1. GENERAL
An analysis of the camouflage measures employed
by the enemy during the Sicilian campaign indicates
that the Germans are still improving their methods,
and that they can readily adapt basic principles to new
terrain conditions. In Sicily they made good use of
all available cover. The fieldcraft and camouflage
undertaken by the individual German soldier were
particularly good. Track discipline was weak, however—perhaps
because vehicles so frequently were
required to move at night.
2. PILLBOXES
The Germans paid special attention to the camouflage
of pillboxes designed to repel landing forces. Every
effort had been made to blend these pillboxes, most
of which were of concrete, with the general terrain
patterns. The fact that there were so many small
houses, huts, and stone walls on the island made this
work simpler for the Germans. It was a relatively
easy task to construct pillboxes resembling existing
structures.
In the Pachino area there were several instances of
pillboxes covered with thatch to look like huts. A
pillbox overlooking a road junction between Pachino
and Rosolini was actually a small house which
had been reinforced with concrete and which had
weapon slits just above the level of the ground. In
the Palazzolo area a number of pillboxes had been
constructed in the vicinity of limestone outcroppings; as
a result, the pillboxes blended fairly well with their
surroundings. These pillboxes were roofed with straw
and had straw "blinds" over the weapon slits. Near
Rosolini the Germans had constructed a pillbox beside
a wall, and had painted on the pillbox a continuation
of the stone pattern of the wall.
However, the locations of many pillboxes were
revealed by the careless laying of wire obstacles. Instead
of being blended with the ground pattern, wire often was
stretched haphazardly across fields, thereby permitting
air photographers to identify positions which otherwise
had been well camouflaged.
A number of enemy pillboxes were never used.
3. GUN POSITIONS
Of the enemy gun positions selected for study, half
were covered with grass-garnished nets of Italian
make. The other half lacked overhead concealment, but
the guns themselves were covered with branches
and other natural garnish. In general, track discipline
around gun positions was poor. Occasionally, however, the
Germans constructed gun positions which were excellent
in every respect. A single gun position
near Palazzolo was unusually well planned. Here the
pit was dug out of an embankment at the side of a
road, and a low overhead cover of nets garnished with
boughs and grass gave the location an entirely natural
appearance. Near Grammichele an antitank gun had
been given an imaginative, yet very simple, camouflage
treatment. The gun was sited in a field where
cornstalks had recently been cut and stacked. The
Germans constructed a similar stack around the shield
of their gun.
4. SNIPER EQUIPMENT
At least two different types of camouflaged cloth
jackets were worn by German snipers in Sicily. One type, with
which a matching helmet cover was issued, had a disruptive
pattern with a green background on one side, and a pattern
with a brown background on the other. The second type was
an ordinary twill jacket, dyed a mottled green and
brown. Both types blended well with local terrain
colors, but had the weakness of revealing characteristic
outlines, inasmuch as they fitted the body closely.