Showing posts with label luftwaffe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luftwaffe. Show all posts

1/25/2013

Black Cross Red Star: The Air War Over the Eastern Front Volume 3 Review

Black Cross Red Star: The Air War Over the Eastern Front Volume 3
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This is the best volume so far of this series. A fast reading and excellent discription of the air war around Leningrad. The best was the portion of the book in the Caucasus air war. The description of the battle around Stalingrad was good but only gave one side of the description from either side in details many times about incidents.Christer Berstrom as always gives a very interesting view of the air war in the Arctic. I still believe it's one of the best descriptions so far to come of this aspect of the war in Russia. This seems to be winning team working on these volumes. Now I'm waiting for volume 4 to finish the story for this campaign in the south. Check out Vlad Antipov's book on "Dragon's On Bird Wings" for further reading of the southern air war from a Russian fighter regiment's view of Stalingrad and the war in the south.

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1/13/2013

Red Star Against the Swastika: The Story of a Soviet Pilot over the Eastern Front Review

Red Star Against the Swastika: The Story of a Soviet Pilot over the Eastern Front
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"Red Star Against the Swastika" is an extremely well written and compelling story, told for the first time.
The book is one of a series of new World War II memoirs by Red Army soldiers and airmen, which provide fresh and valuable insights into the Soviet armed forces of the Great Patriotic War. It remind us that Ivan, the Red Army soldier, was a living, breathing being, who cherished life as much as his counterparts in the West and who was willing to defend his family and his homeland fanatically and lay down his life dearly for all that he loved.
In "Red Star Against the Swastika" Il-2 Shturmovik pilot Vasily Emelianenko remembers his own war against the German Luftwaffe in the skies over Soviet Russia. Developed before the Second World War for the Soviet Air Force, the Il-2 was the first plane optimized for all ground attack and close air support missions. With an armored pilot's compartment, including specially armored glass, and equipped with multiple heavy machineguns and later cannon, the Il-2 played a major role in the Red Army's defeat of the Wehrmacht in Russia.
Emelianenko flew 92 sorties against the Germans, including 80 combat missions. Shot down three times, he always managed to reach home safely, once after another pilot in his squadron landed his own Sturmovik under fire to rescue Emelianenko. For his courage and successful completion of a number of critical missions, the author was awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union, Soviet Russia's highest award.
"Red Star Against the Swastika" reminds us of the tremendous sacrifices made by Red Army soldiers and airmen to stop the Germans, even when the odds were stacked against them. "After the first weeks of the war our troops did not have enough fighters and anti-aircraft guns left," writes Emelianenko. "Consequently, squadrons flew their attacks without any cover. German aircraft had complete superiority in the air. Soviet military pilots had to pay tremendous prices, and a very few of those who began the war in summer 1941 lasted until victory came."
But, fortunately, the battle did not always go the Wehrmacht's way, and time after time, the Red Army managed to catch the Germans by surprise: "Approaching Bobruysk the Shturmoviks were flying very low. Anti-aircraft guns began to fire....The leader turned and launched the attack. Missiles hit the row of [German] bombers and exploded, tracer bullets shredded the wings with black crosses....Junkers and Messerschmitts ready for operational flights blazed up. Our aircraft came in time and did not allow the enemy planes to take off!"
By 1943 the tide of battle had shifted and the resurgent Red Army seized the strategic offensive, never to lose it again. "In the fierce cruel struggle we managed to crush the enemy that brought war to our land," remembers Emelianenko, "and there is my part of strain, blood and sweat in it." Indeed. In four years of combat, the author's ground attack aircraft division lost 717 men. Two hundred of those were from the 7th Guards Ground Attack Aircraft Regiment, Emelianenko's unit.
Victory thus came at a horrendous price. By the end of the Second World War, Soviet Russia had lost some 27 million people in the war, including ten million soldiers, sailors and airmen killed. And those that survived were changed forever: "Few people lived through the war without deep scars on their bodies and on their hearts," admits the author.
Emelianenko concludes his story with the following words; "My friends said to me then: 'Those who were killed must live in a book. People myst know about them. And write the truth only!' I have done my best."

