to cease
operations for lack of replacements. Between 10
September and 26 October, II Corps' four divisions
had suffered over 15,000 casualties, with the
U.S. 88th Division alone losing over 5,000 men.
During roughly the same period, Eighth Army casualties
approached 14,000 men. Losses were so severe that
on 10 October, Prime Minister Churchill asked
the United States to send at least two additional
divisions to the Italian front. His request was
turned down by U.S. Army Chief of Staff General
George C. Marshall, who preferred to send new
U.S. units to France where significant progress
was being made rather than to Italy for an increasingly
bloody and 24
stalemated campaign in a
secondary theater. Although the U.S. 10th Mountain
Division was slated for Italian service and the
black U.S. 92d Infantry Division as well as the
Brazilian Expeditionary Force had arrived in the
IV Corps' sector, all were undergoing training
and were not yet ready for frontline deployment.
Field Marshal Alexander,
still striving for an eleventh-hour breakthrough
before winter, decided that another attempt on
the German defenses should be made by both armies
with whatever strength they could muster. Under
his plan, the Fifth Army would rotate units from
the front for rest and refitting and then return
them to the line by 15 November in preparation
for the new offensive. General Clark quickly fulfilled
his part of this plan after receiving 3,000 replacements
between 2-22 November. Even with these additional
troops, Fifth Army units still were short some
7,000 men. Meanwhile, Eighth Army planners outlined
another "one-two punch," ordering its units to
attack to the northwest toward Imola and Budrio,
and north toward Ravenna and beyond, at least
drawing enemy units away from the Bologna area.
After 7 December, or after the Eighth Army had
taken Imola, whichever came first, Clark would
launch the Fifth Army's assault with two divisions
of the II Corps. Alexander ordered the offensive
to begin on 2 December 1944, weather permitting.
Eighth Army forces attacked
on schedule with heavy close-air support, but
immediately ran into stiff enemy resistance from
the 90th Panzer Grenadier and 98th Infantry
Divisions. Although the Canadian 5th Armored
Division entered Ravenna, a city liberated in
large part by Italian partisans on 4 December,
the Germans succeeded in stabilizing their front
along the Senio River, ten miles farther north,
and repulsed all subsequent attacks launched by
Canadian, Polish, Indian, and New Zealand units.
At the same time, Wilson withdrew several British
and Greek units from the battlefront and sent
them to Greece, diminishing the Eighth Army's
offensive capabilities. When the British portion
of the offensive failed to produce further gains,
as the winter weather continued to deteriorate,
and when it was reported that the Germans had
not reduced their strength in the II Corps' area
as anticipated' Alexander, on 7 December, announced
the first of several postponements of further
Allied offensive operations as the front temporarily
quieted.
On 15 December 1944, a major
reorganization of the Allied high command occurred
due to the death of Field Marshal Sir John Dill,
the chief of the British Military Mission in Washington.
The Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean,
General Wilson, was selected to replace Dill,
and Wilson's position was in turn assumed by Field
Marshal Alexander. Subsequently, General Clark
took command of the 25
15 Army Group in place of
Alexander, while Maj. Gen. Lucian K. Truscott,
Jr., returned from France to head the Fifth Army.
General Sir Richard L. McCreery, who had replaced
General Leese as Eighth Army commander on 1 October,
remained in command of that force.
Major command changes also
occurred within the opposing Axis forces during
the same general time period. On 23 October 1944,
Field Marshal Kesselring had been severely injured
when his staff car collided with a towed artillery
piece on a crowded mountain road; his subsequent
recuperation virtually ended his effective command
of Axis forces in Italy. Although he returned
to duty in late January 1945, in early March Hitler
gave him command of Army Group B in Western
Europe, replacing Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt.
General Vietinghoff commanded Army Group C
until transferred to the Eastern Front in
late January and then returned to permanently
replace Kesselring in March 1945. General Lemelsen
stood in for Vietinghoff in the Tenth Army
until 17 February 1945, when he was replaced
by Lt. Gen. Traugott Herr. At Fourteenth Army,
Maj. Gen. Fridolin von Senger und Etterlin
replaced Lemelsen before relinquishing command
to Lt. Gen. Kurt von Tippelskirsch, who in turn
gave Lemelsen his old command back in February.
The rapid shifts among Axis commanders were obviously
more disconcerting than those made in the Allied
camp.
General Truscott arrived
in Italy on 15 December 1944 and immediately received
intelligence reports, based upon decrypted ULTRA
intercepts of German radio traffic, of a suspected
Axis buildup opposite the IV Corps. The buildup
consisted of the German 148th Infantry and
157th Mountain Divisions and the Italian
Fascist Monte Rosa and San Marco Marine
Divisions. Transfer of the 16th SS Panzer
Grenadier, 26th Panzer, and 5th Mountain
Divisions to IV Corps' front was also thought
imminent. As a precaution, Truscott attached the
339th and 337th regiments, 85th Division, and
the 2d Brigade, 8th Indian Division, to IV Corps
on 23 December, where they would be in a position
to reinforce the relatively inexperienced U.S.
