Text:
My friends:
Yesterday on June 4, 1944, Rome fell to
American and Allied troops. The first of
the Axis capitals is now in our hands. One
up and two to go!
It is perhaps significant that the first
of these capitals to fall should have the
longest history of all of them. The story
of Rome goes back to the time of the foundations
of our civilization. We can still see there
monuments of the time when Rome and the
Romans controlled the whole of the then
known world. That, too, is significant,
for the United Nations are determined that
in the future no one city and no one race
will be able to control the whole of the
world.
In addition to the monuments of the older
times, we also see in Rome the great symbol
of Christianity, which has reached into
almost every part of the world. There are
other shrines and other churches in many
places, but the churches and shrines of
Rome are visible symbols of the faith and
determination of the early saints and martyrs
that Christianity should live and become
universal. And tonight it will be a source
of deep satisfaction that the freedom of
the Pope and the Vatican City is assured
by the armies of the United Nations.
It is also significant that Rome has been
liberated by the armed forces of many Nations.
The American and British armieswho
bore the chief burdens of battle- found
at their sides our own North American neighbors,
the gallant Canadians. The fighting New
Zealanders from the far South Pacific, the
courageous French and the French Moroccans,
the South Africans, the Poles, and the East
Indians- all of them fought with us on the
bloody approaches to the city of Rome.
The Italians, too, forswearing a partnership
in the Axis which they never desired, have
sent their troops to join us in our battles
against the German trespassers on their
soil.
The prospect of the liberation of Rome
meant enough to Hitler and his generals
to induce them to fight desperately at great
cost of men and materials and with great
sacrifice to 'their crumbling Eastern line
and to their Western front. No thanks are
due to them if Rome was spared the devastation
which the Germans wreaked on Naples and
other Italian cities. The Allied generals
maneuvered so skillfully that the Nazis
could only have stayed long enough to damage
Rome at the risk of losing their armies.
But Rome is of course more than a military
objective.
Ever since before the days of the Caesars,
Rome has stood as a symbol of authority.
Rome was the Republic. Rome was the Empire.
Rome was and is in a sense the Catholic
Church, and Rome was the capital of a United
Italy. Later, unfortunately, a quarter of
a century ago, Rome became the seat of Fascism-one
of the three capitals of the Axis.
For this quarter century the Italian people
were enslaved. They were degraded by the
rule of Mussolini from Rome. They will mark
its liberation with deep emotion. In the
north of Italy, the people are still dominated
and threatened by the Nazi overlords and
their Fascist puppets.
Our victory comes at an excellent time,
while our Allied forces are poised for another
strike at Western Europeand while
the armies of other Nazi soldiers nervously
await our assault. And in the meantime our
gallant Russian Allies continue to make
their power felt more and more.
From a strictly military standpoint, we
had long ago accomplished certain of the
main objectives of our Italian campaign
the control of the major islands- the control
of the sea lanes of the Mediterranean to
shorten our combat and supply lines, and
the capture of the airports of Foggia, south
of Rome, from which we have struck telling
blows on the continentthe whole of
the continent all the way up to the Russian
front.
It would be unwise to inflate in our own
minds the military importance of the capture
of Rome. We shall have to push through a
long period of greater effort and fiercer
fighting before we get into Germany itself.
The Germans have retreated thousands of
miles, all the way from the gates of Cairo,
through Libya and Tunisia and Sicily and
Southern Italy. They have suffered heavy
losses, but not great enough yet to cause
collapse.
Germany has not yet been driven to surrender.
Germany has not yet been driven to the point
where she will be unable to recommence world
conquest a generation hence.
Therefore, the victory still lies some
distance ahead. That distance will be covered
in due time- have no fear of that. But it
will be tough and it will be costly, as
I have told you many, many times.
In Italy the people had lived so long under
the corrupt rule of Mussolini that, in spite
of the tinsel at the top, their economic
condition had grown steadily worse. Our
troops have found starvation, malnutrition,
disease, a deteriorating education and lowered
public health- all by-products of the Fascist
misrule.
The task of the Allies in occupation has
been stupendous. We have had to start at
the very bottom, assisting local Governments
to reform on democratic lines. We have had
to give them bread to replace that which
was stolen out of their mouths by the Germans.
We have had to make it possible for the
Italians to raise and use their own local
crops. We have to help them cleanse their
schools of Fascist trappings.
I think the American people as a whole
approve the salvage of these human beings,
who are only now learning to walk in a new
atmosphere of freedom.
Some of us may let our thoughts run to
the financial cost of it. Essentially it
is what we can call a form of relief. And
at the same time, we hope that this relief
will be an investment for the future an
investment that will pay dividends by eliminating
Fascism, by ending any Italian desires to
start another war of aggression in the future.
And that means that they are dividends which
justify such an investment, because they
are additional supports for world peace.
The Italian people are capable of self-government.
We do not lose sight of their virtues as
a peace-loving Nation.
We remember the many centuries in which
the Italians were leaders in the arts and
sciences, enriching the lives of all mankind.
We remember the great sons of the Italian
people- Galileo and Marconi, Michelangelo
and Danteand that fearless discoverer
who typifies the courage of Italy- Christopher
Columbus.
Italy cannot grow in stature by seeking
to build up a great militaristic empire.
Italians have been overcrowded within their
own territories, but they do not need to
try to conquer the lands of other peoples
in order to find the breath of life. Other
peoples may not want to be conquered.
In the past, Italians have come by the
millions into the United States. They have
been welcomed, they have prospered, they
have become good citizens, community and
Governmental leaders. They are not Italian-Americans.
They are Americans Americans of Italian
descent.
The Italians have gone in great numbers
to the other Americas-Brazil and the Argentine,
for examplehundreds and hundreds of
thousands of them. They have gone to many
other Nations in every continent of the
world, giving of their industry and their
talents, and achieving success and the comfort
of good living, and good citizenship.
Italy should go on as a great mother Nation,
contributing to the culture and the progress
and the good will of all mankind developing
her special talents in the arts and crafts
and sciences, and preserving her historic
and cultural heritage for the benefit of
all peoples.
We want and expect the help of the future
Italy toward lasting peace. All the other
Nations opposed to Fascism and Nazism ought
to help to give Italy a chance.
The Germans, after years of domination
in Rome, left the people in the Eternal
City on the verge of starvation. We and
the British will do and are doing everything
we can to bring them relief. Anticipating
the fall of Rome, we made preparations to
ship food supplies to the city, but, of
course, it should be borne in mind that
the needs are so great, the transportation
requirements of our armies so heavy, that
improvement must be gradual. But we have
already begun to save the lives of the men,
women, and children of Rome.
This, I think, is an example of the efficiency
of our machinery of war. The magnificent
ability and energy of the American people
in growing the crops, building the merchant
ships, in making and collecting the cargoes,
in getting the supplies over thousands of
miles of water, and thinking ahead to meet
emergenciesall this spells, I think,
an amazing efficiency on the part of our
armed forces, all the various agencies working
with them, and American industry and labor
as a whole.
No great effort like this can be a hundred
percent perfect, but the batting average
is very, very high.
And so I extend the congratulations and
thanks tonight of the American people to
General Alexander, who has been in command
of the whole Italian operation; to our General
Clark and General Leese of the Fifth and
the Eighth Armies; to General Wilson, the
Supreme Allied Commander of the Mediterranean
theater, to General Devers, his American
Deputy; to General Eaker; to Admirals Cunningham
and Hewitt; and to all their brave officers
and men.
May God bless them and watch over them
and over all of our gallant, fighting men.
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