French forces Between November 1944 and March 1945 France set up the Détachement d'Armées des Alpes (Army Detachment of the Alps) under General Paul-André Doyen, an officer of the
Chasseurs alpins who was recalled into active service for the occasion. In the Northern part of the theatre the main French unit was the
27th Alpine Infantry Division which was formed from local
French Resistance units, among whom some were veterans of the defense of the Alps in 1940. Within its ranks were some of France's foremost
mountaineers including
Lionel Terray,
Maurice Herzog,
Jacques Boell and
Honoré Bonnet. However the overall level of training was poor and the division was starved of equipment and supplies which the Americans preferred to channel towards the more important offensive into Germany. Various units were attached to the division for the offensive. These included the former
FFI 3rd Alpine infantry regiment, a company of
ski scouts and various ad hoc units. The bulk of the French troops, some 30,000 men, were deployed in the southern part of the front, whereas the units in the northern sector numbered only a few thousand. This choice was partly due to political considerations as French claims on Italian territory in the southern sector, namely the districts of Tende and La Brigue, were more likely to be accepted by the international community. The German forces belonged to the
34th Infantry Division and to the
5th Gebirgsjäger Division. The
Gebirgsjäger were an elite troop recruited among the mountainous regions of
Tyrol and
Bavaria. Their division included a unit of expert mountaineers, the Lehrbattalion Mittenwald. The 34th Division, led by General
Theo-Helmut Lieb, was an experienced unit that had fought for 3 years on the
Eastern Front. Axis defenses relied heavily on French fortifications, both from the 19th century
Séré de Rivières system and from the
Alpine Line of
Maginot forts, as well as on the Italian
Alpine Wall. In 1943 a detailed inspection had convinced the Germans to halt the dismantlement of the French forts by
Organisation Todt, in order to use them against a possible Allied offensive from Italy. In the summer of 1944, with the imminence of a landing in southern France plans were drawn for holding the front in that direction with a force of two German divisions, though an offensive through the Alps was judged unlikely. The Italian forces were mainly formed by two divisions, the
4th Division "Monterosa" under General
Giorgio Millazo and the
2nd Division "Littorio" under General
Tito Agosti, and the Parachute regiment
Folgore, all of which were under German operational control. The
Monterosa and
Littorio divisions were trained in Germany before being deployed on the front and had a mixture of German and Italian weapons. Graziani allocated them to the Western Alps to defend the Franco-Italian border. Conscripted from
Italian prisoners in German labour camps, the troops were mainly opposed or indifferent to
fascism and consequently suffered from low morale. They were chosen among natives of German-controlled areas of Italy so that reprisals could be taken against their families in case of desertion. Despite these measures, desertion remained a problem and the Germans were forced to deploy officers and
NCOs in Italian units.
Italian partisans The
partisan brigades were mainly formed by the
Alpini too, and had planned the defence on the mountains and the conquest of the last Aostan cities still controlled by the fascist Italian Folgore regiment, the
Decima Flottiglia MAS and some German units. The major part of the partisan forces was however sent to prevent the Germans retreating to Germany from causing massacres and violence against the civilians. ==Campaign==