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Borghese

Junio Valerio Borghese during the Italian Social Republic (RSI) period - note the gladius on collar insignias, symbol of RSI armed forces

Prince Junio Valerio Scipione Borghese (Artena, Province of Rome, 6 June 1906 – Cadiz, Spain, 26 August 1974), nicknamed The Black Prince, was an Italian Navy commander during the regime of Benito Mussolini's National Fascist Party and was a prominent hard-line fascist politician in post-war Italy.

Early career[]

Junio Valerio Borghese was born in Artena, Province of Rome, Kingdom of Italy. He was born into a prominent noble family of Sienese origin, the House of Borghese, of which Pope Paul V was a notable member. Borghese was first educated in London, England, and, from 1923, he attended the Royal Italian Navy Academy (Accademia Navale) in Livorno. In 1929, the naval career of Borghese began. By 1933, he was a submarine commander. Borghese took part in the Second Italo-Abyssinian War. During the Italian intervention in the Spanish Civil War, he was in command of the submarine Iride, where he allegedly lost two seamen after his unit was depth-charged by the British destroyer HMS Havock.

World War II[]

The elite World War II Italian naval unit Decima Flottiglia MAS is considered by many to be the first modern naval commando squad. Assembled by Prince Junio Valerio Borghese at the beginning of the war, these "frogmen" were trained to fight undercover and underwater with small submarines and assault boats armed with a variety of torpedoes—pioneering tactics that remain a standard for Special Forces around the world today.[1]

At the start of the Second World War, Borghese took command of submarine Vettor Pisani, and in August 1940 was in command of submarine Sciré, which was modified to carry the new secret Italian weapon, the human torpedo. Known as "slow speed torpedoes" (siluri a lenta corsa, or SLC), and nicknamed "pigs" (maiali) for their poor maneuverability, these were small underwater assault vehicles with a crew of two. These were part of the 1ª Flottiglia Mezzi d'Assalto (MAS), the "First Assault Vehicle Flotilla", (later called Decima Flottiglia MAS) an elite naval sabotage unit of the Royal Italian Navy (Regia Marina Italiana).

As commander of Sciré Borghese took part in several raids using SLC. The first of these, in September and October 1940 were directed at Gibraltar. The September raid was abandoned when the harbour was found to be empty. In the October raid Borghese took Sciré deep into Gibraltar Bay, making a difficult submerged passage [2] in order to release the SLC as close to target as possible. For this he received the Medaglia d'Oro al Valor Militare (MOVM), despite the missions overall lack of success. In May 1941 a further attempt ended in failure, but on 20 September 1941 a successful mission resulted in damage to three merchant ships in the harbour. After this last attack he was promoted to Capitano di Fregata, and named commander of Decima MAS' sub-surface unit [3] On 18 December 1941, he reached Alexandria in Sciré and launched the daring raid by three SLCs that heavily damaged the two Royal Navy battleships HMS Valiant and HMS Queen Elizabeth and two other ships in the harbour. The six Italian Navy crew that attacked Alexandria harbour all received the Medaglia d'Oro al Valor Militare, and Borghese was named Cavaliere dell'Ordine Militare di Savoia.

In May 1943, Borghese took command of the Decima Flottiglia MAS [4] ("10th Assault Vehicle Flotilla"), or Xª MAS with Roman numerals, which continued active service in the Mediterranean and pioneered new techniques of commando assault warfare.

8 September 1943: the Armistice[]

Following the armistice of Italy on 8 September 1943, the Xª MAS was disbanded. Some of its sailors joined the Allied cause to fight against Nazi Germany and what remained of the Axis. Borghese chose to continue fighting with the Italian Social Republic (RSI) alongside the German Armed Forces (Wehrmacht).

