Reincarnated: Vive La France-Chapter 125: “This is the march of a civilization. This is the rise of a new Rome.”
Chapter 125: “This is the march of a civilization. This is the rise of a new Rome.”
August 5, 1935.
Benito Mussolini stood alone near the central table a sheet of paper in one hand, his other clenched behind his back.
The chamber around him was filled not with opposition, never with that but with agreement wrapped in deference.
Galeazzo Ciano, his son-in-law and Undersecretary of Press and Propaganda, sat closest to the front.
Beside him were Dino Grandi, Achille Starace, and Italo Balbo men whose roles had long shifted from commanders to symbols.
At the far edge, Marshal Pietro Badoglio arrived late, his eyes bloodshot from field reports.
Mussolini did not shout.
He didn’t need to.
The silence in the room was a canvas waiting for command.
"The time has come," he said.
He laid the paper on the table before him. "Final mobilization orders are to be issued immediately. Forty thousand more will be added to the East African deployment. Units will embark from Naples and Taranto beginning Friday. Supplies have already been redirected from northern garrisons."
A murmur ran through the room.
Some took notes.
Others simply nodded.
Starace leaned forward. "Duces orders are received with discipline. The people are ready."
"They are not yet angry enough," Mussolini replied.
Ciano spoke up. "The press can change that."
Mussolini looked at him. "And they will."
He turned, pacing slowly in front of the table.
"The Fascist revolution was not built on the illusion of peace. It was built on iron, on will, on sacrifice. The Ethiopian campaign is not a colonial excursion it is the birth of Italy as a great power."
Balbo, ever the maverick, cleared his throat. "But is Ethiopia the place to prove it? We control the sea. The terrain favors the defender. If Britain flinches..."
"Britain will flinch behind a desk," Mussolini snapped. "They signed nothing that they will enforce. And the French? They are too tangled in Morocco and Syria to stop us."
He held up his hand.
"We do not wait for permission to shape history."
Badoglio spoke then, slow and gravelly. "We are stretched thin. The ports in Eritrea are at capacity. Men are sleeping in warehouses. The logistics...."
"You will make room," Mussolini said flatly.
Ciano, sensing the tension, interjected. "The people must feel this is their campaign. Not just a war of the State, but of the Italian soul."
Mussolini turned toward him. "Then write them their soul."
He nodded to an aide near the door.
"Summon the editors."
By midafternoon, the corridors of Il Popolo d’Italia, Corriere della Sera, La Stampa, and Il Messaggero full of confusion.
Invitations had been sent in the morning quiet but unmistakably urgent.
Now, editors from across Italy gathered inside a secured hall at the Ministry of Press and Propaganda.
Ciano entered first, flanked by junior officials.
He didn’t waste time.
"You are here because the Duce has chosen this moment not merely to command an army, but to command a narrative."
A man from La Stampa raised his hand. "You mean direct instruction?"
"No," Ciano replied with a thin smile. "I mean clarity."
He passed out a sheet of typed directives.
"Effective immediately, all coverage of the East African campaign will reflect national will. We are not colonizers. We are civilizers. Any reporting on troop movements will be approved in advance by the Ministry."
An editor from Corriere della Sera hesitated. "What about foreign wire content?"
Ciano’s voice dropped. "You will curate only what strengthens morale. Rebuttal pieces will accompany British criticism. League statements, if covered at all, must be paired with Italy’s sovereign right to act."
One man dared to speak more boldly.
"And casualties?"
Ciano looked at him.
"None until victory."
There was a silence.
Then pens scratched paper. Heads nodded.
"Feature pieces will highlight the nobility of the soldier," Ciano continued. "The modernity of Italian arms. The gratitude of the African native. Write poems if you must. But make sure Rome sings through every line."
He folded his arms.
"And remember the newspapers are not the voice of the people. They are the voice that makes the people."
At a bar in Trastevere that night, two young journalists from Il Telegrafo drank in silence.
"Forty thousand more?" one said. "That’s half the reserves."
The other shrugged. "Does it matter? They’ll call it national destiny. We’ll print it in bold."
"Do you believe it?"
"No. But belief is not required. Only ink."
In Asmara, Eritrea, the telegrams began arriving by nightfall.
One after the other, addressed to divisional commanders and transport chiefs.
ROME ORDERS MOBILIZATION PHASE 3.
BEGIN LOGISTICAL READINESS FOR 40,000 ADDITIONAL MEN.
REINFORCEMENT DEADLINE.
SEPTEMBER 1ST.
ENSURE PRESS PHOTOGRAPHY UPON ARRIVAL.
Colonel Fabbri, in charge of supply lines between Massawa and the Eritrean plateau, slammed his fist on the table when he read the notice.
"We don’t have room for the ones already here," he muttered. "Where the hell are we supposed to store forty thousand more?"
Major Corsini looked up from the corner. "Rome says there’s always room when glory’s at stake."
Fabbri lit a cigarette.
"I’ve seen glory. It smells like dead mules and dysentery."
But the orders were orders.
By midnight, the docks were being cleared. New bunkhouses erected.
Rail convoys re-routed.
The Eritrean command had no choice.
They would make room.
And back in Rome, Mussolini stood on the balcony of Palazzo Venezia.
Below him, the crowds had gathered again summoned by headline and horn, banners waving, flags snapping in the summer wind.
A military band played the national anthem.
Loudspeakers rang slogans.
"CIVILTÀ! IMPERO! DESTINO!"
Mussolini raised one gloved hand and silence fell.
He spoke into the stone, not needing a microphone.
His voice always carried.
"Italy has waited long enough to take her rightful place among the great powers. The age of treaties and half-promises is over."
The crowd roared.
"Our mission in East Africa is not conquest. It is redemption. We will bring roads where there is mud. Schools where there is darkness. And strength where there is chaos."
More cheers.
"Let the League of Nations convene its committees. Let the British whisper from across the channel. We will not pause our destiny for the permission of yesterday’s empire."
He leaned forward.
"This is the march of a civilization. This is the rise of a new Rome."
He saluted.
The crowd returned it.