Wednesday, February 5, 2025

Italian Fucilieri Platoon outside Africa Settentrionale (North Africa): CoC Army List for the operations in the Mediterranean 1942-1943

After my CoC Army List for the different structured platoons of the "Livorno", "Superga" (and later "Friuli") was ready it's now time for an Army List for the remaining Metropolitan (in Italy itself, or stationed in Albania, Greece and so on) divisions.
This includes the fanteria costiera (Coastal Divisions) and camicie nere (Blackshirt).

In contrast to the organisation of the British, Americans and Germans, it is much more difficult and time-consuming to obtain reliable information for Italian army units, the sources I have used are listed at the end of this post.

In 1943 there was a reorganisation of many of the infantry divisions outside Africa Settentrionale (North Africa) but without touching the structure of the infantry platoons itself - they stayed with two squads per platoon.
But as now there were much more SMGs available, the fucilieri were issued 3 SMG per squad - one for the leader and two for the riflemen.

For the information regarding the historical support weapons used please look at:


For the complete list just click on the picture of the list above.


Used and recommended sources


"LE SQUADRE DELLA FANTERIA"; Scuola di applicazione di fanteria", Turin 1943
Official document of the infantry schools dating from 1943, containing the structure and deployment of an infantry squad.

„Tactical Structure in World War II. Italy. Infantry“; Leland Ness, 2 May 2023
Firstly he used original Italian sources that were captured by Germany 1943 and in turn captured by the Americans who microfilmed the sources before being returned to Italy.
And secondly he visited the Ufficio Storico, the Italian Army's historical office located in Rome.

For up-to-date information regarding the weapons of the Regio Esercito I strongly recommend:
„Le armi della fanteria italiana“; Filippo Cappellano and Nicola Pignato.
Colonel Dr. Filippo Cappellano is the chief of the Italian Army Historical Branch (Ufficio Storico SME) and his detailed description of the Brixia M35 mortar, its handling technical data, but also information on its tactical use in combat was very enlightening.

A good starting point too is the handbook based on the gathered informations by the US Military, dating from August 1943, which is freely available as PDF:
"TME30-420. Handbook on the Italian Forces."

14 comments:

  1. Is this saying that a platoon is made up of 1 tenente, and then two squads of 20 men, each with a sergeant, the others split into two four man gun teams, and one rifle team of the remaining 11 men?

    Somehow my mind can wrap itself around the platoon structure of other nations, but this one seems complicated. Structurally feels like having a late war German squad of two light machine gun teams, but then also another group of only riflemen left behind during any maneuvering.

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    Replies
    1. This binary strcture of Italian squads is indeed very special but the most used one in WW2 nevertheless.

      And yes it looks like:
      Comando Plotone
      - tenente or sottotenente, SL, pistol

      squadra fucilieri 1 - 2
      sergente maggiore, Inferior SL, rifle

      gruppo mitragliatori 1
      Breda LMG, 2 crew
      2 fucilieri

      gruppo mitragliatori 1
      Breda LMG, 2 crew
      2 fucilieri

      gruppo fucilieri
      caporale maggiore, JL with rifle
      10 fucilieri

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  2. Hi, I was wondering what the make-up of the "Pioneer Section with JL" in List Four would be? I'm currently working on this list for my CoC v2 games with The Ministry of Miniatures.

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    Replies
    1. Hello, this was the standard make-up according to the v1 rules - you could decide for 2 teams out of the normal engineering teams after the supports were chosen, so didn´t decide for specific teams before.

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  3. Ah- I've never played v1, jumping in at v2.

    Will you be updating these lists to show the lovely selector colours from the v2 handbook?

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  4. Thank you. As I've never played v1, I wasn't aware of this. I guess I need to look into v1 to see what that means.

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    Replies
    1. I would wait for the release of the Co-Calculator for v2 and not use this list until then because the Force Ratings have strongly changed.

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    2. Thank you- I'm quite keen to get these up and running, as I have invested a significant amount of effort into them so far!

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    3. We did, thanks! I ran an all-infantry force with 6 points of support against a British force- see our video on YouTube later at Ministry of Miniatures.

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    4. Ah nice - but the video isn´t Online yet, right? At least couldn´t find it now.

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    5. It is now! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TewOgA7-_LU

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    6. Nice BatRep! Just a hint regarding minute 15:00: If you activate your JL with a 3 and he spend his 2 CI to activate the Bren team for Concentrated Fire he has no CI left to activate the Rifle Team too!
      You will need another CD with a 1, or a Senior Leader to spend 1 CI to activate them.

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    7. Thank you! Every game is a learning opportunity. We pick up something new each time, and as we play, we get better. My personal opinion is that CoC is my current favourite WW2 game (even though I've only played two full games so far).

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