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ITALY INVADES GREECE, STARTING BALKAN DRIVE, AS ATHENS REJECTS A THREE-HOUR ULTIMATUM (10/28/40)
Microfilm-New York Times archives, McHenry Library, U.C. Santa Cruz | 10/28/40 | A.C. Sedgwick, Camille M. Cianfarra, Raymond Daniell, James B. Reston

Posted on 10/28/2010 4:39:39 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson

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TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: milhist; realtime; worldwarii
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Free Republic University, Department of History presents World War II Plus 70 Years: Seminar and Discussion Forum
First session: September 1, 2009. Last date to add: September 2, 2015.
Reading assignment: New York Times articles delivered daily to students on the 70th anniversary of original publication date. (Previously posted articles can be found by searching on keyword “realtime” Or view Homer’s posting history .)
To add this class to or drop it from your schedule notify Admissions and Records (Attn: Homer_J_Simpson) by freepmail. Those on the Realtime +/- 70 Years ping list are automatically enrolled. Course description, prerequisites and tuition information is available at the bottom of Homer’s profile.
1 posted on 10/28/2010 4:39:43 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
Selections from West Point Atlas for the Second World War
German Fighter Range and British Radar Deployment
Marcks’ Plan, August 5, 1940
The Mediterranean Basin (Map 33)
The Far East and the Pacific, 1941 – The Imperial Powers, 1 September 1939

Plus a special guest map from Michael Korda’s, “With Wings Like Eagles,” showing the air defenses of England and Wales, August 1940.

2 posted on 10/28/2010 4:40:14 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
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William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich

3 posted on 10/28/2010 4:40:59 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: r9etb; PzLdr; dfwgator; Paisan; From many - one.; rockinqsranch; GRRRRR; 2banana; henkster; ...
Border is Crossed – 2-3
The International Situation – 3
Greece Faces Axis Attack with Small Armed Forces – 3
R.A.F. Hits Reich – 4
Judge Orders Raids in Argentine Nazis – 4
Albanian ‘Attack’ Denied by Athens – 5
De Gaulle Forming Free ‘Government’ – 5-6
Kennedy Sees Roosevelt at White House; Envoy is Silent on Arrival from London * – 6-7
Two City Leaders Shift to Willkie – 7-8
Germans in Egypt, Italians Announce – 8
Germans Intensify Liverpool Attacks ** – 8-9
Reorganized Cabinet Named in Australia – 9
Texts of Day’s War Communiques – 10

* The Times frequently prints photos of the ambassador. In every one old Joe is grinning like a loon. It is a little strange.

** The Blitz has gone from front page headlines, to page 1 below the fold, to the back pages.

4 posted on 10/28/2010 4:42:25 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://www.onwar.com/chrono/1940/oct40/f28oct40.htm

Italy invades Greece

Monday, October 28, 1940 www.onwar.com

In Athens... An Italian ultimatum is presented to the Greeks during the night. It amounts to a declaration of war.

In the Balkans... At dawn, before the ultimatum expires, the Italian forces in Albania begin to cross the border into Greece. Patras is bombed. General Prasca leads eight of the 10 Italian divisions in Albania in the advance. They attack along three lines with the main effort being in the center from the Dhrina and Vijose valleys. General Papagos, the Greek Command in Chief, has not deployed his main force close to the border to avoid giving any provocation to the Italians. He hopes to use 8 divisions with the possibility of reinforcements being brought from the troops watching the Bulgarian border. The greatest obstacle to the Italians for the first two or three days is the very bad weather which grounds their air support. The Italians have chose a very unwise time of the year for their attack.

In Italy... Hitler and Mussolini meet at Florence. Hitler conceals his anger at not being kept informed of the Italian plans and says that German troops are available if it is necessary to keep the British out of Greece and away from the Romanian oil.

In Vichyt France... Laval become Foreign Minister of the Vichy government.

In the North Atlantic... U-32 completes the job and sinks the damaged Empress of Britain.


5 posted on 10/28/2010 4:46:30 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://homepage.ntlworld.com/andrew.etherington/month/thismonth/28.htm

October 28th, 1940

UNITED KINGDOM: Battle of Britain:
RAF Fighter Command: Losses: Luftwaffe, 11; RAF, 2.
VICHY FRANCE: Pierre Laval is appointed Foreign Minister.

