The L6/40 was quick to see combat action with the execution of the Balkans Campaign beginning in October of 1940. The campaign saw the combined forces of Germany, Italy, Albania, Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania invade the sovereign nations of Greece and Yugoslavia. The Axis powered eventually gained the victory over the joint allied forces that included the British, Australians, New Zealanders, Greeks and Yugoslavs in June of 1941. When Germany officially invaded the Soviet Union through "Operation Barbarossa", Italian L6/40s were also participants and were furthermore featured in subsequent offensives that nearly shattered the Soviet Union. By this time, however, the L6/40 series was obsolete though they were still being forced into service as frontline combat systems. L6/40s then served as part of the Axis contingent used across North Africa in an attempt to halt Allied advances. Ultimately, the Axis powers were foiled in this region of the world and completely forced from North Africa altogether - the noose beginning to tighten. Closing combat actions involving L6/40 light tanks took place in the final days of Italian participation in World War 2 as an Axis power. These were featured in the defensive-minded engagements at strategic locations in Sicily and Italy proper. Ultimately, Axis Italy was forced into surrender in September of 1943 and would soon join the Allied cause in the push towards Berlin.
Variants of the base L6/40 light tank series included a command vehicle, flame projector, ammunition carrier and self-propelled assault gun. The command vehicle was completed with an expanded communications suite as well as an open-air turret, providing the field commander unfettered views of the action ahead. A single 8mm machine gun was used for defense but these were falsified to appear as though the larger 20mm-armed combat tanks so enemy tanker crews could not outright identify these valuable battlefield communications relays. The flame projector version replaced the cannon armament in the turret with a liquid-fueled flamethrower. The tracked ammunition carrier was used to supply projectiles to self-propelled guns and were defensed by a single 8mm machine gun. Perhaps the most notable L6/40 development became the Semovente 47/32 self-propelled gun. Semovente 47/32s saw the original L6/40 turret removed in favor of a fixed, armored superstructure mounting a heavier, more potent field gun of 47mm caliber. Production of this type reached approximately 300 examples by war's end. Amazingly, the nimble little L6/40 series outlasted Italian participation in World War 2 as well as the entire war itself. It was used in limited security roles across a rebuilding war-torn Italy under control of militia forces up until the 1950s to which the series was officially and finally retired from operational use.
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