MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · November 11 · 1940
ON THIS DAY · 11 NOVEMBER 1940
Raid on Taranto

11 Nov 1940 — 21 British biplanes cripple Italy’s battle fleet in harbor. Japan’s navy takes notes.
THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT
Mussolini wants conquests of his own — a “parallel war” for a new Roman Mediterranean. It goes catastrophically: his invasion of Greece from Albania is thrown back into the mountains; the British cripple his fleet at Taranto with 21 obsolete biplanes (Japanese planners take careful notes); his army in Libya collapses.
From Chapter 5 — Mussolini’s Parallel War of The War Room — WW2, 1936–1945 (MAY 1941).
OPEN THE INTERACTIVE MAP →TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES
- Why it happened — Fascist prestige economics. Mussolini’s regime ran on spectacle. With Hitler devouring Europe, Italy “needed a few thousand dead” to claim a share of the new order — wars…
- The turn — Crete, May 1941 — a pyrrhic first. Airborne invasion succeeds, but a third of the paratroopers are killed or wounded in ten days. Hitler concludes big airborne operations are…
- What it changed — Barbarossa loses five weeks — maybe. The Balkan detour and a late spring push the Russian invasion from May to 22 June. Whether those weeks cost Germany Moscow in December is one of the…
Then ask the room: Was the Balkan campaign a fatal distraction from Barbarossa, or a convenient excuse for its failure? The argued answer is on the chapter page →
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