ITALY: Hitler meets with Mussolini in Florence. Commenting on his recent meeting with Generalissimo Franco he says he would prefer to have three or four teeth extracted rather than meet with him again. (Marc James Small)

GREECE: Athens: At 5:30 AM Mussolini’s army invaded Greece. In the firm belief that they would meet little resistance from the dictator General Metaxas’s forces, Italian tanks and infantry crossed from occupied Albania into the mountains of Epirus before dawn. Hitler heard the news on his train ‘Amerika’ between Munich and Florence. When the arrived, the Italian leader was delighted to tell him, in German: “Fuhrer, we are on the march!” Hitler conceals his fury at news of the Italian invasion of Greece and pledges military support if Mussolini requires it.

In Hitler’s opinion Mussolini is making a critical strategic blunder. To Hitler the capture of Gibraltar, with assistance from Franco and Italy’s conquest of Egypt, especially the great naval base at Alexandria, would ensure Britain’s collapse.

Mussolini in turn was convinced that the pro-German Metaxas - who has based his Asfalia secret police on the Gestapo and abolished most democratic institutions in Greece - would succumb quickly offering little resistance.

Metaxas, however, has rejected the Italian ultimatum - which he received in his bed from an Italian envoy at six in the morning - half an hour after Italian troops crossed the border.
The first Greek communiqué reads: As of 5:30 am today, the Italian armed forces are attacking our troops protecting the Greek Albanian border. Our forces are defending our native territory.

The first Italian Communiqué reads: “At dawn on the 28th October our forces stationed in Albania crossed over the Greek border and gained entrance at several places. Our advance continues” (Steven Statharos)

General Visconti-Prasca, the Commander-in-Chief of the Italian aerial forces has not blocked the road to the north, thus allowing three newly-mobilised Greek divisions to move quickly to the front. The Italians are moving slowly, and the Greeks are mobilising quickly.

EGYPT: Cairo: Air Marshal Sir Arthur Longmore Air Officer C-in-C, Air HQ Middle East (an Australian) orders 3 squadrons of Blenheims and one of Gladiators to Greece.

Wavell is ordered to send also two A.A. batteries to Athens and an infantry brigade to Suda Bay, in Crete, to assist in the defence of the Greek islands.

SUDAN: Khartoum: The British Secretary of State for War, Anthony Eden, the C-in-C, General Sir Archibald Wavell, the South African Premier, General Jan Smuts and the Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie meet to try to reconcile their different war aims in Africa.

CANADA: Convoy HX-84 sailed from Halifax.

Corvette HMCS Nanaimo launched Esquimalt, British Columbia. (Dave Shirlaw)

ATLANTIC OCEAN: The liner ‘Empress of Britain’ is sunk by U-32, which in turn is sunk.
RMS Empress of Britain, 42,348 tons, was the largest ship sunk in the U-boat war. U-32 was sunk 30 October 1940 northwest of Ireland, in position 55.37N, 12.19W, by depth charges from the Royal Navy destroyers HMS Harvester and HMS Highlander. 33 of the 42 U-boat crewmen survived. (Jack McKillop)

The Reuters News Agency in London reported:-

The Admiralty has announced that the English steamship Empress of Britain has gone down. The vessel was attacked by enemy aircraft and caught fire so that it had to be evacuated. Salvage manoeuvres were instituted at once, but when the steamer was taken in tow, it reared up and sank. Of a total 643 persons on board, 598 survivors were brought to land by British war vessels. They included the families of military men and a small number of military personnel. The energetic and effective action of the steamer’s anti-aircraft defence was largely responsible for the fact that so many people were saved.

The vessel was a 42,000 ton luxury steamer. The King and Queen sailed home on her last year from their trip to Canada and the United States.

Luftwaffe Front-Line Bulletin No. 26

On 26 October 1940, a FW-200 on armed reconnaissance and weather-scouting patrol over North-West Ireland sighted a large vessel with 3 smokestacks. Despite powerful AA fire which inflicted serious hits on the attacking aircraft, the German plane made 2 hits on the ship in a total of 4 low-level attacks. As the plane was flying away, the ship showed a slight list and was burning along its whole length. The assaulted ship burned for 24 hours and the following day its wreck was sunk by a U-boat. The vessel in question was the passenger steamer Empress of Britain, which at 42,000 tons was the tenth largest ship in the international merchant fleet.


