OPERATION UNDERWORLD
G'day folks,
You might find this interesting. In
order to prevent enemy sabotage at home during World War II, the U.S.
government secretly enlisted the help of an unlikely partner—the Mafia.
In March 1942, with the recruitment of Fulton Fish Market
kingpin Joseph “Socks” Lanza, Naval Intelligence officers launched the
top-secret “Operation Underworld.” Lanza agreed to furnish union cards to
agents operating undercover in the market and aboard coastal fishing fleets.
Authorities were particularly concerned that pro-fascist sympathizers of
Germany’s top ally, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, lurked among the Italian
immigrants who worked as longshoremen in New York. However, Lanza explained
that their cooperation could be secured by the imprisoned mobster Charles
“Lucky” Luciano, who still wielded absolute power on the docks even after six
years behind bars.
With his top aide Meyer Lansky acting as an intermediary,
Luciano agreed to assist the government and ordered his capos to act as
lookouts and report any suspicious activity. Luciano’s contacts even assisted
in the Allies’ 1943 amphibious invasion of Sicily by providing maps of the
island’s harbors, photographs of its coastline and names of trusted contacts
inside the Sicilian Mafia, who also wished to see Mussolini toppled.
Still with between 20 and 40 years left on his sentence,
Luciano filed a petition for executive clemency on May 8, 1945—the same day
World War II ended in Europe. Ironically, the man who had prosecuted the
mobster a decade earlier, New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey, pardoned Luciano
in January 1946 due to his assistance in the war effort and ordered him
deported to his native Italy. The ultimate effectiveness of “Operation
Underworld” has been questioned, but no other ships suffered the same fate as
Normandie for the duration of World War II.
Clancy's comment: Interesting, eh? Nothing would surprise me.
I'm ...
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