La Brigata Del Diavolo < TRUSTED · OVERVIEW >
The Brigade never failed a mission. Despite suffering massive casualties, they were the first Allied unit to enter Rome. Today, they are remembered as the spiritual ancestors of modern elite units like the U.S. Army Special Forces and the Canadian Special Operations Regiment.
In the winter of 1943, Lieutenant Colonel Robert T. Frederick was handed a near-impossible task: take a band of unruly American misfits—many of them former convicts—and mold them alongside a unit of hyper-disciplined Canadian specialists. This unlikely group, known officially as the 1st Special Service Force, would soon earn a far more terrifying nickname: . The Birth of the Brigade La brigata del diavolo
: To aid their stealth, they often blackened their faces with boot polish. When German survivors spoke of the terrifying "Black Devils" (Die schwarzen Teufel), the nickname stuck. Legacy of Valor The Brigade never failed a mission
Though originally trained for a mission in Norway, the Brigade was diverted to Italy to break the "Winter Line," a series of German fortifications high in the Apennine Mountains. Their most legendary feat was the capture of , a strategic peak that had repelled Allied forces for months. Army Special Forces and the Canadian Special Operations
Training at Fort Harrison, Montana, was a clash of cultures. The Canadians, led by the career-driven Major Crown, and the Americans, under the abrasive Major Bricker, initially despised one another. Fights were common until a massive brawl with local lumberjacks forced the two groups to defend each other, finally forging them into a single, lethal unit. The Legend in Italy