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Bob Dole and the Nazis’ Brutal Last Stand in Italy

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Authors: Edwin S. Grosvenor

Historic Era: Era 8: The Great Depression and World War II (1929-1945)

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Summer 2022 | Volume 67, Issue 3

Robert Dole was only 20 when he enrolled during WWII and was assigned to the 10th Mountain Division.
Only 20 years old when he enlisted during WWII, Dole was assigned to the elite 10th Mountain Division.

Editor’s Note: The late Sen. Robert Dole and nearly one million other Allied soldiers continued to fight Nazi Germany in northern Italy after D-Day in 1944, when the world’s attention turned to France. A team from American Heritage recently traveled to Italy to find the spot where Dole was so badly wounded, and to learn more about this dramatic but often-neglected phase of World War II. We thank Gabriele Ronchetti, author of several books on the Italian campaign, and the other historians of the Gothic Line Association for their help in the research for this article.

Churchill called Italy the “soft underbelly” of Europe. It turned out to be anything but that as the Allies faced some of World War II’s most costly battles, from the invasion of Sicily on July 10, 1943 to Salerno, Anzio, Monte Cassino, and many other bloody encounters. 

“In the year before D-Day, the Italian campaign was the single most important front in the war,” historian Gabrielle Ronchetti recalled. “The Allied plan was to use Italy as a bridge into Nazi Germany, to strike at the heart of the Third Reich. Little by little, over many months, the Allies fought their way up the peninsula, liberating Rome on June 5, 1944.”

Then, one day after Rome was taken, the world’s attention turned away from Italy as the Allies landed at Normandy to open up a second front in Europe. Seven American divisions were transferred out of Italy to help in France. But the Allies would continue to heroically struggle on the Italian peninsula, with little notice from the press and public.

Late in 1944, the Allies ran into a strong German defense at the Gothic Line (red) with 2,000 bunkers, artillery, and machine gun nests.
Late in 1944, the Allies ran into a strong German defense at the Gothic Line (red) with 2,000 bunkers, artillery, and machine-gun nests. While Americans focused on the center, the British army attacked along the Adriatic coast near Rimini. For a detailed map of fortifications, see the Gothic Line Association website.

As the Germans retreated northward in late 1944, Hitler ordered them to fortify and hold what was known as the Gothic Line – two hundred miles of fortifications dug into the mountains from Pisa on the west coast to Rimini on the east. The Allies would face more than 2,000 bunkers, artillery, and machine-gun nests. These strongholds overlooked and blocked crucial roads that ran from Florence and Pistoia through the mountains to Bologna and the fertile Po Valley beyond.

The German commander was Albert Kesselring, one of the most decorated Nazi generals, who had led the operations in North Africa and was later convicted of war