Everything about Gran Sasso Raid totally explained
Operation Eiche (
German for 'Oak') was the daring rescue of Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini by
German special forces in
World War II. It was planned by General
Kurt Student.
Overview
Mussolini was being transported around Italy by his captors, whilst
Otto Skorzeny, selected personally by
Hitler and
Ernst Kaltenbrunner to carry out the mission, was tracking him.
Intercepting a coded Italian radio message, Skorzeny used his own reconnaissance to determine that Mussolini was being imprisoned at Campo Imperatore Hotel, a ski resort at
Campo Imperatore in Italy's
Gran Sasso, high in the
Apennine Mountains. On
12 September 1943, Skorzeny joined the team to rescue Mussolini in a high-risk
glider mission. The commandos crashed their gliders into the nearby mountains, then overwhelmed Mussolini's captors without a single shot being fired. Skorzeny attacked the radio operator and his equipment, and formally greeted Mussolini with "
Duce, the
Führer has sent me to set you free!" to which Mussolini replied "I knew that my friend wouldn't forsake me!" Mussolini was first flown from Campo Imperatore in a Luftwaffe
Fieseler Fi 156 Storch liaison aircraft, then flown on to
Vienna (where he stayed overnight at the
Hotel Imperial) and given a hero's welcome.
The operation on the ground at Campo Imperatore was in fact led by Lieutenant Count Otto von Berlepsch, planned by Major
Harald Mors and under orders from General
Kurt Student, all
Fallschirmjäger (German Air Force Paratroop) officers; but Skorzeny stewarded the Italian leader first into Rome and eventually into
Berlin, right in front of the cameras. After a pro-SS propaganda coup at the behest of SS Reichsführer
Heinrich Himmler and propaganda minister
Joseph Goebbels, Skorzeny was granted the majority of the credit for the operation.
Aftermath
The operation severely hampered Allied advances into Italy, as well as granting a rare late-war public relations opportunity to
Hermann Göring. Mussolini was returned to power again in the German-occupied portion of Italy (the
Italian Social Republic). Otto Skorzeny gained a large amount of success from this mission; he received a promotion to
Major, the award of the
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross and fame that led to his "most dangerous man in Europe" image.
Nazi propaganda hailed the operation for months, the Axis otherwise having little about which to boast in the fall of 1943. As it turned out, it was the last of Hitler's spectacular gambles to bear fruit.
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