Luftwaffe Viermot toes 1942-45 Robert Forsyth ROBERT FORSYTH has studied the history and operations of the Luftwaffe for many years. He has written four books for Osprey - Aviation Elite Units 27: Jagdverband 44 - Squadron of Experten and Aviation Elite Units 29: Jagdgeschwader 7 ‘Nowotny’, Duel 24: Fw 190 vs B-17 and Aircraft of the Aces 99: Legion Condor Aces. He is also the author of JV 44 - The Galland Circus (1996), Battle over Bavaria: The B-26 versus the German Jets (1998), Mistel: German Composite Aircraft and Operations 1942-1945 (2001) and Messerschmitt Me 264 Amerikabomber (2006 - with Eddie J Creek). He is presently working on a volume on Me 262 bomber and reconnaissance units for publication in the Osprey Combat Aircraft series. Profile artist JIM LAURIER is a native of New Hampshire. He graduated with honours from the Paiers School of Art, Connecticut, in 1978 and has worked as a freelance illustrator ever since, completing assignments in a wide variety of fields. Jim has a keen interest in military subjects, both aviation and armour, and is a Fellow member of the American Society of Aviation Artists, the New York Society of Illustrators and the American Fighter Aces Association. He has been a key contributor to the Osprey Aviation list since 2000, and in that time he has produced some of the finest artwork seen in these volumes. OSPREY AIRCRAFT OF THE ACES • 101 Luftwaffe Viermot Aces 1942-45 SERIES EDITOR: TONY HOLMES OSPREY AIRCRAFT OF THE ACES * 101 tjft Luftwaffe Viermot Aces 1942-45 Robert Forsyth Front Cover First published in Great Britain in 2011 by Osprey Publishing On 1 August 1943, a combined force Midland House, West Way, Botley, Oxford, 0X2 OPH of B-24 Liberators drawn from five 44-02 23rd Street, Suite 219, Long Island City, NY, 11101, USA groups of the US Eighth and Ninth Air Forces launched a major strike on the Ploesti oilfields and refinery E-mail; [email protected] complex north of Bucharest, in Rumania, which produced some Osprey Publishing is part of the Osprey Group ten million tons of oil per year, with the aim of depriving the Third Reich of a valued source of fuel. Flying © 2011 Osprey Publishing Limited from bases near Benghazi, in Libya, the 178 B-24s constituting Operation All rights reserved. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, Tidal Wave followed a 2000-mile course across the Mediterranean, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Design and passing over the island of Corfu, Patents Act, 1988, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in before turning at the Albanian coast a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, and heading inland over Yugoslavia electrical, chemical, mechanical, optical, photocopying, recording or otherwise and Bulgaria towards the target. The bombers, flying at low level, without prior written permission of the copyright owner. Enquiries should be were harried by flak and fighters. addressed to the Publisher. Mark Postlethwaite's dramatic, cover art depicts the moment that Feldwebel Albert Palm of 3./JG 4 A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library manoeuvred his Bf 109G-2 'Yellow 6' to attack a B-24 of the 44th BG - the ISBN: 978 1 84908 438 3 'Flying Eightballs' - by diving from e-book ISBN: 978 1 84908 439 0 astern as the low-flying bombers emerged from the drifting clouds of black smoke spiralling up from the Edited by Tony Holmes burning refineries. Page design by Tony Truscott 3./JG 4, under the command of Cover Artwork by Mark Postlethwaite the combat-seasoned Hauptmann Aircraft Profiles by Jim Laurier Manfred Spenner (formerly of JG 52) Index by Michael Forder and based at Mizil, northeast of Ploesti, had been formed in Originated by United Graphic Pte Ltd Rumania in early January 1943 and Printed and bound in China through Bookbuilders built up with Rumanian personnel under a Luftwaffe officer cadre. The Staffel's prime duty at this time was 11 12 13 14 15 109 876 5432 1 the air defence of the oilfields and refineries, although the following www. ospreypublishing. com year it relocated with the rest of I./JG 4 to western Germany to engage in the defence of the Reich. Acknowledgements During the bitter action over I would like to thank Erik Mombeek and Eddie J Creek for their kind and Ploesti, Alfred Palm would account essential support to this project. I would also like to acknowledge the kind for the destruction of a B-24. He had assistance of J Richard Smith, Martin Pegg, Nick Beale and Donald Nijboer. flown previously with 8./JG 77, and Many years ago I interviewed and corresponded with a number of former at the time of leaving that Staffel to German fighter pilots who experienced at first-hand what it was