6 posted on 10/28/2010 4:49:14 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Other than Pearl Harbor, this is the key move that helped bring down the Axis.


7 posted on 10/28/2010 4:51:03 AM PDT by Chi-townChief
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://worldwar2daybyday.blogspot.com/

Day 424 October 28, 1940

Battle of Britain Day 111. Mist and fog over Northern France and Southeastern England in the morning hamper operations, but Luftwaffe launches 3 raids in the afternoon. At 1 PM and 2.30 PM, 20 Messerschmitt Bf109 fighters fly across Kent towards Biggin Hill but are turned back. From 4.30 PM until 5.10 PM, several groups of 30-80 German aircraft (mainly bomb-carrying Bf109s with some medium bombers) attack simultaneously across Kent and South coast of England. They do not reach London but many sites in Southern England are bombed. Bomb-laden Bf109s do not provide much protection for the medium bombers and 2 Ju88s are shot down plus 2 Bf109s. RAF loses no fighters in the action. London and Birmingham are again bombed overnight, but not heavily.

At 2.05 AM, 50 miles Northwest of Aran Island, Ireland, U-32 sinks British troop carrier Empress of Britain with 2 torpedoes (25 crew and 20 passengers killed). At 42,348 tons, Empress of Britain is the largest U-boat victim and the largest liner sunk during WWII. http://www.uboat.net/allies/merchants/ships/643.html

At dawn, before the expiry of the Italian ultimatum, 85,000 Italian troops cross the border from Albania into Greece, supported by 400 aircraft and 163 tanks. They are faced by 30,000 Greek troops with no tanks and only 77 aircraft. 5,000 Italian troops advance 5 miles along the Ionian coast and are able to cross the Kalamas River. Further inland, however, the Italians make little progress in the steep mountainous terrain where their tanks are useless and bad weather grounds their air support.

Between October 28 and November 7, German raider Pinguin and auxilliary minelayer Passat (converted Norwegian taker Storstad) laid mines off the ports of Sydney, Newcastle and Hobart, off Adelaide in the Banks Strait, off Tasmania and in the Bass Strait on the approaches to Melbourne.


8 posted on 10/28/2010 4:51:03 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Chi-townChief

The necessity of dealing with the Greek resistance and subsequent British intervention (the necessity being to protect the all-important Ploesti oilfields), took vital time away from the Axis forces - slowing down the onset of Barbarossa and also mildly denuding the forces available for its success.

The failure of the invasion of Russia, which indeed could have been a success, was the deathknell for Nazism.

Another massive factor in its failure was - Pearl Harbor. If the Japs had attacked Russia, as their army faction were minded to do, then Kutuzov could never have brought his Siberian troops back in time to defend Moscow. The USSR would have collapsed and any eventual D-Day would have faced vastly more potent tank forces.

Instead the Japanese Navy launched the militarily brilliant, but strategically toxic attack on Pearl Harbor. Kutuzov was free to move his forces, and of course the sleeping giant awoke.

If Hitler had our hindsight, he would have cursed Yamamoto every bit as much as he cursed Mussolini.


9 posted on 10/28/2010 5:07:40 AM PDT by agere_contra (...what if we won't eat the dog food?)
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To: Chi-townChief
A neutral Italy in WWII would have been addition by subtraction for Germany.

Great Britain could not afford to be lax on that front for fear that Italy could flip to hostile at any time. Hitler would have been able to avoid having to rescue Mussolini from his own idiocy in Greece and North Africa keeping one his best tank generals (Rommel) on the eastern front.

10 posted on 10/28/2010 5:21:09 AM PDT by AU72
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To: agere_contra

Yup. We lucked out.

Had the Nazis conquered Russia, an Anglo-American invasion to liberate Europe using conventional arms would have been quite impossible.

WWII would have still ended with an Allied victory, but probably only after Berling and a few other German cities became radioactive.


