Battle of Rhodes (1943)


The Battle of Rhodes took place between Italian and German forces for the control of the Greek island of Rhodes, in the then Italian-held Dodecanese islands in the Aegean Sea.

Background

When the Armistice of Cassibile was announced, on 8 September 1943, Admiral Inigo Campioni was the governor of the Italian Dodecanese, the Cyclades and the Northern Sporades; his seat was in Rhodes. The military commander of the Italian forces in these archipelagos was instead Rear Admiral Carlo Daviso di Charvensod.
With no orders from the high commands and lack of information about the general situation of the Italian armed forces, the high command of the Italian armed forces in the Aegean, with headquarters in Rhodes, had to choose whether it should keep fighting alongside the German forces or remain loyal to Victor Emanuel III. Like many other commands, the Italian commands in the Aegean decided to consider the Germans as enemies, thus leading to the German invasion of the islands.

Forces

Italy

Campioni’s staff was headquartered in the Palace of the Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes; his Chief of Staff was Brigadier General Roberto Sequi. The Rhodes HQ was subordinate to the command of Army Group East, based in Tirana.
On 1° September 1943, Lieutenant General Arnaldo Foriero had been sent to Rhodes to assume command of the Royal Italian Army forces stationed there and to create the Rhodes Military Command, but at the time of the German invasion many of the internal fortifications scheduled to be built on the island had not been completed, due to lack of resources.
The Italian Army had on Rhodes the 50th Infantry Division Regina under major general Michele Scaroina, as well as the 35th, 36th, and 55th Static Artillery Groups, and the 56th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Group. The latter was equipped with 75/27 and 90/53 mm guns, whereas the static artillery groups had a total of 46 batteries and 9 autonomous sections, armed with 210/8 mortars, 149/12 mm howitzers and 105/28 and 75/27 guns. The Regina Division lacked one battalion of the 9th Infantry Regiment, which had been detached to garrison Karpathos, and the entire 10th Infantry Regiment, which garrisoned Kos. In Rhodes were the artillery regiment, the 309th Infantry Regiment, and the remaining battalions of the 9th Infantry Regiment. Overall, the Army troops available in Rhodes numbered about 34,000 men, with several dozen old vehicles.
These troops were allocated to seven defense areas, some on the coast and some inland: Rhodes Fortress Area, at the northern end of the island; Kalitea Area, in the northeast; Kalathos Area, in the east; Vati Area, which spread from Lindos promontory in the south-east to Alimia bay in the west; and Agios Georgios Area, in the north-west. The Army controlled all communications within the island, except for those of the coastal batteries and sighting points, which were under Navy control.
The Royal Italian Navy had in Rhodes the command of the Aegean Military Sea Zone, under Captain Mario Grassi, and the Rhodes Naval Command, under Commander Adriano Arcangioli. The latter controlled a unit intended for swift intervention against an invasion, as well as eight coastal batteries and several anti-aircraft batteries. The coastal batteries were named Majorana, Melchiori, Bianco, Dandolo, Morosini, Mocenigo, Bragadino, and Alimnia ; none of them was provided with a radio.
Few naval units were available at Rhodes; the 3rd MAS Flotilla with three motor torpedo boats and one MAS, the 14th Anti-Submarine Group with two submarine chasers, the 39th Minesweeping Flotilla with eight auxiliary minesweepers, the gunboat Sebastiano Caboto and the steamer Pomezia. Naval personnel on the island amounted to about 2,100 men.
The Italian Royal Air Force had 3,000 personnel and about 60-65 aircraft in Rhodes, under air commodore Alberto Briganti. The Gadurra air base, near Kalathos, had no planes, as its torpedo bombers had been moved to Italy some months earlier, and the Kattavia airport had been abandoned in early 1943 and rendered unusable. The only active air base was in Maritsa, where the 30th Bombing Wing had twelve bombers, one transport squadron with four Savoia-Marchetti SM.81 and one Savoia-Marchetti SM.75, and a group of 40 fighters, mostly FIAT CR.42 and FIAT G.50, with six Macchi C.202. Ten of the 40 fighters weren’t in working order, and only 20 pilots were available for the remaining 30. A CANT Z.506 flying boat, used for the personal movements of the governor, was based in the Mandraki seaplane base; there were also two more CANT Z.506 used as rescue planes, and the 147th Marittime Reconnaissance Squadron, equipped with CANT Z.501s. The air bases were defended by 20 mm machine guns of the Army.