like to engage join 3./JG 4 he had 28 victories to his credit. In March 1944 Palm formations of heavy bombers, including Adolf Galland, Oskar Bosch, Fritz suffered severe injuries to his right Buchholz, Richard Franz, Klaus Neumann, Willi Reschke, Gustav Rodel, Franz foot and ankle when he was forced Steiner, Franz Stigler and Willi Unger. The information that I was able to glean to bail out over Italy after his Bf 109 from those exchanges is as important today as it was back in the late 1980s and was attacked by Kittyhawks. Once early 1990s when I obtained it. I thank them for their patience and cooperation he had recovered, Palm served as an instructor, before returning to JG 4 during my research of some 20 years ago. towards the end of the war. This book is dedicated to David Wadman, whose cheerfulness and fortitude Thirty-three B-24s were lost to is an example to all. Looking back, I realise that the book has its origins in a flak during the Ploesti raid and ten discussion I had with Dave late one night 21 years ago in a bar in Mesa, Arizona to fighters. Another 56 Liberators were damaged — after one beer too many. I knew that was a mistake. CONTENTS CHAPTER ONE HEAD-ON 6 CHAPTER TWO CORNERED WOLF 20 CHAPTER THREE 'BIG WEEK' AND BERLIN 34 CHAPTER FOUR BLOODY APRIL 45 CHAPTER FIVE 'STOVEPIPES' AND DESTROYERS 62 CHAPTER SIX ALL-OUT DEFENCE 70 CHAPTER SEVEN STORMBIRDS 84 APPENDICES 90 COLOUR PLATES COMMENTARY 92 INDEX 96 HEAD-ON E N O R E T P A H C At the beginning of August 1942 the Luftwaffe fighter force was committed predominantly to two major theatres of war. To the east, Gruppen drawn from six Jagdgeschwader, fielding around 500 single-engined fighters, were operating in the USSR, deployed on a 2000-kilometre front engaging an enemy that, in terms of size, matched them. By this stage of the war the Soviet air force had recovered from setbacks it had suffered during the previous winter and spring and was enjoying a period of qualitative and organisational improvement. For the time being, as the long drive towards Stalingrad loomed, more intuitive German commanders realised that an early victory in Russia was a dim prospect. In North Africa, a smaller force comprising six Jagdgruppen from two Geschwader provided support to the Afrika Korps as it struggled to break the line which the British held between El Alamein and the Qattara depression. Thousands of kilometres away from these distant battlefronts, most of the German population in its homes and factories, in its offices and shops, its schools and hospitals, although placed on a war-footing, In a scene typical of its time, pilots continued to function, in daylight hours at least, without much direct of 2./JG 2, clad in life jackets and flare bandoliers, gather around disruption from the enemy. For two years, RAF Bomber Command had one of the unit's Fw 190A-4s at mounted a determined campaign of night raids using light and medium their airfield in France to be briefed bombers to strike at shipping, the transport infrastructure and industry by their Staffelkapitan in early 1943. in several major cities, including Berlin. In this, the British had been From the summer of 1942 to mid-1943, this Staffel, along with relatively successful. Equally, however, the Luftwaffe had built up an the others of JG 2 and JG 26, formed effective and technologically sophisticated nightfighter and flak the Luftwaffe's first line of defence organisation that inflicted an increasing toll on the night bombers. against the Allied bomber offensive 6 Most of Western Europe was firmly under German occupation. In one form or another, Hitler’s ‘Thousand-Year Reich’ spread from Norway to the French Riviera, from the Channel Coast to Czechoslovakia. Although America had joined the European war, and its first P-38 Lightning fighters and B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bombers were arriving in England, so secure did the Germans consider their hold on Europe to be that responsiblity for guarding the skies over the western ‘gateway’ to the occupied territories in the hours of daylight was assigned, in the main, to just two Jagdgeschwader (JG 2 and JG 26), based in France and Belgium. Fundamentally, there was nothing wrong with this state of affairs. Since early 1941, the RAF had concerned itself with a ‘lean towards France’, mounting a campaign of offensive fighter sweeps aimed - nominally — at needling and testing the German air defences by strafing ground installations, troop concentrations, railways and airfields, although as one British historian has commented, ‘the Germans appeared to be largely unimpressed’. During the Channel campaign of 1941-42, fighter pilots on both sides had learned, developed and