Something is wrong with our army…’ Command, Leadership & Italian Military Failure in the First Libyan Campaign, 1940-41

Authors

  • Craig Stockings University of New South Wales, Canberra

Abstract

There is no question that the First Libyan Campaign of 1940-41 was an Italian military disaster of the highest order. For all of the ethnic slurs and cultural stereotyping levelled at Italian military performance in North Africa by historians and popular authors, the last 70 years has seen relatively little research effort invested into identifying the real military disadvantages under which Mussolini’s soldiers in this theatre fought. When understood as a product of measurable and objective military factors, like the issue of leadership for example, the rout of the 10th Army takes on an entirely new complexion. The subsequent reputation of Italian soldiers as embarrassing battlefield liabilities in the Western Desert in this period is unfair. This overlooks the handicaps they fought under, and often ignores the bravery displayed in spite of them all. Like the Australians, the Italians in the Western Desert were ordinary men, no more and no less. In truth, it is singularly unsurprising that so many were killed or surrendered without putting up much real resistance. They faced challenges and conditions that would have handicapped troops from any country.

Author Biography

Craig Stockings, University of New South Wales, Canberra

Craig Stockings is a Senior Lecturer in history at the University of New South Wales, Canberra. His research focuses on Australian and international military history. Among his many publications are The Torch & the Sword: A History of the Australian Army Cadet Movement 1866-2006, UNSW Press, Sydney (2007); Bardia: Myth, Reality and the Heirs of Anzac, UNSW Press, Sydney, (2009); and Zombie Myth of Australian Military History, UNSW Press, Sydney, 2010 (ed.).

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Published

2012-05-11

Issue

Section

Seventy Years On: New Perspectives on the Second World War