On 12 September 1943, he signed a treaty of alliance with the German Navy (Kriegsmarine). Many of his colleagues volunteered to serve with him, and the Decima Flottiglia was revived, headquartered in Caserma del Muggiano, La Spezia. By the end of the war, it had over 18,000 members, and Borghese conceived it as a purely military unit. The X Sailors gained a reputation for never firing a shot at any Italian military units fighting with the allied forces.

In April 1945 when the USA command discovered that the British had granted permission to Marshal Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia, and his communist troops, to occupy northeastern Italy from Venezia to the east, he moved the bulk of the X from the Liguria and Piemonte area to the Veneto. The X built a line of defense on the Tagliamento river where they resisted until the arrival of the Allied troops.

In this action the X lost over eighty percent of the fighting sailors dispatched to the front against Tito's troops, and the Italian Communist Partisans allied with Tito.

At the end of the war, Borghese was rescued by Office of Strategic Services officer James Angleton, who dressed him up in an American uniform and drove him from Milan to Rome for interrogation by the Allies. Borghese was then tried and convicted of collaboration with the Nazi invaders, but not of war crimes, by the Italian Court. He was "sentenced to 12 years imprisonment, discounted to 3 years, due to his glorious expeditions during the war, his defence of north east borders against Tito's IX Corpus and his defence of Genoa harbour".[5] He was released from jail after four years' imprissonment by the Supreme Court of Cassation in 1949.

Political activism after the war[]

Junio Valerio Borghese

Junio Valerio Borghese in 1970

With his record as a war hero and his support of fascism, he became a figurehead for pro-fascist, anti-communist groups in the immediate post-war period, acquiring the nickname Black Prince. Borghese wrote a supportive introduction affirming his political ideology of an idealistic, neo-fascist new aristocracy meritocratically based purely on character to far right revolutionary-conservative theorist Julius Evola's book, Men Among the Ruins [1]. He was associated with the Movimento Sociale Italiano (MSI), the neo-Fascist party formed in the post-World War II period by former supporters of the dictator Benito Mussolini.

Later, advocating a harder line which the MSI was not able or willing to uphold, he broke from the MSI to form an even stauncher neofascist formation, known as the Fronte Nazionale.

Attempted coup[]

Following a last minute aborted coup d'état plot which fizzled out in the night of 8 December 1970 (a religious festivity in Italy, known as the Feast of the Immaculate Conception), referred to as the Golpe Borghese, he was forced to cross the border to avoid arrest and interrogation. In 1984, 10 years after Borghese's death, the Supreme Court of Cassation ruled that no coup d'état attempt had happened. Latterly regarded as a political outcast and shunned by his ancestrally blue blood social connections for his "heretical" political extremism and disregard for the external norms of modern aristocratic etiquette and behavior, Junio Valerio Borghese died in strange circumstances in Cadiz in 1974.

His body is buried in Cappella Borghese inside Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore, Rome.

He wrote a memoir of his wartime exploits, published as Sea Devils in 1954.

Further reading[]

  • Jack Greene; Alessandro Massignani (2004). The Black Prince and the Sea Devils: The Story of Prince Valerio Borghese and the Elite Units of the Decima MAS. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81311-4. 
  • Junio Valerio Borghese (1954). Sea Devils. Chicago: Henry Regnery Company. 
  • Junio Valerio Borghese (1950). Decima Flottiglia MAS. Milano: Garzanti. 
  • Paul Kemp : Underwater Warriors (1997) ISBN 1-85409-455-6
  • Mario Bordogna (2003). Junio Valerio Borghese e la X Flottiglia MAS. Mursia. 
  • Sergio Nesi (2005). Junio Valerio Borghese. Un principe, un comandante, un italiano. Bologna: Lo Scarabeo. 

References[]

  1. US Naval Institute
  2. Kemp p 36
  3. Kemp p 51
  4. Kemp p 57
  5. Sergio Nesi, Italian Supreme Court report in Il processo, in Junio Valerio Borghese. Un principe, un comandante, un italiano. Bologna, Lo Scarabeo, 2004, pp. 555-556.
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