refined fighter-versus-fighter tactics. Pitted against the RAF’s Spitfires, Hurricanes and Whirlwinds were the trusty, but regularly re-engineered, Messerschmitt Bf 109Fs and, following its introduction to the Channel Front in mid-1941, the much vaunted radial-engined Focke-Wulf Fw 190A. Flying these two fighter types, the France and Belgium-based German jagdflieger demonstrated impressive levels of combat dexterity, with a number of pilots from both Geschwader notching up high personal scores, and in doing so, becoming the darlings of the propaganda reporters and film cameras for the benefit of German newsreels ‘back home’. In Holland, another unit, JG 1, had been assigned the defence of the northwestern approaches to Germany. As with its sister units to the south, most of JG l’s activity to mid-1942 had centred upon intercepting Spitfires and probing formations of British twin-engined Bleinheims, Whitleys, Hampdens, Hudsons, Beauforts and Wellingtons (known by the Germans as ‘Zweimots’- ‘two-engines’). The latter attacked shipping and coastal targets and the German ports, as well as some targets further inland, during the hours of daylight. These raids, frequently mounted without fighter escort or with an escort that was large but poorly organised (known as ‘Circuses’), suffered casualties at the hands of a German defence, which was wrongly assumed to have been significantly weakened by a mass relocation to the USSR. Between 11 November 1941 and 22 February 1942, the RAF had mounted daylight bombing operations on 20 days (543 sorties), from which 40 aircraft were lost (7.4 per cent), although the precise respective figures attributable to flak and fighters are not known. The RAF usually despatched formations of between 10-30 bombers at a height of a little over 20,000 ft. If escorted, the fighters were ordered to remain with the bombers, much as Luftwaffe fighter pilots had been instructed to do over Britain in the summer of 1940. Initially, the Germans, under orders to attack only the bombers, and to ignore the escort, dealt with these formations by manoeuvring their fighters above and behind the bombers before diving through any escort, opening fire randomly at hastily selected targets and then diving away. In November 1941, the Kommodore of JG 26, Oberst Adolf Galland, Guarding the airspace over Holland was appointed the General der Jagdflieger following the untimely and and the northern approaches to the Reich against Allied bombers in unwelcome death of the previous incumbent, the revered Werner 1942-43 was JG 1. Here, Fw 190A-3 Molders. Galland successfully pushed for a revision of the prevailing 'White V of the Staffelkapitan of bomber interception tactics and gained more freedom for his pilots to 10. Staffel, Oberleutnant Friedrich take on the Spitfires that would pursue the Bf 109s as they broke away Eberle, is rolled back towards it dispersal by groundcrew at from their pass over the bombers. Bergen-op-Zoom, in Holland, Galland recalled the weight of fire from a Spitfire at this time as being in May 1942. Note the 12 victory Very effective’. While with JG 26, his pilots had devised special tactics markings on the fighter's rudder that saw them exploiting cloud cover to move slowly and carefully towards the British escort without being noticed, before quickly assessing a vulnerable or ‘covenient’ part of the formation to attack. The German pilots would then climb slightly and dive quickly before the escort had a chance to react. Galland also experimented with the method of deploying a number of his fighters to the rear of and above an enemy formation, thus diverting the attention of the escort while, alone, he would climb slowly and gradually out of the clouds below the formation. Hopefully remaining unseen, he would close in on one of the lower elements, select a target, shoot it down and then quickly dive into the clouds to get away. Such tactics occasionally brought success, but they could also result in losses, such as on 13 October when, having attacked a formation of Blenheims from below and shot one down in flames, Galland veered away unscathed. His inexperienced wingman, however, was not so fortunate, drawing fire from the turret gunner of the Blenheim he was targeting. Leutnant Peter Goring, a nephew of Hermann Goring, crashed to his death. Also, these methods depended to a great extent on weather and an ineffective or slow-to-react escort. Somewhat more ominous had been the appearance, in July 1941, of a new British y*w-engined bomber — a ‘Viermot* (a contraction of ‘four-engines’) — the Short Stirling, which carried a crew of six protected by no fewer than eight 0.303-in Browning machine guns housed in nose, dorsal and tail turrets.