Germany

The German presence on Rhodes had begun in January 1943. Several attempts to put Egeomil under German control had failed, but the Germans had eventually reached an agreement with the Italian Air Force to place two 88 mm Flak batteries on the island to strengthen the anti-aircraft defense of the air bases. German personnel were to train Italians in using the Flak batteries and then depart, but their stay was prolonged on the pretext of the planned shipment of more batteries. Towards the end of January 1943, four German officers, experts in coastal fortifications, visited the island, and in April a panzergrenadier battalion was landed in Rhodes; during the following month, two more panzergrenadier battalions were sent.
At the end of June 1943, the German general Ulrich Kleemann was sent to Rhodes, where he formed the Sturm-Division Rhodos, which began military exercise near the Italian defenses about 11 km from the city of Rhodes. The Rhodos had a strength of between 6,000 and 8,000 men, and a communication network separate from the Italian system. Its command was established in Campochiaro ; the Division included four panzergrenadier battalions with about a hundred cannons, anti-tank guns, and 60-70 mortars; a reconnaissance unit with 1,500 men equipped with armed sidecars and nearly 60 armoured cars; a tank battalion with over 25 Panzer IVs; four batteries of self-propelled guns, two of them equipped with Wespes and two with Hummels; five 8,8 cm Flak batteries placed near the air bases; and one unit of about 300 Greeks in German uniform. The latter, whose purpose was not clear, caused heavy complaint by the Italian command.
Overall, the German forces had about 150 armoured fighting vehicles, including Panzer IIs, Panzer IVs, StuG IIIs and fifteen 150 mm self-propelled guns.

September 8

The announcement of the armistice took the Italian leadership and soldiers in Rhodes completely by surprise; the memorandum with the instructions from the Italian Supreme Command to Egeomil was to be sent by air, but bad weather had prevented this, and the messenger was still in Pescara on 9 September.
On the evening of 8 September, Campioni asked General Forgiero to contact Kleeman to exhort him not to give orders that could cause Italian reactions, and Kleeman reacted calmly, stating that he would cooperate. Around 20:30, shortly after news of the armistice arrived, Campioni held a meeting at the Palace of the Grand Master; however, as there were no precise orders about how to act, no decisions were taken. Lieutenant colonel Marcello Fossetta, in charge of the Maritsa air base, informed the command that the German troops guarding the airport were gathered without weapons and watching a film show, so a sudden attack would be easy to carry out, but he was ordered not to act, based on the previous promises by Kleeman. Campioni only had the Badoglio Proclamation, which had been broadcast to the other Dodecanese islands, highlighting the last sentence, which ordered Italian forces to react "to eventual attacks from any other source ".
Admiral Daviso gave different orders: all ships that were at sea were to head for Leros, except for the MAS and motor torpedo boats, which were to remain in Rhodes; all the ships at Rhodes were ordered to be ready to move on short notice. The coastal batteries were alerted, the guard at the Rhodes Naval Command was strengthened, and the naval landing force readied; the Naval Commands of Syros, Leros and Astypalaia were informed of the situation. Any aggressive action by German forces was to be opposed by arms. These instructions later turned out to be in line with the directives issued by Supermarina on 9 September.
At midnight, Kleeman, now upset, asked Forgiero for permission to freely move his forces in order to be able to quickly oppose a possible British landing, but received a strong refusal.