11 posted on 10/28/2010 5:28:47 AM PDT by Sherman Logan (You shall know the truth, and it shall piss you off mightily)
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To: AU72

Also: if Italy had remained neutral, the RAF Swordfish raid on the Italian navy that famously gave the Japs the idea for Pearl Harbor - that wouldn’t have happened.

Still, the war in the Mediterranean would have been a cakewalk without German planes flying from Italian bases. The Med would have rapidly become an English lake.

But the British probably didn’t have the wherewithal to mount a successful assault on Ploesti even with total control of the Med. So, yes: in summary Italy was a millstone around Hitler’s neck.


12 posted on 10/28/2010 5:32:45 AM PDT by agere_contra (...what if we won't eat the dog food?)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

“”Hitler calls Mussolini on the phone:
“Benito aren’t you in Athens yet?”
“I can’t hear you Adolf.”
“I said aren’t you in Athens yet?”
“I can’t hear you. You must be ringing from a long way off, presumably London.”””

Joke circulating in Occupied France, winter 1940-41


13 posted on 10/28/2010 5:34:45 AM PDT by iowamark
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To: Sherman Logan

Berling = Berlin, obviously. Sorry ‘bout that.


14 posted on 10/28/2010 5:40:58 AM PDT by Sherman Logan (You shall know the truth, and it shall piss you off mightily)
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To: Chi-townChief; patton

Funny that nobody knew it at the time though: The later failure in Crete, in Greece itself were all in the future. And nobody was seeing the long-range impact on the Russian invasion the next summer.


15 posted on 10/28/2010 6:31:35 AM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but socialists' ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
Battle of Britain Campaign Diary

Date: 28th October 1940


16 posted on 10/28/2010 8:56:48 AM PDT by CougarGA7 (It take a village to raise an idiot.)
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To: agere_contra; Chi-townChief; AU72; Sherman Logan; Robert A. Cook, PE; henkster; Homer_J_Simpson
Though many agree that this side show did not significantly delay BARBAROSSA since it was already delayed by a wet spring on the Russian frontier, I imagine that the wear and tear on equipment had its own effect.

There is another aspect of the invasion of Greece that I alluded to the other day though that I think is very significant.

As we have seen the last few days, Hitler has been trying to secure the support of Vichy France as well as Spain. Franco was really on the fence at this point, but the Italian invasion of Greece helped him make a decision to stay neutral. After all, how could he rely on the promises of Hitler when he couldn't even keep his allies from running off and starting new wars with other neutral countries.

Imagine if Spain had signed on with the Axis. There is a good possibility that Gibraltar would have been attacked by land and the entry into the Mediterranean would have been effectively sealed from the British. This would have completely changed the game in that theater which may have lead to the collapse of the area giving Italy it's desired private lake. It also would have taken the command post away from Eisenhower for the TORCH landings two years later. He would have commanded initial operations from London.

17 posted on 10/28/2010 9:21:43 AM PDT by CougarGA7 (It take a village to raise an idiot.)
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To: CougarGA7

Churchill acknowledged that Franco held the keys to Gibralter and could have at any time made that fortress untenable for Great Britain. He said that while Franco always acted in his self-interest he was grateful that included nuetrality.


18 posted on 10/28/2010 9:33:42 AM PDT by AU72
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To: AU72

Churchill went so far as to play on the fact that Franco and the Spanish acted firstly in their own interest. So much so that despite the fact that the British are essentially broke they managed to come up with a $10 million (USD) bribe to the Spanish generals to keep them out of the war. This was arranged through Franco’s personal banker, Juan March and the money was sent to Swiss bank accounts (I don’t have the exact date of this but it took place sometime between now and May of next year).


19 posted on 10/28/2010 10:49:18 AM PDT by CougarGA7 (It take a village to raise an idiot.)
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To: All

the Allies were lucky that Musso was such a pompous pig-headed blundering fool

no way were the Italian armed forces prepared to conquer Greece while heavily engaged in North Africa

this was an impulsive decision of ego and pride, predicated on wishful thinking for immediate collapse of Greek resistance

the Italian army was only given a handful of days to prepare for the invasion and did not have nearly the forces to conquer Greece if resistance was prolonged (as it was in fact)


20 posted on 10/28/2010 11:49:50 AM PDT by Enchante (De-fund the agitprop twits of NPR, PBS, and CPB now!!)
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