PREMIER BENITO MUSSOLINI'S SPEECH BEFORE THE CHAMBER OF FASCES AND CORPORATIONS
Rome, Italy, June 10, 1941
[New York Times, June 11, 1941. (Excerpts)]
Comrades, this is a memorable, solemn day. It is just a
year since our entrance into the war. A year filled with
events, giddy, historical developments. A year during which
Italian soldiers on land, sea and in the sky fought
heroically, mostly on the fronts of Europe and Africa....
No one doubts any longer, in the light of unquestionable
published documents, that between Italy and Greece there
should be a rendering of accounts. At Athens, newspapers
begin finally to disclose the criminal backstage of Greek
policy. Since August, 1940, I had proof that Greece no longer
was keeping even the appearance of neutrality. In the same
months there was a period of tension which was followed by a
few weeks of calm....
Thus, on Oct. 15, it was unanimously decided to break
hesitancies and take to the field at the end of the month.
It is absolutely mathematical that in April, even if
nothing had happened to change the Balkan situation, the
Italian Army would have overcome and annihilated the Greek
Army.
It is necessary to state honestly that many Greek
detachments fought courageously.... It is sad to affirm,
furthermore, that the Greek Army would not have held for six
months without the aid of England. The Greek Army was fed,
supplied and armed by the English. Aviation was English.
Anti-aircraft and artillery also were English. Not less than
60,000 English were in services and special groups flanking
the Greek Army.
Material aid furnished by Turkey was modest. Its value
did not amount to 2,000,000 Turkish pounds.
While Italian troops were pushing to liquidate the Greek
Army Yugoslavia revealed through a coup d'etat its real
sentiments. The Axis war against Yugoslavia, therefore, was
rendered inevitable. Axis armies acted together with
lightning rapidity. While the Second Army of the Alps was
moving down along the Dalmatian Coast with forced marches
which tried the resistance of our soldiers, the Greeks, with
a ruse in the authentic style of Ulysses tried at the end to
hold us on the Albanian frontier by offering an armistice to
the Germans and not to us.
They were energetically recalled by me to reason and
finally surrendered unconditionally.
Regarding Yugoslavia, it revealed almost immediately the
inconsistency and, it may be said falsity, of its state
organism in the third mosaic State artificially created at
Versailles. With exclusively anti-Italian functions it falls
into pieces at the first shock.
The Yugoslav Army for which Paris and the Little Entente
circle had created a reputation of invincibility . . . was
put out of action with the first blows. The English still
made a few appearances on battlefields, but . . . found
Hellenic soil also burned under their feet and they
abandoned-fleeing by the usual sea route-dying Greece.
Political and military consequences which sprang up by
the elimination of England from her last European bases . . .
have profoundly changed the map of that region-changed for
the better, especially if every one will keep a sense of
proportion-that is to say, change toward a more reasonable
arrangement according to justice, taking into account all
elements which go to make them up and frequently snarl
problems.
Here also it has not been possible to reach an
arrangement perfect in every way, but one must not hope for
the absolute in such matters.
Bulgaria annexes Macedonia, which is prevalently
Bulgarian, and Western Thrace....
Hungary . . . has enlarged her confines and Germany has
carried hers to the left bank of the Sava. The rest of
Slovenia has become an Italian province with a special
regime. The most important fact is the resurrection, after
two centuries, of the Croat State....
With the annexation of almost all of the islands of the
Dalmatian Peninsula, with the creation of the two provinces
of Split and Kotor and the enlarging of old, extremely
faithful Zara, the Dalmatian problem may be considered
solved, especially taking into account . . . relations
between the Kingdoms of Italy and Croatia, whose crown has
been offered to a Savoy-Aosta.
If we wished we could have pushed our borders from
Velebiti to the Albanian Alps but we would, in my opinion,
have made a mistake. Without counting others, we would have
brought within our borders several hundred thousand foreign
elements naturally hostile.
The conquest of Crete places at the disposition of the
Axis air and naval bases very close for mass attacks on the
Egyptian coast. Life will become ever more difficult for the
English naval forces stationed at the bases of Egypt and
Palestine. The objective, which consists of expelling Britain
from the Eastern Mediterranean, will be reached and with it a
gigantic step will be taken toward a victorious epilogue of
war.
Collaboration between the powers of the Tripartite Pact
is under way. But above all, collaboration between Germany
and Italy is under way....
Ridiculous rumors which were speculating on eventual
frictions or dissensions and come of the feeble minded who
worked even further, like the English Prime Minister in his
useless Christmas Eve speech, are reduced to silence....
Added to this Japan . . . is in perfect line with the
Tripartite Pact. The Japanese are a proud and loyal people
who would not remain indifferent in the face of American
aggression against the Axis powers.
With the other powers adhering to the Tripartite Pact,
namely, Hungary, Slovakia, Rumania and Bulgaria, relations
are more than cordial even where special political accords do
not exist.
Regarding Turkey, that country has until now refused to
all English solicitations. President Inonu has seen the
tragic fate that awaits all nations which in any way trust
themselves to Britain. But I wish to take this occasion to
say to President Inonu that Italy intends to follow toward
Turkey that policy of comprehension and collaboration which
was inaugurated in 1928 and which for us is still in effect.
If Spain and Turkey are out of the fighting there is one
transoceanic State which seems likely to enter it. It is well
that it be known that American intervention does not bother
us excessively. A specific declaration of war would not
change the present situation, which is one of de facto war,
if not de jure. American intervention, when employed
completely, would be late, and if it were not late, would not
remove the terms of the problem. American intervention will
not give victory to Britain but will prolong the war; will
not limit the area of war but will extend it to other oceans;
will change the United States regime into an authoritarian,
totalitarian one in comparison with which the European
forerunners-fascist and nazi-will feel themselves far
surpassed and perfected.
When it is desired to be called a dictator in the pure
classical meaning of the word, Sulla is cited. Sulla appears
to us a modest amateur compared with Delano Roosevelt.
By agreement with the German command, almost all of
Greece, including Athens, will be occupied by Italian troops.
This lays a very serious problem before us, especially from
the point of view of food, but we shall face it seeking to
alleviate as far as possible miseries inflicted upon the
Greek people by their governors subordinated to London and
having in mind that Greece re-enters into Italy's vital
Mediterranean space.
Many times after Cheren the English have announced the
campaign in Italian Africa might be considered more or less
virtually concluded. But after Cheren they had to go up
against Amba Alagi, where for the second time Italian
resistance reached epic proportions. After the fall of Amba
Alagi the English again proclaimed that all was now finished.
Instead, they are still fighting. There are three zones where
our barricaded troops are still giving the English plenty of
wool to twist-Dankalia, Jimma and Gondar.
How long it may last cannot be known, but it is certain
that resistance will be protracted to the limits of human
possibility.
Even the whole conquest of the empire by the English has
no decisive importance toward the ending of the war. This is
a vendetta of strictly personal character which could have no
influence on the results of a war which has dug even deeper
chasms between Italy and Britain. I cannot tell you today
when or how, but I affirm in the most categoric manner that
we shall return to that land bathed by our blood and-Our dead
shall not go unavenged.