NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 776, sig. 110-5/66 Page 144 · 144 of 185
THE GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 776, sig. 110-5/66
English Translation
112 - 5-- the internal front was already under discussion in Italy, next to the military arena in Sicily and soon to come true in southern Italy. However, the National Socialist and Fascist Party had been granted the benchmark of a stable and stable guarantor, especially in relation to the internal Front. How can an internal front stir up to the last resistance if there is a military dictatorship at the head of the state and if the whole voik should only be kept threateningly threatening open use of force. So far one sees the development clearly that one considers the internal political situation under the direction of a fight against fascism. Mussolini's followers and the fascist party will and must still be strong enough to oppose an almost unimaginable fact of the completion of the Duces. Individual Italian students studying in Prague showed themselves deeply depressed yesterday. In a fanatical rage against the Italian royal family, various of these students expressed a clear fidelity to Mussolini. The poor Italianic people, as deep as they could not have sunk, could not think that the sohio-csal with Italy would be punished in this way, that the Duee was more than a mini-president, that Duce had represented Italy and the Italian people for many faithful Italians. On the German side, we continue to look forward to things in Italy with expectation and also with concern, pointing, among other things, to the not only pgychological burden, which represent thousands and thousands of Italian workers in the realm. It is not to be overlooked that the majority of the German population adheres to the sympathy for Mussolini, but at any rate Mussolina speaks far better than the emperor and king Viotor Emanuel, than the crown prince Umberto and the marshal Badoglio. The confiscation of all the illustrators, the images of Mussolini, who has his 6O's birthday in the next few days, caused a great stir. Mussolinis, too, on the German side, could only be understood if Mussolina had actually been a traitor, so one would at last hear a clear word from the government about it. But if Mussolini were to fall for internal political reasons only, then this opportunism, with which Mussolin is no longer mentioned and which is copied, German Ie