Battle

September 9

During the night, Campioni and Kleemann had a heated argument over the disposition of German troops on the island. According to some it was agreed that the Rhodos Division would take up positions near Campochiaro, while the German troops at the air bases were to remain outside of their perimeters, and any movement of German troops would require authorization by the Italian command. According to others, it was decided that the Germans would stay inside the air bases, and would not disarm them if no Italian unit left Rhodes.
Meanwhile, a British plane over Rhodes dropped thousands of leaflets signed by General Henry Maitland Wilson, head of the Middle East Command, ordering the Italians to take control of the German positions and to move their ships and aircraft to British bases; Campioni, however, did not comply, in part because the origin of the leaflets was dubious.
At 9:00 a German officer went to the harbour of Rhodes and asked to occupy it. The port commander, Captain Francesco Bagnus, refused. The German steamer Taganrog, loaded with ammunition, was moored in the harbour, and her captain asked for permission to unload and leave the island. Admiral Daviso denied authorization, and instead posted sentries to guard the ship. After several minutes, however, the harbour was opened, and the Germans unloaded the crates containing the ammunition.
The first German attacks began around noon; the Italians returned fire. Swift action against the Regina Division led to the capture of General Scaroina, who ordered his men to surrender. The Rhodes Military Command was alerted to what was happening, and Forgiero was ordered to move to the city of Rhodes to avoid complete capture of his command. Some vehicles of his escort were intercepted by German forces, and Forgiero only reached the city around 15:00, half an hour after the Germans had occupied the Maritsa air base. Daviso proposed sending the destroyer, which was at Leros, to bombard the air base with her guns, but the suggestion was rejected; General Briganti, however, obtained permission from Campioni to use the artillery. The artillery fire destroyed the German tanks that had occupied the airport, but also hit the Italian planes that were still there. When the noise of the shelling was heard in the harbour, Captain Bagnus ordered the capture of Taganrog. The ship had a mixed Greek and German crew; the Greeks were released, while the Germans were taken prisoner and brought to the city. A new Italian crew was placed aboard the ship, and the next day it left Rhodes for Symi.
The Bianco battery inflicted losses on German vehicles at the Maritsa air base, but was in turn seriously damaged and had to be abandoned. The Dandolo battery was encircled and defended itself for a short time, after which its personnel were taken prisoner. The artillerymen, however, freed themselves on the afternoon of 10 September.

September 10

On the night of 9/10 September, British Majors Julian Dolbey and George Jellicoe and a sergeant with a portable radio parachuted onto Rhodes; they were brought to the Palace of the Grand Master, where they met with Campioni. They asked how long Rhodes could hold out, and explained that it would be at least a week before any British reinforcements would arrive. Campioni suggested air strikes and landings in the southern part of the island to divert German attention from the city of Rhodes, but Dolbey replied that there weren’t sufficient means to meet these requests. At 13:00 Dolbey, whom had been injured in landing with his parachute, was given a letter from Campioni to Wilson asking for assistance, and was evacuated to Symi on a motor torpedo boat.
Early on the morning of 10 September a German motorized formation began moving towards Maritsa, although its advance was slowed by artillery fire from Mount Paradiso and Mount Fileremo, where isolated Italian Army units remained in action. At 9:00 a German plane dropped leaflets offering safe passage to Italy in exchange for surrender. An hour later the destroyer Euro arrived with 200 reinforcements from Kos. As units from the inland part of the island were already reinforcing the garrison of the city of Rhodes, Euro was sent back to Kos with its men. In the afternoon the Maritsa battery, which was firing on the tanks that occupied the Maritsa air base, returned fire against some German 88 mm guns; together with the Melchiori battery and some mortars, they silenced the German guns, inflicting heavy casualties and losing six men.
In the evening, German troops captured the positions on Mount Paradiso and Mount Fileremo, and later more positions were taken. At 19:45 Jellicoe and the British sergeant, together with the Italian colonel Fanizza and an Italian major, were sent to Kastelorizo, where they were to further discuss the situation and the dispatch of reinforcements to Rhodes.
During the night, Campioni was informed of the surrender of Italian forces in Greece and Crete, which further weakened his position.

