The air defense of the German Reich, 1939-1945.

German Luftwaffe 1935-1945.
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Prosper Vandenbroucke
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Re: The air defense of the German Reich, 1939-1945.

Post by Prosper Vandenbroucke »

Well done Raul It's very interresting
Kindly regards
Prosper :up: :up:
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tigre
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Re: The air defense of the German Reich, 1939-1945.

Post by tigre »

Hello to all :D; more..............................

The air defense of the German Reich in the World War 1939-1945 and its lessons.

The fight for air supremacy over Germany until the invasion 1943-1944.

At the end of 1943, the “Air Commander Center” (“Luftbefehlshaber Mitte”) was replaced by the “Reich Air Fleet Command” (“Luftflottenkommando Reich”), which now took charge of the entire air defense of the Reich. Fighter divisions were given control of the flight reporting service. The air defense radio listening system was combined in the hands of the Reich Air Fleet and the Air Fleet 3 in France. The tactical and strategic reports of the air situation were immediately communicated to the combat units.

However, the German Air Force did not begin 1944 with any decisive reinforcements for its fighter units. By the spring of 1944, the numerical superiority of Allied escort fighters had become so great that German fighters and destroyers suffered increasing losses in the escalating battles. Only in isolated cases did the defense forces manage to find unaccompanied bombers. For this period the following picture of the distribution of forces for all German fighters emerged: see table below.

Before the invasion, German air defense in the West and in the Reich had the following defense units available and ready for action:
Fighter 540, destroyer and night fighter 544.

The Americans and British were able to counter these German forces with the following numbers: US 8th and 9th Air Fleet -- RAF
Heavy bombers: 2592-1620
Medium bombers: 456 - 342
Light bombers: 171 - 144
Fighter and fighter-bombers: 2700 - 918
Night fighters: 36-198
Reconnaissance fighter aircraft: 280 - 144
Total USAAF: 6235 - RAF: 3366

Source: Die Luftverteidigung des Deutschen Reiches im Weltkrieg 1939-1945 und ihre Lehren: ein strategischer Überblick. Herhudt von Rohden. Allgemeine schweizerische Militärzeitschrift. Band (Jahr): 117 (1951). Heft 11

Cheers. Raúl M 8).
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* As of 5/31/44: 129. ** As of 5/31/44: 54.<br />1. Occupied Western Territories; 2. Territory of the Reich; 3. Russia; 4. Finland and Norway; 5. Italy; 6. Balkans.
* As of 5/31/44: 129. ** As of 5/31/44: 54.
1. Occupied Western Territories; 2. Territory of the Reich; 3. Russia; 4. Finland and Norway; 5. Italy; 6. Balkans.
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Serás lo que debas ser o no serás nada. General José de San Martín.
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Re: The air defense of the German Reich, 1939-1945.

Post by tigre »

Hello to all :D; more..............................

The air defense of the German Reich in the World War 1939-1945 and its lessons.

The fight for air supremacy over Germany until the invasion 1943-1944.

If we assume that the heavy and medium bombers, fighters and fighter-bombers of the Western allies had an operational readiness of 60%, which is certainly still too low, then they faced each other in the ongoing battle in the West and over the Reich (round numbers):

American bombers 1830 - 1,100 German fighters, destroyers and night fighters
RAF 1,180 bombers - 1,492 heavy anti-aircraft batteries in the Reich /
USA fighters 1,620 - 612 light anti-aircraft batteries (May 9, 1944) / (Luftwaffe Flak only)
RAF 550 fighters - 433 heavy anti-aircraft batteries in the west /
422 light anti-aircraft batteries (May 24, 1944) / (including Flak Kriegsmarine)
Source: Lagekarten des OKL.

In the period between March 31, 1944 and May 1, 1944, and between November 29, 1944 and December 31, 1944, the proportion of the branches of the air force, calculated based on its operational aircraft, was as follows:
March-April 1944 - - November-December 1944
Fighters, destroyers and night fighters 38% -- 53%
Bombers 13% -- 6%
Attack aircraft 17% -- 18%
Reconnaissance aircraft and seaplanes 17% -- 13.6%
Transports 15% -- 9.4%
Source: Lagenkarten des OKL in connection with GenQu reports; the latter have generally proven to be too high.

At the height of the battle for air supremacy over the Reich, losses of fighters, destroyers and night fighters (from 10% damage to total loss) were as follows:

In 1943
from January 1 to June 30 - 4,470
from July 1 to December 31 - 6,191

In 1944
from January 1 to March 31 - 3,900
from April 1 to May 31 - 3,902
from June 1 to August 31 - 7,855
from September 1 to December 31 - 7,704
In total: 34,022
Source: GenQu Reports 1939-1944.

By 1943, American fighters had reached a depth of approximately to the Aurich-Rheine-Münster-Dortmund-Cologne-Sedan line. At the beginning of 1943/44 it was known that they flew to the Elbe, but the bombers flew over all of Germany. In March 1944, escort fighters flew north to the Bremen - Hannover - Kassel - Frankfurt am Main area, south to Vienna and Munich, and at the end of summer throughout the Reich.

What the leaders of the Reich Air Defense had predicted starting in 1942 had come true: contrary to all the opinions of the Supreme Command, the flights of bomber units to the territory of the Reich were protected by fighters.

Source: Die Luftverteidigung des Deutschen Reiches im Weltkrieg 1939-1945 und ihre Lehren: ein strategischer Überblick. Herhudt von Rohden. Allgemeine schweizerische Militärzeitschrift. Band (Jahr): 117 (1951). Heft 11

Cheers. Raúl M 8).
Serás lo que debas ser o no serás nada. General José de San Martín.
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