1946 British Embassy bombing

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The bombing of the British Embassy at Porta Pia in Rome was a terrorist action[1] perpetrated by the Irgun that occurred on 31 October 1946. Two suitcases containing timed explosives were planted near the embassy's front entrance; the resulting blast injured two people and damaged the building's residential section beyond repair. The Irgun targeted the embassy because they considered it an obstacle to illegal Jewish immigration into Mandatory Palestine.[2] One of the Irgun's intended targets, ambassador Noel Charles, was away on leave during the attack. It was quickly determined that foreign militants from Mandatory Palestine were behind the attack and under pressure from Great Britain, the Italian police, Carabinieri and the Allied Police Force rounded up numerous members of the Betar organization, which had recruited militants from among the displaced refugees.[3] Confirming fears of the expansion of Jewish terrorism beyond Mandatory Palestine, the bombing of the embassy was the first attack against British personnel by the Irgun on European soil.

1946 British Embassy bombing
Part of spillover of the Jewish insurgency in Mandatory Palestine
LocationPorta Pia, Rome
Date31 October 1946
TargetBritish Embassy; Ambassador Noel Charles
Attack type
Bombing
WeaponsTimed explosives encased in suitcases
Perpetrators Irgun
InquiryItalian police, Carabinieri and the Allied Police Force

The British and Italian governments commenced an extensive investigation and concluded that Irgun operatives from Mandatory Palestine organized the attack. The attack was condemned by the leaders of Jewish agencies superintending their refugees. Italy subsequently enacted strict immigration reform and antisemitic sentiment heightened in the United Kingdom. The Italian government rounded up nine suspects, one of whom was shot and killed by the police during an escape attempt. However, the remaining eight suspects were later released from custody. During the early 1950s, Israel lobbied the British to pressure the Italian government not to pursue the militants. In 1952, the eight suspects–including ringleader Moishe Deitel–were tried in absentia and received light sentences ranging from 8 to 16 months.

Background

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The British government anticipated the threat of Jewish terrorism emanating outside Mandatory Palestine in the aftermath of the Second World War.[4] The Irgun had been founded before the Holocaust out of discontent with the Haganah's policy of havlagah, or self-restraint.[5] It became the armed wing of Revisionist Zionism in 1936, a turn related to the Arab recourse to insurrectionary violence in that year, itself a protest against British policy regarding Jewish immigration. Terrorism, the Irgun reasoned, was a winning tactic for it had enabled the Arabs to alter Great Britain's policy on Jewish migration into Palestine.[6] The consequent White Paper of 1939 severely curtailed further Jewish immigration by imposing quotas and ignited a brief military response by the Irgun as well as its later offshoot Lehi, with both concluding that only campaigns of political violence targeting British personnel and installations could shift the British.[7] The Irgun suspended these operations when the Second World War broke out some months later. News from occupied Europe of the Holocaust led them to undertake an insurrection in 1944 under the leadership of Menachem Begin.[8] The Irgun also played a key role in organizing Aliyah Bet to enable clandestine Jewish immigration into Palestine,[9] and is said to have singled out the embassy convinced that it was a center of "anti Jewish intrigue" curbing illegal Jewish immigration to Palestine.[10]

Before he retired as MI5's wartime Director General in May 1946, David Petrie offered an assessment of the threat of Jewish terrorism in Europe and a warning: "the red light is definitely showing".[11] The alert was confirmed by his successor Sir Percy Sillitoe in August and September, when he designated the Irgun and Lehi as the possibly planning to assassinate prominent English figures outside the Middle East.[12] MI5 considered Mandatory Palestine a priority within the British Empire and had Defence Security Officers (DSO) stationed within the Mandate, working with local criminal investigation departments (CID) as well as MI5's sister agency the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), to collect intel on Jewish terrorist threats to Britain.[13] Their sources warned that the Irgun and Lehi were targeting British personnel outside Mandatory Palestine.[13] MI5 were obliged to take these threats seriously: on 22 July 1946, the Irgun bombed the King David Hotel, housing British government offices, in Jerusalem, killing 91.[13] A low intensity guerilla war was being waged in Palestine, with sabotage of communication lines and attacks on British soldiers and mandatory policemen, 99 being killed for the period 1 October through to 18 November. While the Haganah decided at this time to suspend its role in sabotage operations, the Irgun and the Lehi extended their operations to Europe to strike at British diplomatic representatives.[14]