92d Division, then holding a six-mile sector between
the Ligurian Sea and the Serchio River Valley.
Truscott completed these
shifts just in time. On 26 December 1944, Axis
forces launched Operation WINTERGEWITTER, a spoiling
attack against the 92d Division twenty miles north
of Lucca. Using eight infantry battalions supported
by mortars and artillery, the enemy hoped to destroy
completely the offensive capability of the 92d
Division while simultaneously relieving the pressure
that the Brazilian Expeditionary Force was exerting
on the Italian Fascist Monte Rosa Division
to the east in the upper Serchio Valley.
Mountains west of the Serchio River. (DA photograph)
General Crittenberger, the
IV Corps commander, reacted quickly to the attack
by rushing reinforcements from the U.S. 1st Armored,
U.S. 34th, and 8th Indian Divisions to repel an
Axis penetration of the 92d Division's front near
Barga, a village just east of the valley, on the
afternoon of the 26th. Axis forces, however, advanced
only a few miles beyond Barga, before beginning
a withdrawal on 27 December. Advancing soldiers
of the 8th Indian Division, supported by aircraft
of the XXII Tactical Air Command, then began four
days of intense fighting in bitter weather and
succeeded in pushing the now spent Axis forces
back to their original positions.
In early January 1945 the
Allies in Italy ceased large-scale military operations.
In addition to the winter weather, five Eighth
Army divisions and one corps headquarters had
been moved to northwest Europe and Greece, further
diminishing Allied capabilities in Italy. Alexander,
Clark, Truscott, and McCreery, therefore, agreed
to go on the defensive and use the winter months
to prepare for new offensive operations scheduled
for 1 April 1945. Despite two months of planning,
limited offensives, and much maneuvering, Allied
units came to rest on a winter line that had changed
very little since late October 1944. 27
Axis forces, having successfully
held the Gothic Line through the fall and early
winter, also used the lull to rest and refit,
sending two divisions, the 356th Infantry and
16th SS Panzergrenadier, to reinforce their
Hungarian and Western fronts, respectively. Two
other units, the 278th and 710th Infantry
Divisions, replaced the departing units. While
Kesselring expected limited Allied assaults during
the winter months, he miscalculated both their
timing and strength.
Early in the year Clark
decided to launch three small attacks to obtain
the best possible starting points for the planned
spring offensive. The Eighth Army's Canadians
began the first attack on 2 January 1945 along
the Adriatic, quickly eliminating two enemy bridgeheads
on the Senio River before consolidating their
gains and digging in for the winter.
The second attack, a two-phased
assault named Operation FOURTH TERM, lasted from
4-11 February 1945 and saw the U.S. 92d Division
push back Italian Fascist forces in the Serchio
River Valley area of IV Corps. The operation tested
two inexperienced 92d Division regiments, the
365th and 366th. Although making progress 28 Map:
Operation Encore
against the Italians, who
melted away in face of the American advance, the
offensive slowed as German forces were encountered.
Mine fields, stiff resistance, and strong counterattacks,
which overran several units, finally caused the
American assault to break down. Further offensive
action by the 92d Division was impossible, and
the unit pulled back to its original position,
having suffered over 700 casualties in four days.
The third limited attack,
Operation ENCORE, was the result of a change in
Allied operational strategy that eliminated the
heavily fortified city of Bologna as a spring
objective and, instead, focused on securing exits
from the northern Apennines directly into the
Po Valley itself. The U.S. 10th Mountain Division
began arriving in Italy on 27 December 1944. Its
mission was to capture the high ground on the
right wing of the IV Corps and eliminate enemy
positions overlooking Allied forces so that the
spring offensive could be shifted westward to
bypass Bologna. Although only a small Axis force
held the area, the 10th Mountain Division was
provided with reinforcements of artillery, armor,
and antitank weapons, as well as infantry support
from the Brazilian Expeditionary Force.
The first phase of the assault
began on 19 February 1945 with a battalion of
the 10th Mountain Division successfully climbing
the cliff face of Riva Ridge, surprising enemy
forces there and forcing them to retreat. Continuing
their attacks to the northeast, the Americans
captured Monte Belvedere and Monte delta Torraccia
by 23 February. A second 10th Mountain Division
attack against recently reinforced German positions
on ridges farther to the northeast began amid
worsening weather conditions on 3 March, but also
succeeded. By 5 March, the 10th Mountain Division
had occupied a solid line of ridges and mountain
crests that placed Allied forces in excellent
positions for further offensive operations in
the spring.
