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Mario Giorgini (Massa, 19 March 1900 – , 23 January 1977) was an Italian naval officer during World War II. He commanded the I Flottiglia MAS (later renamed Decima Flottiglia MAS), the special operations unit of the Royal Italian Navy, from February 1940 until his capture during an attempt to carry out a raid on in September of the same year. After the war he became an admiral in the .


Biography
Giorgini was born in Massa from Vittorio Giorgini and Florence Rochat. He then entered the Naval Academy of Livorno in 1914, graduating with the rank of ensign in 1920. In March 1923 he married Fiorenza Corsi, from whom he had a son, Gian Giorgio (Dido). In 1934 he was promoted to lieutenant commander, and later to commander.Gianni Bianchi, "Un capitano coraggioso" la storia di Mario Giorgini, il Comandante di Tesei, Birindelli, De La Penne..., pp. 39-56

On 24 February 1940, replacing his colleague , he was appointed commander of the 1st MAS Flotilla, later briefly called the Special MAS Flotilla, the special operations unit of the , better known with its later name of Decima Flottiglia MAS, adopted under Giorgini's successor, Vittorio Moccagatta. While Aloisi was known for his technical expertise, Giorgini was valued for his organizational skills. It was him who chose submarines as the best means to deploy SLC near enemy bases, and in May 1940 he organized and directed the first trials for the transport and release of manned torpedoes from a submarine, using Ametista as the SLC carrier and the old cruiser Quarto, moored in , as the target. , , Junio Valerio Borghese and participated in the exercise alongside Giorgini, onboard Ametista; three SLCs were released from Ametista, one of which was able to reach Quarto undetected and place a dummy charge on its hull, proving the effectiveness of the SLC. After this, placed three submarines – Iride, Gondar and Scirè – at the disposal of the 1st MAS Flotilla.Gianni Bianchi, "Un capitano coraggioso" la storia di Mario Giorgini, il Comandante di Tesei, Birindelli, De La Penne..., pp. 77-81-94Giorgio Giorgerini, Attacco dal mare. Storia dei mezzi d’assalto della Marina italiana, p. 99

In July 1940 Admiral Raffaele de Courten, Giorgini's superior, ordered him to select his best four crews and launch an attack on the capital ships of the Mediterranean Fleet moored in Alexandria. After vainly protesting that his men were not yet ready for action, Giorgini set out to carry out the order; but the operation, codenamed G.A.1, ended in failure when the carrier submarine, Iride, was sunk by British in the Gulf of Bomba while readying to sail, on 22 August 1940. Giorgini, who was onboard Iride, barely survived along with the SLC operators, while most of the submarine's crew perished; the SLC operators themselves (including Tesei, Toschi, de la Penne and Birindelli) managed to save several survivors trapped in the sunken wreck of the Iride.Gianni Bianchi, "Un capitano coraggioso" la storia di Mario Giorgini, il Comandante di Tesei, Birindelli, De La Penne..., pp. 119-143-161 Operazione G.A. 1Giorgio Giorgerini, Attacco dal mare. Storia dei mezzi d’assalto della Marina italiana, pp. 170-171-172

A new attempt, G.A.2, was quickly organized, with some changes from the previous one: the carrier submarine, Gondar, was equipped with special pressurized containers for the SLCs, which in the previous attempt had been simply lashed to Iride's deck; and he submarine sailed from an Italian port, , rather than from a lightly defended Libyan anchorage as Iride had done. Having left Messina on 24 September 1940, Gondar arrived off Alexandria in the night between 28 and 29 September, but was then informed by Supermarina that the operation had been called off, as the Mediterranean Fleet had left Alexandria a few hours before to escort a convoy to . Having set course for , Gondar was then located and hunted by HMAS Stuart and HMS Diamond, badly damaged by and forced to surface, where she was by her crew. Along with the crew and the SLC operators, Giorgini was thus captured and sent to a prisoner of war camp in , where he remained in captivity for nearly six years, only returning to Italy on 21 April 1946. The Raid on Alexandria would be attempted again and successfully in December 1941, depriving the Mediterranean Fleet of its battleships for over a year. Operazione G.A. 2Giorgio Giorgerini, Attacco dal mare. Storia dei mezzi d’assalto della Marina italiana, p. 127-128-175-178

Upon returning from captivity, Giorgini was promoted to captain, later commanding the submarine depot ship Antonio Pacinotti and the light cruiser Giuseppe Garibaldi. In 1950 he was promoted to . From 1956 to 1959 he held the position of Judge of the Military Supreme Court and later that of member of the commission for the granting and revocation of , being promoted to in 1959. He died in in 1977.Gianni Bianchi, "Un capitano coraggioso" la storia di Mario Giorgini, il Comandante di Tesei, Birindelli, De La Penne..., pp. 245-397

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