- Much to the suprise of Minister of Colonies Alessandro Lessona, Mussolini was not very interested in the administration of newly conquered Ethiopia. For Mussolini, it was enough to have declared the Italian Empire. This reflected Mussolini's opinion that colonies were merely geopolitical assets (127).
- Mussolini viewed colonies as a projection of Italian power and a way to revenge past humiliting defeats. Colonies also served as a springboard for Mussolini's goal of breaking out of the Mediterrean (128).
- Italian Fascism lacked consistent ideology or direction besides radical nationalism and a cult of personality around Il Duce. In 1919 and 1920, fascism was vaguely leftist, republican, and populist; in 1921, fascism became monarchist and rightist; from 1922 to 1925, it supported leissez faire economics, but switching to support of corporatism and state planning between 1929 and 1934; in 1935 and 1936, the focus shifted to a war economy and autarky; in 1936 and later, fascism shifted to open imperialism and racism (127-128). [The statement that fascism was ideological inconsistent is incorrect and reflects a surface view of the shifts in party tactics not ideology. The goal was always to reconstruct the Italian people as a domineering people within a totalitarian and imperial state. The ways to force the Italians to become fascist 'novo homo' changed, as did domestic policies due to Mussolini's uneasy cooperation with his monarchical rivals]
- The essential obstacle to fascism in Italy was that Mussolini was partnered with conservative forces that disagreed with his revolutionary goals. Mussolini wanted a fascist revolution, while his partners pushed for normalization and fought against a revolution (147).
- Mussolini's key beliefs remained the same: life is defined by struggle and conquest, where the stronger dominated the weaker. As a strong and virile state, Italy would naturally be expansionist and imperialist (128). To reeducate Italians in control and violence was the goal (147).
- Mussolini was deeply troubled by Italy's many defeats, poor international reputation, and lack of great power status. This resentment fueled his imperial ambitions (128). The weak state of Italy in the 1920s and its second rate status compared to Britain and France rankled Mussolini (130).
- The Italian Empire, prior to 1934, was marginal and more about prestige than economics. It never attracted settlers or commercial investment and, in the 1890s, accounted for between 2% and 3% of imports and exports (129).
- The Italian colonies were stripped down to their barebones as a cost-saving measure (129).
- This pattern of minimal colonial presence and expenditure continued during the fascist period up until 1934. Imports and exports from colonies increased to between 6% and 7% in the 1930s, but the only significant Italian expenditures there were on military campaign and, even then, it accounted for only 2% of total military expenditure (132-133).
- The memory of the loss at the Battle of Adua in 1896 was particularly humiliating to Italy, bringing fears that Italy would fail in Africa (129-130).
- The Italian Empire disintegrated during the First World War and they got nothing at the peace conferences. When the Fascists came to power in 1922, Somalia was in anarchy, Eritrea faced serious issues, and Libya was in open revolt (130).
- Under the first stage of the Fascist government, limited freedoms granted to the Libyans were withdrawn and the colonies were to be absorbed into the totalizing and dictatorial fascist state. Mussolini's first governor of Libya, Giuseppe Volpi, also discriminated against Arabs in employment and political rights (130-131).
- Part of the Fascist strategy of repression was to confiscate the land of rebellious Libyans. These lands were distributed among prominent Italians, especially members of the government (131).
- The Fascists were brutal in crushing colonial dissent in Libya. They focused on separating the population from the rebels, employing concentration camps in eastern Libya that at one point contained half of the entire region's population. The impact of the repression was enormous: of 200k living in eastern Libya, by 1931 20k were in exile in Egypt and 40k were dead (131-132).
- The colonies were convenient places to put incompetant but loyal fascists. Men generally considered to be incompetant buffoons, such as Cesare Maria de Vecchi or Emilio de Bono, were stuck in the colonies, where they were thought to be less harmful to the administration. Mussolini also stuck his potential rivals in Africa (132).
- Italian interest in the colonies suddenly exploded between 1935 and 1940. This started with the war with Ethiopia, which only accounted for 21% to 28% of all public spending (133), despite Mussolini's assurances that the war would be cheap and easy (135). After victory, expenditures on Africa continued to be high and the African colonies became a major destination of exports, accounting for nearly a third of all Italian imports in 1936 and a quarter in 1937; this reflected an increase from 248 million lira of exports in 1931 to 2.5 billion lire in 1937 (133).
