On 8 September 1943 the Armistice of Cassibile was announced, and within a few days, most of the Italian units located in Greece were disarmed and interned by the German troops. One of the few exceptions was the Pinerolo Division; General Infante, thanks to the mediation of a British military mission, established a collaboration agreement with the Greek partisans of ELAS and EDES, and starting from 15 September at least 8,000 men of the division took to the mountains of the Pindus region. The units of the "Pinerolo" were reorganized into the TIMO Regiment ("Italian Troops of Eastern Macedonia"), initially employed in operations against the Germans; starting from the end of October, however, Italian units were progressively disarmed by the Greek partisans and interned in special prison camps, in harsh conditions that resulted in the death of several thousand of Italians. Infante protested harshly with the British mission for the treatment received by his men, but only obtained that the British take charge of the supplies of the internees and that small Italian contingents were used in limited sabotage operations.[5][6][7][8]
Infante's behavior in Greece favorably impressed the British, who in June 1944 repatriated him to Italy to take on the post of Deputy Chief of the General Staff of the Italian Co-Belligerent Army; he was also made aide to crown princeUmberto of Savoy, then Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom of Italy, in 1944-1945. After the war he held the position of Military Attaché at the Italian Embassy in London.[1][6][7]
Later years
After the end of the war, the Greek National Office for War Crimes included Infante in several lists of war criminals whose extradition it intended to request from Italy to try them in Greece. Among other charges, he was accused for the killing on 13 August 1943 of thirty-five civilians in the village of Almyros, in Thessaly. The request was however dropped, along with all those against the Italian military, in 1948, when Greece, under strong Allied pressure, renounced in a secret agreement to prosecute Italians accused of war crimes on its national territory.[9][10][11]
^The Central Registry of War Criminals and Security Suspects, Consolidated Wanted Lists, Part 2 - Non-Germans only (March 1947), Naval & University Press, Uckfield 2005, p. 58 (facsimile of the original document at the National Archives in Kew/London).