Gen. Dwight Eisenhower made a radio broadcast to now non Fascist, but not democratic, Italy, stating:
You can have peace immediately, and peace under the honorable conditions which our governments have already offered you," said Eisenhower. "We are coming to you as liberators ... As you have already seen in Sicily, our occupation will be mild and beneficient ... The ancient liberties and traditions of your country will be restored.
Franklin Roosevelt also addressed the American population on the Italian surrender in a fireside chat, stating:
We have started to make good on that promise.
The least to which they are entitled, it seems to me, is something like this:
And finally (6.), sufficient pensions for disabled members of the armed forces.
Of course, both extremes -- of optimism and pessimism -- are wrong.
"Are you working full time on your job?"
"Are you growing all the food you can?"
"Are you buying your limit of war bonds?"
"Because -- if your answer is 'No' -- then the war is going to last a lot longer than you think.
Over 30,000 residents of Hamburg were killed on the RAF night raid on Hamburg, which we already noted yesterday.
British Communist Party member Douglas Springhill was sentenced to seven years in prison for something akin to espionage. The presiding judge was careful not to suggest the Soviet Union as the client.
President Roosevelt ended the rationing of coffee.
Ingvar Kamprad, age 17, formed IKEA.
Addendum:
Shoot, I missed some big ones today that Sarah Sundin caught.
Today in World War II History—July 28, 1943
Palermo's harbor opened up for Allied shipping.
P-47s escorted US bombers all the way to Germany and back, the first time they'd done so and the first time Allied fighters had done so. Drop tanks made that possible.