Paris. In the Peace Treaty after the Second World War, Italy must compensate the countries it declared war on and occupied. The most significant compensation is territorial, with the loss of its colonies, a decision pushed by Great Britain, and of two Alpine municipalities: Istria and the Dodecanese. Then there are $100 million and a portion of its fleet to be ceded to the USSR, $5 million to Albania, $25 million to Ethiopia, $105 million to Greece, and $125 million to Yugoslavia, all to be paid within seven years. There is no comparison with the treatment meted out to Germany after the First World War.



