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The Siege of Leningrad was one of the most brutal battles of the
Second World War. The second largest and most populous city in the
Soviet Union, Leningrad, now St. Petersburg, was one of the three
priority targets of the German invasion, Operation Barbarossa. A
total of 333 large military factories were concentrated in
Leningrad and, accordingly, 565,000 workers lived there, producing
tanks, aircraft, artillery and warships. On 10 July 1941, German
tank divisions, having broken through the front south of the city
of Pskov, reached the town of Luga. From there, Hitler's forces had
just over 110 miles to go to Leningrad. Meanwhile, the city was
feverishly preparing for defence. Stalin's deputies, Zhdanov and
Voroshilov, planned to use the entire combat-ready population of
Leningrad for that purpose. Believing that the city would soon be
captured by the Germans, Stalin ordered the immediate evacuation of
military factories and skilled workers from Leningrad to the East.
Before the city was completely blockaded, most of the valuable
equipment had been removed. However, the remaining civilian
population, including about 400,000 children, were left to their
fate. In early September 1941, German divisions supported by the
Luftwaffe's VIII Fliegerkorps, captured the town of Shlisselburg.
Leningrad was now cut off from the rest of the Soviet Union. Hitler
believed that the city would soon echo to the sound of German
jackboots. Leningrad, however, did not give up. In the autumn of
1941, the Wehrmacht did not have enough forces to take the city and
for three long years the main means of fighting its defenders were
the Luftwaffe and long-range artillery. In September 1941, when the
systematic bombing and shelling began, many thousands of families
tried to leave Leningrad, but nearly all of the escape routes were
cut off. Food supplies in the city sharply decreased. In this book
the authors explore the full story of the German and Soviet aerial
battles in the Leningrad sector during the siege. There are
devastating details of the bombing of the starving population,
numerous attempts by the Luftwaffe to destroy the Red Baltic Fleet,
and air attacks against the �Road of Life', along which vital
food and ammunition were delivered to the city, and combats in the
skies over Leningrad and its surroundings. Revealing what was
happening in the air and on the ground, as well as in the German
and Russian headquarters, the authors explain why, in spite of
numerous successes, the Luftwaffe failed to help force the
surrender of Leningrad.
Much has been written about the famous fighters and bombers of the
Luftwaffe which proved so successful in the invasion of Poland, the
Battle of France, the Battle of Britain and in the early operations
in Eastern Europe. Little attention, however, has been focused on
the Luftwaffe's transport aircraft which played a vital role in
supplying German forces in every theatre. In early May 1940, the
battle of Norway was nearing its climax, but General Eduard Dietl's
3rd J ger division was blocked by the Allies in the Narvik area.
Only the Luftwaffe could provide effective assistance to the
encircled troops. The special purpose groups KGr.zbV107 and
KGr.zbV108 were ordered to supply the division by air. Transports
delivered ammunition, food, and even boots for German sailors who
found themselves on land. This was the first of a number of
occasions in which the Luftwaffe's transport Gruppen, often
equipped with the slow, but reliable Junkers 52, created an air
bridge' to supply troops cut off or surrounded by the enemy. The
transport Gruppen had previously been involved in supporting the
advance of German forces during the Polish campaign, this being
followed by the capture of Denmark, The Netherlands, Belgium, and
Greece. During Operation Barbarossa, German troops were dispersed
over the vast expanses of Russia. It was a country without roads
where the normal supply by trucks and trains to the troops was
difficult and sometimes impossible. Often, it was only the
Luftwaffe's transport aircraft that kept the Germans fighting. But
with Hitler's insistence that there should be no retreat despite
the overwhelming strength of the Soviet forces, his Germans armies
found themselves surrounded and the Luftwaffe had to create air
bridges to supply the beleaguered troops. Nowhere was this more
evident than the Battle of Stalingrad, Goring having convinced
Hitler that the Luftwaffe was capable of keeping the Sixth Army
supplied. As the war increasingly turned against the Third Reich,
air bridges were vital in supporting and maintaining its garrisons
in places such as Demyansk, Holm, Korsun, Budapest, Breslau, and
many others. Hitler's Air Bridges presents the story of the
Luftwaffe's transport Gruppen more extensively and in greater
detail than ever before.
Germany was never able to match the power of the Allied air forces
with their great four-engine bombers, the Lancasters, Liberators
and Flying Fortresses. Indeed, many have ascribed the defeat of
Germany in the Second World to its lack of a strategic bombing
force. There were, though, two occasions when the Luftwaffe's
twin-engine bombers undertook strategic objectives on a large
scale. The first of these was the 'Blitz' of 1940-1941, in which
the Luftwaffe attempted to wreck Britain's industrial and military
capacity. The second was on the eve of Operation _Zitadelle_, a
major offensive against Soviet forces in the Kursk salient Hitler's
objective was to replicate the successful Allied mass-bombing of
German cities, the Luftwaffe being tasked with destroying the main
tank and aircraft production facilities and fuel depots. Hitler saw
this as the necessary prelude to weaken the Russians before the
'decisive' onslaught of _Zitadelle_. The aerial operation, _Carmen
II_, lasted for a month and covered a huge target area from the
Rybinsk reservoir to the Caspian Sea. For these complex and risky
night missions, all the Ju-88 and ??-111 bombers available to
Hitler in the East were employed.. The authors have collected a
huge amount of factual material, reconstructing all the details of
this little-known campaign, which was the largest operation
Luftwaffe on the Eastern front. This book opens a completely new
page in the history of the German air war and provides a
comprehensive investigation into the nature of the targets
attacked, the degree of damage suffered by the Soviet military
machine, and how this affected Operation _Zitadelle_. The
descriptions of the dangerous missions carried out by Luftwaffe as
part of this operation are presented in great detail and all these
exclusive facts are complemented by a large number of unique photos
and documents.
On the night of 14/15 August 1944, the roar of an unknown aircraft
was heard over the dense forests to the south-east of Moscow.
Flying past the Soviet capital, the aircraft turned towards a
secret' landing site at Yegoryevsk on the outskirts of the city.
But lying in wait were troops of Stalin's elite secret service,
SMERSH. The troops turned on the landing lights and the aircraft, a
German machine of some description, swept down to land. As the
aircraft touched down, some of the SMERSH troops lost their nerve
and opened fire prematurely. The German pilot responded quickly and
managed to pull his aircraft up in time to brush over the top of
the trees at the end of the clearing and disappear back into the
dark Soviet sky. This was just one of many vivid episodes in the
operational service of the Luftwaffe's special and secret units
which engaged in the delivery of agents and saboteurs in the rear
of the enemy throughout the Second World War - just on the Eastern
Front but across Asia and Europe. The activities of the pilots and
crews of these squadrons, even in the Luftwaffe itself, were closed
and secret. Information on the operations and missions of these
units was known only a limited number of people. It was common
practice for the crew of one aircraft in these units to know
nothing about the assignments of their fellow airmen. The area of
activity of such units and aircraft covered the whole of Europe,
North Africa, the Arctic circle, the Urals, the Caucasus, and
Central Asia including Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan. The Luftwaffe
not only flew to these remote regions, but also created secret
bases for their aircraft. Drawn from German and Russian sources,
much of the latter only recently declassified, the authors expose
for the very first time the Luftwaffe's secret operations and
reveal the fate of many of the pilots, agents and saboteurs in a
story as breathtakingly dramatic as any blockbuster novel.
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