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Battle of Asiago

Battle of Asiago
Strafexpedition
Part of the Italian Front
(First World War)
Guerra Altipiani Dopo Assalto.jpg
The remaining alpine vegetation after the attack on Asiago.
Date 15 May – 10 June 1916
Location Asiago plateau, Veneto, Italy
Result Italian defensive victory
Belligerents
 Kingdom of Italy  Austria-Hungary
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of Italy Luigi Cadorna
Kingdom of Italy Roberto Brusati replaced by Kingdom of Italy Guglielmo Pecori Giraldi
Kingdom of Italy Pietro Frugoni
Austria-Hungary Conrad von Hötzendorf
Austria-Hungary Archduke Eugen of Austria
Austria-Hungary Viktor Dankl von Krasnik
Austria-Hungary Hermann Kövess
Units involved
Kingdom of Italy First Army
Kingdom of Italy Fifth Army
Austria-Hungary 11th Army
Austria-Hungary 3rd Army
Strength
172 battalions
850 guns
300 battalions
2,000 guns
Casualties and losses
140,000 casualties: 12,000 dead
80,000 wounded
50,000 taken prisoner
100,000 casualties: 15,000 dead
75,000 wounded
15,000 missing and taken prisoner

The Battle of Asiago (Battle of the Plateaux) or the Trentino Offensive (in Italian: Battaglia degli Altipiani), nicknamed Strafexpedition ("Punitive expedition") by the Austrians, was a counteroffensive launched by the Austro-Hungarians on the Italian Front on May 15, 1916, during World War I. It was an unexpected attack that took place near Asiago in the province of Vicenza (now in northeast Italy, then on the Italian side of the border between the Kingdom of Italy and Austria-Hungary) after the Fifth Battle of the Isonzo (March 1916). Commemorating this battle and the soldiers killed in World War I is the Asiago War Memorial.

Already for some time the Austrian commander-in-chief, General Conrad von Hötzendorf, had been proposing the idea of a Strafexpedition that would lethally cripple Italy, Austria-Hungary's ex-ally, claimed to be guilty of betraying the Triple Alliance, and in previous years he had had the frontier studied in order to formulate studies with regard to a possible invasion.

The problem had appeared to be serious, mostly because the frontier ran through high mountains and the limited Italian advances of 1915 had worsened the situation and excluded a great advance beyond the valleys of Valsugana and Val Lagarina (both connected by railway) and the plateaus of Lavarone, Folgaria and Asiago.

The geographic location of the routes of advance was conducive to the original plan which called for an advance from Trent to Venice, isolating the Italian 2nd and 3rd Armies who were fighting on the Isonzo and the Italian 4th Army who was defending the Belluno region and the eastern Trentino.


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