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1/12/2013

Hans-Joachim Marseille: An Illustrated Tribute to the Luftwaffe's " Star of Africa " Review

Hans-Joachim Marseille: An Illustrated Tribute to the Luftwaffe's  Star of Africa
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HANS-JOACHIM MARSEILLE: AN ILLUSTRATED TRIBUTE TO THE LUFTWAFFE'S "STAR OF AFRICA"
ROBERT TATE
SCHIFFER PUBLISHING, 2008
HARDCOVER, $49.95, 224 PAGES, PHOTOGRAPHS, MAPS, DIAGRAMS, APPENDICESHans-Joachim Marseille, a young German fighter pilot, was the most amazing, unique, and lethal ace of World War II. A non-conformist and brilliant innovator, he developed his own personal training program and combat tactics, and achieved amazing results, including 17 victories in one day; with an average lethality ratio of just 15 gun rounds per victory! Marseille was described by Adolf Galland, the most senior German ace, with these words: "He was the unrivaled virtuoso among the fighter pilots of World War II. His achievements were previously considered impossible."
Marseille, who later became one of the ten most highly decorated German pilots of World War II and was nicknamed "The Star Of Africa" by the German propaganda, ("Jochen" by his friends), had a very uncompromising and problematic start. At age 20, he graduated from the Luftwaffe's fighter pilot school just in time to participate in the Battle of Britain in the summer of 1940. He initially served in Fighter Wing 52 under Johannes Steinhoff (176 victories). In his third combat sortie, he shot down a Spitfire and by the end of the Battle of Britain; he had seven victories while being shot down four times! Further, his behavior on the ground got him into trouble with his superiors. His charming personality coupled with his love of the night life sometimes caused him to be grounded the following morning. He also loved American jazz, which was politically incorrect in the German military. As a result, he was transfered to another unit as a punishment for "insubordination". His new unit, Fighter Wing 27, was deployed in April, 1941 to the hot deserts of North Africa; where he quickly achieved two more victories but was also shot down again and continued to be a discipline problem.
Lucky for him, his new wing commander, Eduard Neumann, recognized that there might be a hidden potential in the unusual young pilot and helped him get on the right track. With his problems on the ground finally over, Marseille began to deeply analyze his combat activity, and started to improve his abilities.
As a fighter pilot, with an intense physical and professional self-training program developed by himself, Marseille concentrated on these points:
*Vision
*G-Force
*Aerobatics
*Marksmanship
*Intelligence
*Tactics
Marseille's career is one of the most interesting and stellar of any Second World War aviator. In 388 combat missions (482 missions total), he destroyed 158 Allied aircraft in the European, Mediterranean, and North African Theaters of Operation. For the remaining skeptics, please take note of the following: in the North African Theater of Operations, some 1,300 victories were claimed by German pilots. Of those, 674 victories were claimed by only 15 pilots, and the top 55 scoring pilots accounted for 1,042 kills. This points out another basic difference between German and Allied combat philosophy. While the Allies tended to hunt in packs and compete vigorously for kills, the Germans, at least in North Africa, tended to let the best pilots "have at it" while the new pilots would tend to sit back and enjoy the show. This is one reason the loss of an asset like Marseille was so devastating to the Luftwaffe in North Africa. That kind of emotional destruction wouldn't likely accur in Allied squadrons.
Marseille's ingenious tactics were made successful because of his unique and masterful flying abilities. Other pilots tried to emulate Marseille, but failed to master their own aircraft and thus weren't as successful. It is interesting to note, that two of the most successful German pilots in North Africa also used Marseille's tactics to achieve many of their victories. Still many Allied military historians refuse to believe that Marseille was as successful and deadly as the Germans claim. Keep in mind that during the Marianas Turkey Shoot on June 19, 1944, U.S. naval aviator Commander David McCampbell shot down seven Japanese aircraft on a single sortie and another nine on 24 October 1944. Another, U.S. Army Air Corps Major William Shomo, was awarded the Medal of Honor for downing seven Japanese aircraft in a single sortie on 11 January 1945. Many pilots on both sides of the war were credited with multiple kills on single sorties but Marseille just happened to make a deadly habit of it.
The men of Marseille's squadron were so devastated by his death, that the entire I Gruppe ceased to function as a combat unit and were subsequently withdrawn from combat operations for a period of one month. Marseille was buried in the desert with full military honors in the military cemetery in Derna, Libya. To this day, a pyramid, newly dedicated in 1989 stands as both a testimony and honor to his achievements on the site of some of the most severe fighting in North Africa.
HANS-JOACHIM MARSEILLE: AN ILLUSTRATED TRIBUTE TO THE LUFTWAFFE'S "STAR OF AFRICA" is an outstanding tribute to one of Germany's most respected but least known military aviators. This long overdue account is both well-written and lavishly illustrated with many never before published photographs of both the man and his aircraft. Anyone that is interested in World War II aviation should purchase this book. You will not be disappointed.Lt. Colonel Robert A. Lynn, Florida Guard
Orlando, Florida

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