WW II Gothic Line ghosts haunt modern day Italy, Europe cover art

WW II Gothic Line ghosts haunt modern day Italy, Europe

WW II Gothic Line ghosts haunt modern day Italy, Europe

By: joe kirwin
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Italy was on the wrong side of history in WW II and the campaign to defeat Nazis and Italian Fascists is known as the Forgotten Front. Launched after the liberation of Rome, the Gothic Line offensive barely gets a footnote in most military history annals. But it featured the most multinational, multi-racial army in WW II. Intertwined in this battle was a vicious Italian civil war and hundreds of civilian massacres - war crimes never prosecuted. Collective amnesia about this ugly past is a present political menace in the face of Italy's economic and defense challenges.joe kirwin World
Episodes
  • Black soldiers and racial abuse on the Gothic Line: 80 years later the Pentagon has a special program to ID uknown 92nd Buffalo soldiers buried in the U.S. military cemetary in Florence Pt. 3
    Feb 4 2026

    At the top of the hillside U.S. military cemetery on the fringe of the Italian city of Florence there is a large wall that describes the Allied Force troop movements that fought on the Gothic Line from August 1944 to April 1945. There is a dizzying array of arrows that provides an inkling of how complicated the story of the final phase of what is often referred to as WWII's ``Forgotten Front.'' There is smaller plaque that mentions how the U.S. Army Fifth Corp led by U.S. General Mark Clark included the only U.S. African American infantry division to face combat in WWII. Often referred to as the ``Buffalo Soldiers'' they included the 92nd Infantry Division and an attachment known as the 366th Regiment, many of whom had joined the military after serving in ROTC programs while pursuing a college education.

    What the plaque description does not mention is the racial abuse these black soldiers and their segregated units faced as they fought, in the words of a Pentagon historian, two wars: one against the Nazis and Italian Fascists and another against white racist U.S. commanders. The cemetery also does not mention that there is an ongoing special U.S. Department of Defense project to identify more than 50 unknown African American soldiers buried in the Florence cemetery.

    Despite the ongoing efforts by the Trump Administration and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth to whitewash the story of racial abuse in the U.S. military before, during and after WWII, the special project to ID the unknown African American soldiers continues. Launched in 2014 the remains of seven soldiers - some from the 92nd Division and some from the attached 366th Regiment - have been identified. To provide more details about the special Pentagon project, the program's historian Ed Valentin explains in this episode the background and details of how work continues using various identification techniques including DNA analyses, field work, archive research and other methodologies. He also expressed optimism the program would be announcing new identification success in the coming year.

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    22 mins
  • Righting the wrong of U.S. Army racial abuse faced by African American soldiers on the Gothic LineI
    Jan 22 2026

    Welcome again to the podcast and this second of a three-part series where we will look back at the story of African American soldiers who braved Nazi and Italian Fascist attacks but also white U.S. Army officer racist abuse while fighting on the Gothic Line. The first episode of the series included an interview with Solace Wales who published a book in 2020 titled Braided in Fire – Black GIs and Tuscan Villagers on the Gothic Line 1944. That episode was published earlier in this Gothic Line podcast series.

    The second part centers around an interview with military historian and author Daniel Gibran who the U.S. Department of Defense employed in the 1990s to do a report on why no U.S. African American, including those fighting on the Gothic Line, received a Medal of Honor, after WWII ended. As a result seven African American soldiers, including Lt. John Fox and Lt. Vernon Baker, were awarded the Medal of Honor by former U.S. President Bill Clinton at the White House in 1997. Fox received the medal posthumously while Baker was present at the WH East Room ceremony.

    The third part of the series includes an interview with Ed Valentin, the official historian of an ongoing, special U.S. Department of Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency U.S. Army 92nd Infantry Division program to identify the unknown African American soldiers killed in combat on the Gothic Line more than eighty years ago and whose remains are buried in a U.S. military cemetery in Florence, Italy. As Valentin will tell us, racism played a major role in why the African American soldiers were not identified more than seven decades ago and are having such a difficult time today to identify the remains even though the special program was launched in 2014.

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    27 mins
  • Unsung Brothers in Arms, Gothic Line heroes: Indian troops side by side with Scottish Highlanders - Part 1
    Dec 12 2025

    There are many Gothic Line heroes who helped free Italy from Nazi and Italian Fascist tyranny but arguably some of the most unsung soldiers who fought and died for democracy even though they did not have it at home were the 50,000 Indians troops. They played a pivotal in the British-led Eighth Army on the Adriatic sector of the Allied Force campaign. Three Indian Divisions, each embedded with Scottish Highlander troops and sometimes other British soldiers, fought mainly in the rugged Apennine mountains to cover the flank of English, Canadian. Polish and Greek troops advancing up the Adriatic coastal plain. The bond forged between the Indians and British soldiers, especially with different divisions of the Scottish Highlander troops, is a multicultural success story .

    Daniel Cesaretti began a crusade 40 years ago to honor the Indian soldiers that fought in Italy and to inform his fellow Italian citizens of their noble efforts. During the past four decades he has visited every battlefield where Indian soldiers fought and where more than 5,000 of them died. His efforts have led to various memorials. He is now leading an effort to establish a Indian soldier memorial site outside the city of Rimini so their valor will never be forgotten.

    The story of the Indian soldiers is one that is not only an important historical landmark but also a vital reference point in today's politics when it comes to the debate over immigration in Europe. For the next two episodes of this podcast we will examine all of these issues in a two-part series dedicated to the Indian soldier story on the Gothic Line.

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    1 hr and 5 mins
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