- This increased investment and interest in Africa was immensely costly and drained the Italian currency reserves on imports that could not be produced in Italy. In the first half of 1937, expenditures in Africa resulted in the loss of 650 million lira equivalent in foreign exchange reserves. State institutions, including the social security fund, were plundered for this cash (134).
- Libya, which had undergone an urban reconstruction program in the 1920s and seen its Italian population explode from 819 in 1911 to 21k in 1931, or roughly one third of the city's population, was also costly. Most economic activity was related to government subsidies and was not profitable (134-135).
- Libya was the target of another massively expensive program in 1937 aimed at Italian resettlment. The plan was to resettle 20k Italian peasants a year in Libya and tens of thousands were employed constructing new villages for the colonists. This construction accounted for 2/3s of the Libyan budget. The resettlment plan was interrupted by the invasion of Ethiopia and only 34k Italians were resettled (135).
- A number of state companies were established to try to make colonialism profitable, but they did not succeed. Costs were high and profits low to nonexistent (134). Much of the money was wasted or embezzled by opportunistic Italians (146).
- By the mid 1930s, the fascist revolution was stuck. The corporatative experiment had been implement but had not succeeded. Mussolini's competitor, Adolf Hitler, had succeeded in assuming complete power and outmanouvering his rightist partners, whereas Mussolini was still hamstrung by compromises with the Catholic Church, the Italian monarchy, the military, and industry. Moreover, the Italians themselves were still far from Mussolini's ideal of a fascist man (136).
- In an attempt to promote the creation of a militaristic fascist man and destroy the existing bourgeois values, Mussolini focused on educating the youth to became a fascist generation. In 1934, pre military instruction was mandated for all men between ages 18 and 21 (136).
- There were a number of complementary motivations behind the invasion of Ethiopia. The war would revegenge the humilating defeat at Adua (137), boost Italy's prestige (137), and the experience of war would teach the Italians the fascist values of toughless, mercilessness, and mastery (137-138).
- The war with Ethiopia was planned as an 'anti-bourgeois' war that would show how far the newly militaristic Italians had distanced themselves from soft bourgeois values. The war would also toughen the Italian and make them into better fascists (137).
- The war in Ethiopia was deliberately brutal, involved overwhelming force, and was fought without regard for human life. Mussolini encouraged attacks on civilian targets, including hospitals, and the use of air bombardment and gas attacks. Resistance was to met with mass execution. Brutality and cruelty among the soldiery was encouraged (140-141).
- Following the conquest of Ethiopia, the African colonies were used a labratory for fascist policies that could not, for political reasons, be implemented in Italy (138). This was best represented by the new architechture of fascist cities in Italy, which were built as model cities without private areas for socializing (139).
- In Italian Africa, fascist style social organizations blossomed among settlers and society was planned around fascist organizations in a way that was impossible in Italy (145-146).
- Italian control over Ethiopia was always limited to the cities and railroad lines. Fascist brutality encouraged the continuation of the rebellion within Ethiopia (142).
- Prior to the conquest of Ethiopia, the fascist state took little interest in colonial racial policy. Without supervision, no consistent racial policy was enforced and miscegenation was common (142).
- When the conquest of Ethiopia took place, the situation changed. Inspired by both scientific racism and fascist attitudes towards domination, the new colonial policy was built on strict hierarchy and the supremacy of Italian 'masters' over African 'servants'. The racist elements of this policy were inspired by similar plans in Nazi Germany (142-143).
- Mussolini employed racial policies in the late 1930s as a tool of forming a new fascist man by using racial exclusion as a way to make the Italians 'less tender hearted' (143-144).
- This strict racism had not been previous encoded in Italian law, so it was added in 1938 with new laws making explicit that Jews and Africans were not citizens and prohibiting miscegenation between Italians and subject peoples. New laws also implemented an apartheid to make sure that Africans worked for Italians and not the other way around (144-145).
- The common Italian soldiers and settlers in Africa were often resistent to the new racist fascist policies. Africans and Italians fraternized and engaged in commercial relations that offended Mussolini; he disliked Italians taking loans from and becoming indebted to Africans (143). Sexual relations between Italians and excluded subject peoples — Africans, Arabs, Jews, Slavs — were common (144).
- Imperialism and colonialism were used as tools to reshape the Italian population as domineering and brutal masters. War was meant to wipe away bourgeois values and inspire fascist values. Racism was meant to similarly inculcate fascist values. Colonies could also be used as 'blank spaces' to more fully complete fascism's totalitarian goals (147).