, the new Prime Minister of Italy after the fall of Mussolini from power After the surrender of the Axis powers in
North Africa on 13 May 1943, the Allies
bombed Rome on 16 May,
invaded Sicily on 10 July and prepared to
land on the Italian mainland. In the spring of 1943, preoccupied with the disastrous situation of the Italian military during the war, the Italian dictator,
Benito Mussolini, removed several figures from the government whom he considered to be more loyal to
Victor Emmanuel III than to the Fascist regime. To help the execution of his plan, the King asked for the assistance of
Dino Grandi (1st Count of Mordano), one of the leading members of the Fascist hierarchy who, in his younger years, had been considered the sole credible alternative to Mussolini as leader of the
National Fascist Party. The King was also motivated by the suspicion that the Count of Mordano's ideas about Fascism might be changed abruptly. Various ambassadors, including
Pietro Badoglio himself, proposed the vague possibility of succeeding Mussolini as dictator. The secret rebels later involved
Giuseppe Bottai, another high member of the Fascist Directorate and Minister of Culture, and
Galeazzo Ciano (the 2nd Count of Cortellazzo and Buccari), the second most powerful man in the Fascist Party and Mussolini's son-in-law. The conspirators devised an "Order of the Day" for the next meeting of the
Grand Council of Fascism (
Gran Consiglio del Fascismo), which contained a proposal to restore direct control of politics to the King. After the Council, held on 25 July 1943, a majority vote adopted the "order of the day", and Mussolini was then summoned to meet the King and was dismissed as prime minister. Upon leaving the meeting, Mussolini was arrested by the
carabinieri and spirited off to the island of
Ponza. Badoglio became President of the Council of Ministers or the
Prime Minister of Italy. However, Grandi had been told that another general of more significant personal and professional qualities (
Marshal Enrico Caviglia) would have taken the position. On July 27, the new
First Badoglio government began to undertake measures by banning all Fascist organizations throughout Italy as well as disbanding the
National Fascist Party and its other elements associated with it. The appointment of Badoglio did not change the position of Italy as Germany's ally in the war. However, many channels sought a peace treaty with the Allies. Meanwhile,
Adolf Hitler sent several divisions south of the
Alps, officially to help defend Italy from Allied landings but really to control the country. Three Italian generals (including
Brigade General Giuseppe Castellano) were separately sent to
Lisbon to contact Allied diplomats. However, to open the proceedings, the Allies had to determine who was the most authoritative envoy, and the three generals had started to quarrel about who had the highest authority. In the end, Castellano was admitted to speak with the Allies at the British Embassy to set the conditions for the armistice of Italy. Among the representatives of the Allies were the British Ambassador to
Portugal,
Sir Ronald Hugh Campbell, and two senior officers sent by
Dwight Eisenhower: major-general
Walter Bedell Smith (US Army, Eisenhower's chief of staff) and brigadier
Kenneth Strong (British Army, Eisenhower's assistant chief of staff for intelligence). On 27 August, General Castellano returned to Italy and, three days later, briefed Badoglio about the Allied request for a meeting to be held in
Sicily, which had been suggested by the British Ambassador to the
Vatican. To ease communication between the Allies and the Italian government, a captured British
Special Operations Executive (SOE) agent,
Dick Mallaby, was released from
Verona Prison and secretly moved to the
Quirinale. It was vital for the Germans to remain ignorant of any suggestion of Italian surrender, and the SOE was the most secure method under the circumstances. ==Terms==