September 11

At 7:00 German air strikes damaged the Majorana battery and put the Navy radio station out of action. A British colonel arrived and immediately met Campioni, who once more asked for diversionary actions, and for fighters to oppose the Luftwaffe. The colonel asked if he believed that a German attack on the city of Rhodes was imminent and how long the Italian garrison would be able to resist; then he was accompanied to the harbour and sent to Kastelorizo.
Shortly thereafter, at 8:00, an officer of the Regina Division, escorted by a German officer of the Rhodos Division, arrived with a message from General Scaroina, asking for an end to the fighting in the southern part of the island. Campioni replied that the battle would go on, while he waited for a meeting with Kleemann.
At 10:30 two more German officers informed the Italian command that the surrender conditions dictated by OKW were for the cessation of hostilities throughout the island, the release of German prisoners, and the unconditional surrender of the Italian forces.
One of the German officers added that the final conditions would be arranged with Kleemann, and that Campioni had half an hour to decide, after which the city of Rhodes would be bombed.
Campioni took stock of the situation with his staff; as no British reinforcements were due to arrive soon, the military situation was considered to be critical. Although Army units continued to resist and the city and harbour were still in Italian hands, only four artillery batteries remained in action, and a German bombing of the city was certain to cause civilian casualties. It was decided to negotiate a surrender.
Meanwhile, false reports circulated that German tanks had entered the city, so some ships left the harbour on their own initiative and were followed by others, believing they were carrying out orders that could not be received. Admiral Daviso later ordered them to sail for Leros.
At 15:30 Campioni, Forgiero and Daviso met Kleemann near the city. It was decided that Campioni would retain his position as governor; the Italian units would not be disbanded, but would be disarmed, except for officers, who would be allowed to keep their weapons. The German command would remain outside the city of Rhodes and no German units would enter it, except under specific conditions.
The Italians destroyed code books and secret documents, but kept a secret radio station in a farmhouse; the Italian government in Brindisi was informed.
Italian troops reacted with anger and incredulity to the news of the surrender, as in some areas they had successfully contained the German attacks, and believed that the Germans were running out of fuel and ammunition. Some soldiers reportedly assumed that the news was referring to a German surrender, such was their apparent advantage over the enemy. Some German units had been forced to surrender during the battle and had been imprisoned in the Italian barracks; they were now released and given back their weapons, much to the indignation of the Italian soldiers who had fought against them. Many cried, said that Rhodes had been "sold out" or that their commanders had "become crazy", accused Campioni of being pro-German, and shattered the butts of their rifles before throwing them in the heaps.

Aftermath

The Italian surrender confronted the Germans with the problem of how to handle such a large number of prisoners, with no ships available for their immediate removal. The Navy and Air Force contingents were disarmed first, as they were firmly determined not to co-operate and therefore potentially more dangerous than the Army, some of whose officers were showing signs of friendship towards the Germans. Kleemann had Campioni order the garrison of Karpathos to surrender, threatening to bomb the island otherwise; however, when Kleemann ordered him to give the same orders to Kos and Leros, Campioni refused. Soon the Germans installed themselves within the Italian command and the Italian officers, Campioni included, were evacuated.
During this period many Italians tried to flee by sea to escape captivity, but often these attempts did not end well, and the fugitives died at sea or were discovered by the Germans. Some succeeded, however, and managed to reach Kos and Leros. The Alimia garrison, commanded by Sub-Lieutenant Cinicola, was ordered to surrender by an Italian general, but refused; Cinicola gathered his men and a number of scattered soldiers that had reached the small island, and they moved to Leros with their weapons, ammunition and provisions.
On 19 September 1943, between 1,584 and 1,835 Italian prisoners, all Navy and Air Force personnel, were herded onto the captured Italian motorship Donizetti, which then sailed for mainland Greece. During the voyage the ship was intercepted and sunk by HMS Eclipse, unaware of her human cargo, with no survivors. On 12 February 1944 the old steamer Oria, crammed with over 4,000 prisoners from Rhodes, ran aground during a storm and sank off Cape Sounion; only 21 prisoners were rescued, while at least 4,062 were lost in the sinking.
Some soldiers were given civilian clothes by their officers, to avoid capture, and mixed with the local population. A small number adhered to the German cause or to the Italian Social Republic. Overall, about 1,580 Italian soldiers managed to escape from Rhodes after the surrender; 6,520 were declared missing after the war. Most of them had died in the sinking of the ships that carried them to Greece, some others starved to death in German prison camps on the island. Ninety were executed after the surrender, forty of them without trial. Admiral Campioni, initially imprisoned in a prisoner-of-war camp in Poland, was later handed over to RSI authorities, tried and executed for having defended Rhodes against the German invasion.
Isolated episodes of resistance continued during the German occupation, both by Greek civilians and some Italians who had escaped capture; sergeant Pietro Carboni of the Italian Navy, helped by an Italian civilian and by a carabineer, hid in the inner part of the island and committed several acts of sabotage against the German forces, until he was discovered and killed on 20 December 1944.