Bombing

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Remains of the British Embassy in Rome in 1946
 
British Embassy in Rome in 2011

By November 1945 alone, it was calculated that some 15,000 Jewish refugees had managed to enter Italy over the preceding six months since the termination of hostilities;[15] the country's geographical location was favorable for the traffic of refugees to Palestine.[16] In September 1945, already engaged for several years in an insurgency against the British Mandatory authorities and army in Palestine, the Irgun high command dispatched a mission to Europe whose aim was to organize the flow of displaced Jewish survivors of the Holocaust to Palestine, recruit soldiers, engage in sabotage against Great Britain and coordinate activities among Zionist organizations sympathetic to the cause.[17]

Eli Tavin, nicknamed Pesach, was appointed head of operations in the diaspora and set up the first logistical base for the group in Italy. Tavin found strong support there among Italian antifascist resistance groups, and, recruiting many members of the Betar organization among the refugees, many of the latter of whom, residing in camps run by UNRRA were also eager to participate,[18] set up cells through the country, while establishing two schools to train commandos for operations at Tricase and Ladispoli.[19][20] Already in March 1946, several refugees, Dov Gurwitz(Roumenian), Aba Churman (Polish), assisted by several others – Natan Rzepkowicz (Polish), Tiburzio Deitel (Fiume), Chono Steingarten (Polish) and Girsh Guta (Polish), had established an office of Jewish correspondence in via Sicilia 135, near the Allied Intelligenced offices, and this was chosen to become the central office for Irgun operations in Italy.[21][a] The British Embassy in Italy was considered by the Irgun to be a centre of operations hindering Jewish migration to Palestine, and thus was singled out as a target.[22][b] Planning for the operation was completed by early October.[23] Before the war Zeev Jabotinsky's Betar movement had obtained permission from Mussolini to have militants train at a Naval College established in Civitavecchia under the auspices of the Italian fascist authorities. According to the historian of fascism Giuseppe Parlato, the Irgun had purchased from the post-war neofascist terrorist group FAR the explosives used for the attempt via the offices of its co-founder Pino Romualdi a fascist who had set up a secret repository of army munitions and explosives after war's end.[24][25] Furio Biagini states that the material was taken from deposits located in a center administered by UNRRA.[26][27]

On the night of 31 October 1946, Irgun operatives divided into two squads: one daubed a large swastika on the front wall of the British Consulate, and the other planted two explosives, amounting to 40 kilos of TNT[28] encased in suitcases and rigged to a timer on the steps of the embassy's front entrance in Via XX Settembre.[23] A driver, working for the embassy, noticed the suitcases and entered the rear of the building to report them. A few moments later, at 02:43, the explosives detonated.[23] The report of the explosion echoed throughout the entire city and was sufficiently powerful to shatter all the windows of the houses and apartments within a distance of one kilometer.[23] The 350-children school of the Handmaids of the Sacred Heart was "badly damaged."[29] The embassy's residential section was destroyed by the blast which created a gaping hole in the entranceway. Noel Charles–the British ambassador and main target of the attack–was away on leave though his quarters were heavily damaged. No British personnel were harmed but two Italians, one a soldier[28] who happened to be passing by and the other the embassy's concierge, suffered severe wounds that left them in a critical condition.[1]

Aftermath

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The bombing was the first terrorist operation by the Irgun against British personnel in Europe;[30] it resulted in both a setback for illegal Jewish immigration to Palestine, and a major public relations disaster for the Zionist mainstream.[10]