Except for these limited
attacks, the Allies contented themselves with
resting, receiving reinforcements, and stockpiling
munitions, especially artillery shells and other
supplies. During the month of January 1945, a
round robin replacement of units at Fifth Army
gave everyone a brief rest from frontline duty.
By late March, the Japanese-American 442d Regimental
Combat Team returned from France and the Italian
Legnano Combat Group moved from Eighth to Fifth
Army control. An additional number of Allied artillery
and antitank units also arrived. As spring approached,
the fully rested and resupplied 15 Army Group
prepared to renew the offensive in a campaign
that most anticipated would take it into the Po
Valley and mark the final Allied push of the war
in Italy.
Northern Apennines, IV Corps' sector.
(DA photograph)
Analysis
The northern Apennines fighting was
the penultimate campaign in the Italian theater.
Although the Allies steadily lost divisions, materiel,
and shipping to operations elsewhere, which diminished
their capabilities, their offensives prevented
the Axis from substantially reinforcing other
fronts with troops from Italy. Yet the transfer
of units from Fifth and Eighth Armies for use
in northwest Europe, southern France, and Greece,
both after the capture of Rome and during the
North Apennines Campaign itself, left Allied commanders
with just enough troops to hold Axis forces in
Italy but without sufficient forces to destroy
the enemy or to end the campaign.
The Allies attacked the
Gothic Line in the fall of 1944 with hopes of
a quick breakthrough and the rapid destruction
of Axis armies on the plains of the Po Valley.
Given the depth of the German defenses and the
highly compartmentalized terrain, however, the
Allies' progress had been disappointingly slow.
Weather delayed the advance north, especially
with the onset of winter, but more important was
the lack of powerful and mobile reserves able
to rapidly exploit local successes.
Although Allied armies in Italy successfully tied
up Axis forces desperately needed elsewhere, they
could not break Axis positions or morale until
the final offensive in April 1945.
As they had in 1943-44,
the Germans took great advantage of the rugged
Italian terrain and mounted an effective defense
that largely negated Allied manpower, air, armor,
and artillery superiority. With the excellent
lateral road network in the Po Valley, the defenders
easily transferred troops from different parts
of their front to reinforce threatened sectors.
The Allies, on the other hand, had to move supplies
and troops over circuitous mountain routes. Although
they had captured Leghorn and had begun restoring
its harbor before the beginning of the North Apennines
Campaign, the supplies off-loaded there moved
slowly and tortuously through the mountains to
reach the men on the front line.
The combat in the northern
Apennines demonstrated the valor, courage, resilience,
and determination of the average Allied soldier.
The compartmentalized terrain put a premium on
small unit leadership and the fighting spirit
of the individual soldier. Battling over treacherous
ground, often in rainy weather with mist or fog,
against an often unseen, highly motivated, and
determined enemy, the Allied troops persevered.
Their effort and their survival as an effective
fighting force during the winter of 1944-45 set
the scene for the breakthrough and rapid advances
which were to take place in the Po Valley in the
spring of 1945. 31
Further Readings
For campaign overviews,
see Carlo D'Este, World War II in the Mediterranean,
1942-1945 (1990); G. A. Sheppard, The Italian
Campaign (1968); Douglas Orgill, The Gothic
Line, Autumn 1944 (1967); Higgins Trumbull,
Soft Underbelly, the Anglo-American Controversy
over the Italian Campaign (1958); and Michael
Howard' The Mediterranean Strategy in the Second
Word War (1968). The official histories are
MAAF, Air Power in the Mediterranean, November
1942-February 1945 (1945); and the nine-volume
Fifth Army history condensed in From Salerno
to the Alps (1948), Lt. Col. Chester G. Starr,
ed. The most comprehensive work on the Italian
campaign remains Ernest F. Fisher, Jr., Cassino
to the Alps (1977), which also lists in its
bibliography the official campaign histories of
British, Canadian, Indian, New Zealander, French,
Brazilian, and South African forces in Italy.
An excellent description of combat conditions
is provided in Klaus H. Huebner, A Long Walk
Through War: A Combat Doctors Diary (1987).
For the role of code-breaking, see Ralph Bennett,
Ultra and Mediterranean Strategy (1989);
and F. W. Winterbotham, The Ultra Secret (1974).
Postwar memoirs give the
commanders' perspectives and include Mark Clark,
Calculated Risk (1950); Lucian K. Truscott,
Jr., Command Missions (1954); Albert Kesselring,
A Soldier's Record (1954); Winston Churchill,
Closing the Ring (1951); and Nigel Nicholson,
Alex, the Life of Field Marshal, Earl Alexander
of Tunis (1973), with Gen. Fridolin von Senger
und Etterlin, Neither Fear nor Hope (1954),
being one of the best. |