RFalvo69
Posts: 1380
Joined: 7/11/2013 From: Lamezia Terme (Italy) Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: RangerJoe Whether or not German equipment such as the Mark IV would have enabled the Italian Army to fight longer and more effectively on the Axis side. No. And I ever wonder how this came up. The problems in the Italian Army were endemic and not just limited to the equipment. Bad leadership from top down, for example. An incompetent "supreme leader" (Mussolini), incompetent High Command, incompetent generals, down to incompetent NCOs etc. Sure, you could find the stray competent person - who could only suffer from depression given what he saw around him. Also, Mussolini wasted Italy's already meager forces by chasing too many dogs. Having better equipment would only have meant chasing too many dogs with better equipment. A Panzer IV in Italian hands would have meant a Panzer IV lost in one of too many fronts due to poor leadership, preparation and motivation. The SS trained fanatically. The "Camicie Nere" (Black-shirts, CC. NN.) didn't train a lot because "their fighting prowess came from their fanatical adoration of the Duce." You can't go around something like this. When the British launched "Operation Compass" the Italian forts they met at the frontline were "unable to support each other" and fell one by one. Being better equipped couldn't fix such an incompetence. And just remember: the Greek Army, led with minimum competence and equipped with the same or inferior weapons, was winning the war against the Italian one. This tells you all you need to know about the "endemic incompetence" of the Italian leadership at any level. True, Italy also deployed elite units, exp. the Alpine troops. But the "Alpini" alone could not win the war against Greece, and in Russia they were a drop in the ocean (their biggest achievement was to guarantee the retreat of a vast number of other Italian soldiers). Other troops in Russia initially fought well, but crumbled when faced by a determined and well led counteroffensive. And the Italian troops in North Africa fought well after months and years of combat experience along with Rommel and the Germans. TL;DR: The Italian Army needed to be reformed from top to down, with the equipment being only part of the problem. If you give a sword to someone totally incompetent you do not create a warrior overnight: he will always lose anyway against someone who actually knows how to use a knife. And, of course, under the fascist rule, thinking of sending home all the incompetent people who had gained their place via fanaticism to the party and/or sycophantism was, for all practical means, impossible.
_____________________________
"Yes darling, I served in the Navy for eight years. I was a cook..." "Oh dad... so you were a God-damned cook?" (My 10 years old daughter after watching "The Hunt for Red October")
|