The chief of the Italian police declared the following day that no Italian nationals were involved, that the incident bore the hallmarks of similar operations against the British in Palestine, and that those responsible were Jews[31] from Palestine, dismissing rumours alleging that Italian fascists might have been responsible.[24][32][c] An investigation was conducted by the Polizia di Stato with British and American assistance.[33] On the 4 November the Irgun plastered streets in many Italian cities with notices proclaiming it was behind the explosion[34] and released to an American journalist a communiqué claiming responsibility and this was duly reported in The Times on 6 November. The Irgun also threatened more coordinated attacks against Britain,[35][36] and justified its actions by charging that Great Britain was engaged in a "war of extermination" against Jews throughout the world.[34] Soon three refugees were quickly arrested on suspicion, and another two detained on 4 November. The Irgun Zvai Leumi sabotage school was discovered in Rome,[37] where pistols, ammunition, hand grenades, and training literature were found.[38] Four other suspects were caught in Genova, and Tavin arrested in December.[39] Among those arrested were Dow Gurwitz, Tiburzio Deitel, Michael Braun and David Viten.[40]

Many were members of Betar. The English authorities requested that those rounded up be handed over, for transfer to British prison camps in Eritrea. One of the arrested, Israel (Ze'ev) Epstein, a childhood friend of the Irgun leader Menachem Begin, attempted to flee from his imprisonment on 27 December 1946. He had been receiving assistance from the American League for a Free Palestine, which provided blankets, food and cash, but which denied sending him the rope with which he escaped.[41] He was shot in the stomach after an Italian officer on the scene fired a warning shot and called on him to stop. He died of his wounds later that day.[42][43] Eventually after reported pressure from the Allied Command, the suspects were released.[28]

The distinguished Italian criminal lawyer Giovanni Persico, who was a friend of Jabotinsky's from their days at university, took on the suspects' defence.[44] In November, the British media began to sensationalize the idea that Jewish terrorism was a threat to Britain itself, creating unsubstantiated accounts of other putative terrorist plots and activities.[45][46][47] However, the American League for Free Palestine on behalf of Irgun and Irgun itself made the same threats as what the media was reporting.[48][49] As a consequence, antisemitic sentiments increased in the United Kingdom.[50] Though the Jewish leadership of displacement camps condemned the bombing, the attack had an adverse effect on refugees in Italy. Encouraged by Britain, the Italian government enacted several pieces of legislation, reforming their immigration policy. The government set a registry deadline for 31 March 1947 and imposed strict travel visa requirements.[16] The Irgun bases of operations in Italy were closed down and shifted to other European capitals where operatives continued to strike at British targets: the Sacher Hotel in Vienna, which at the time was headquarters of the British Army in that area, to name just one.[51] In order not to be outdone by the Irgun, the rival Lehi undertook similar operations against the Colonial Office in London, which the Scotland Yard unit investigating Jewish terrorist activities linked to the Embassy bombing,[52][53] and only desisted from a plan to release a strain of cholera bacteria into London's underground water supply system by news that the British government had decided to leave Palestine.[54][d] According to Italian historian Furio Biagini the entire world cheered at the way such bold feats by members of the Palestinian yishuv managed to humiliate Great Britain and the recourse to terrorism by the Irgun and Lehi were complementary to the activities of the Haganah and the diplomacy of the Jewish Agency in effecting the British withdrawal from Palestine.[55]

Five years following the bombing, Israel urged Britain to pressure Italy not to pursue eight suspected perpetrators of the bombing who resided in Israel. Five of them had been arrested in Rome but had jumped bail and escaped, while three others had never been arrested. On 17 April 1952, the Italian government tried Moshe Deitel in absentia for his leading part in the bombing. Deitel was found guilty and sentenced to 16 months imprisonment.[56] The seven other suspects were also convicted for taking part in the bombing and received eight-month sentences. The sentences, however, were immediately annulled by amnesties.[56]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "It was stated that two members of the Irgun Zvai Leumi were instructed last March to start a propaganda campaign in Rome and to establish a news exchange office, whereas it was the headquarters of the organisation in Italy." (CT 1946a, p. 1)
  2. ^ "that the Irgum Svai Leumi was responsible for the bombing of the British Embassy in Rome. It was stated that the building was selected as it was the centre of operations hindering the repatriation of Jews." (CT 1946b, p. 2)
  3. ^ According to Paolo Mieli the archives of the Italian police and the carabinieri in 1948 indicate that the Italian Communist Party was also suspected of being responsible at the time (Mieli 2017).
  4. ^ "Yaakov Eliav, capo delle operazioni del Lehi in Europa, rivelerà nelle sue memorie che, all'epoca, l'organizzazzione aveva progettato addirittura da disseminare dei bacilli di colera nelle condotte dell'acquedotto di Londra. I germi dovevano essere prelevati dalle colture dei laboratori dell'Instituto Pasteur, grazie alla complicità dei medici e degli impiegati che simpatizzavano per la causa ebraica. Secondo Eliav i preparativi per mettere in esecuzione questo spaventoso piano furono arrestati unicamente dalla decisione britannica di lasciare la Palestina."(Yaakov Eliav, head of Lehi operations in Europe, was later to reveal in his memoirs that, at this time, the organization had worked on nothing less than a plan to disseminate cholera bacteria in London's waterworks. The germs were to be obtained from cultures in the laboratories of the Pasteur Institute, thanks to the connivance of doctors and employees who were sympathetic to the Jewish cause. According to Eliav, preparations to execute this frightful plan were stopped only because of the British decision to withdraw from Palestine.) (Biagini 2004, pp. 90–91, 91)

