Massacre of Kos


The Massacre of Kos was a war crime perpetrated in early October 1943 by the Wehrmacht against Italian army PoWs on the Dodecanese island of Kos, then under Italian occupation. About a hundred Italian officers were shot on the commands of General Friedrich-Wilhelm Müller, after being considered traitors for resisting the German invasion of the island.

Background

Kos was occupied by Italy since the Italo-Turkish War of 1912, which ended the long Ottoman rule over the island. In the course of the second World War, Kos became important owing to an airfield located near Antimachia. The armistice of Cassibile on 8 September 1943, which stipulated the surrender of Italy to the Allies, was greeted with enthusiasm both by the Italian army and the local population in the hope of an imminent conclusion of the war. The few Germans on the island were caught off guard and easily disarmed. Soon after, more than 1,500 British troops landed on Kos to assist the approximately 4,000 Italian soldiers defend the island from a possible German invasion.
In the dawn of 3 October, the German 22nd Air Landing Division, led by General Friedrich-Wilhelm Müller, carried out the operation Polar Bear by landing in three different locations on the island, both from the sea and the air. During the battle there was no coordination between the Italians and the British, the RAF was unable to provide air cover and the lack of sufficient anti-aircraft artillery allowed Luftwaffe's Fliegerkorps X to carry out heavy air bombardments undisturbed.
Thus, despite that the ground forces defending Kos vastly outnumbered the Germans, they surrendered on October 4. A total of 1,388 British and 3,145 Italians were captured and mustered in the Neratzia Castle in the city of Kos.

The massacre

Between 4 and 6 October, 148 captured Italian officers underwent a summary trial ordered by Müller. It was concluded that all the officers who had remained loyal to King Vittorio Emanuele III and had resisted the Germans as a result, were to be shot. Eventually, of the 148 officers, seven switched sides joining the Germans, 28 managed to escape to Turkey, 10 were hospitalized and latter transferred to camps in Germany, whereas the remaining 103 were shot by Müller's men between the evening of October 4 and 7 near the Tigaki salt lake.

Aftermath

In February 1945, 66 bodies were exhumed from eight mass graves near Linopotis and buried in the Catholic cemetery of Kos. In 1954, these bodies were transported to Italy and buried in a WW II memorial in Bari. Despite that many bodies were still missing in Kos, no research campaign to locate them was undertaken until 2015. Then, a group of Greek and Italian volunteers carried out excavations which unearthed human remains and personal objects. The recovered remains were placed in a marble urn at the ossuary of the Catholic cemetery of Kos.
After the end of the war General Müller was captured in East Prussia by the Red Army and extradited to Greece, where he was sentenced to death by a military court for retaliatory atrocities against civilians in Crete. He was executed by firing squad in Athens on 20 May 1947 and was the only person among those responsible for the massacre that was ever punished.

The armoire of shame

In 1994, during the trial of former SS Erich Priebke, documents related to the Kos massacre were uncovered among many other files in an archive found in a wooden cabinet facing a wall in the chancellery of the military attorney's office in Rome. In 2003, inquiries by a parliamentary commission revealed that in January 1960, the Italian military attorney general Gen. Enrico Santacroce had signed a filing order for almost 2,000 Nazi war crime files. In the context of the Cold War era, the military attorney general was under strong political pressure to cover up the material by ministers G. Martino and P. Taviani who feared that Germany, Italy's NATO ally, would be disturbed.