In March 1945, the airborne forces of the Allied-aligned
Italian Co-belligerent Army comprised: the 114-strong
1st Reconnaissance Squadron "Folgore", which was made up of 12
sections/
squads under
Captain Carlo Gay, and; a 112-strong contingent, led by
Lieutenant Guerrino Ceiner drawn from the remnants of the
Paratroopers Regiment "Nembo": four
platoons, each made up of three sections/squads. After being assigned to Operation Herring, the Italian paratroopers received a rapid but thorough training update under the supervision of a British
SOE officer,
Major Alex Ramsay, who was reportedly pleased by the Italian paratroopers' performance. The mission would entail eight drops on as many areas south of Po River, southeast of
Ferrara, the
Mirandola area, and
Poggio Rusco and the
Modena-
Mantua highway. It would last 36 hours. Every paratrooper was to be equipped with an Italian
Beretta MAB submachine gun with 400 rounds, high explosive charges, four
hand grenades, dagger, maps, and food for 48 hours. On the night of 19/20 April 1945, the Italian paratroopers, plus at least one British paratrooper who had joined them, jumped from 14
Douglas C-47 transport aircraft of the US
64th Troop Carrier Group. During the drop, they were scattered considerably, a few were captured upon landing, and 16
paracadutisti barricaded themselves in a farmhouse, after becoming surrounded by German forces; all but two of the Italians died while fighting until running out of ammunition. Other groups of
paracadutisti proved to be more effective, inflicting heavy damage and suffering light casualties. Two squads from "F" Squadron (18 personnel) captured two small towns,
Ravarino and Stuffione, took 451 prisoners and held out until the arrival of Allied ground forces. ==Aftermath==