Citations

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  1. ^ a b Biagini 2004, p. 83.
  2. ^ Liebreich 2004, pp. 56–57.
  3. ^ Biagini 2004, pp. 78, 88.
  4. ^ Walton 2008, p. 435.
  5. ^ Medoff & Waxman 2013, pp. 91–92.
  6. ^ Hoffman 2015, p. 474.
  7. ^ Walton 2008, p. 436.
  8. ^ Hoffman 2015, pp. 474–475.
  9. ^ Medoff & Waxman 2013, pp. 91–93.
  10. ^ a b Liebreich 2004, p. 57.
  11. ^ Walton 2008, p. 439.
  12. ^ Walton 2011, pp. 143–144.
  13. ^ a b c Walton 2008, pp. 438–439.
  14. ^ Laurens 2002, p. 567.
  15. ^ Biagini 2004, pp. 81–82.
  16. ^ a b Kokkonen 2008.
  17. ^ Biagini 2004, pp. 177–178.
  18. ^ Biagini 2004, p. 78.
  19. ^ Bell 1976, pp. 178–181.
  20. ^ Biagini 2004, p. 178.
  21. ^ ANPI 1987, p. 55.
  22. ^ Bagon 2003, p. 93.
  23. ^ a b c d Biagini 2004, p. 82.
  24. ^ a b Parlato 2015, p. 156.
  25. ^ Parlato 2006, p. 220.
  26. ^ Biagini 2004, p. 82,n.19.
  27. ^ Toscano 2010, p. 81.
  28. ^ a b c Pannullo 2016.
  29. ^ The Southern Cross 1946.
  30. ^ Walton 2008, p. 440.
  31. ^ The Argus 1946.
  32. ^ Biagini 2004, pp. 83–84.
  33. ^ The Daily Telegraph 1946.
  34. ^ a b Biagini 2004, p. 84.
  35. ^ Bagon 2003, pp. 93–94.
  36. ^ The Border Watch 1947.
  37. ^ The Canberra Times 1946.
  38. ^ The Newcastle Herald 1946.
  39. ^ Bell 1976, p. 180.
  40. ^ Jewish Telegraphic Agency 1947.
  41. ^ The West Australian 1946a.
  42. ^ Biagini 2004, pp. 88–89.
  43. ^ The Age 1946.
  44. ^ Biagini 2004, p. 89.
  45. ^ Bagon 2003, pp. 94–95.
  46. ^ The West Australian 1946b.
  47. ^ The Recorder 1946.
  48. ^ The West Australian 1947.
  49. ^ The Age 1947a.
  50. ^ Bagon 2003, p. 98.
  51. ^ Biagini 2004, p. 90.
  52. ^ The Age 1947b.
  53. ^ The Argus 1947.
  54. ^ Heller 2012, p. 168.
  55. ^ Biagini 2004, pp. 91–92.
  56. ^ a b Jewish Telegraphic Agency 1952.

Sources

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41°54′32″N 12°30′05″E / 41.90900797°N 12.50128161°E / 41.90900797; 12.50128161