The Night Witches
The story of
the Women's Air Service Pilots (WASP) in the United States is relatively well
known. Much less well known however is the story of the Night Witches, an
incredible group of Soviet women who flew bombing missions during World War
II.
The year was
1941 and Hitler had invaded the Soviet Union. By November the German army was
just 19 miles from Moscow. Leningrad was under siege and 3 million Russians
had been taken prisoner. The Soviet air force was grounded.
In the summer of 1941 Marina Raskova, a record-breaking aviatrix, was called upon to organize a
regiment of women pilots to fly night combat missions of harassment bombing.
From mechanics to navigators, pilots and officers, the 588th regiment was
composed entirely of women. The 588th was so successful and deadly that the
Germans came to fear them, calling them Nachthexen--night witches.
The women,
most of them barely 20 years old, started training in Engels, a small town
north of Stalingrad. The women of the 588th flew their first bombing mission
on June 8, 1942. It consisted of three planes; their target was the
headquarters of a German division. The raid was successful but one plane was
lost.
The 588th
flew thousands of combat bombing missions. They fought non-stop for months,
sometimes flying 15 to 18 missions on the same night. They flew obsolete
Polikarpov Po-2 wooden biplanes that were otherwise used as trainers. They
could only carry two bombs that weighed less than a ton altogether. Most of
the women who survived the war had, by the end, flown almost a thousand
missions each.
Nadya Popova
recalls those missions and comments that it was a miracle the Witches didn't
suffer more losses. Their planes were the slowest ones in the air force and
often came back riddled with bullets, but they kept flying. In August of 1942
Nadya and her navigator crashed in the Caucasus. They were found alive a few
days later.
Years after
the war, Nadya commented that she used to sometimes look up into the dark
night sky, remembering when she was a young girl crouched at the controls of
her bomber, and she would say to herself, "Nadya, how did you do
it?"
There was a
great deal of resistance to the idea of women combat pilots from their male
counterparts. The women had to fight both enemy aircraft as well as the
resentment of their male colleagues. In spite of the never-ending fatigue ,
the loss of friends, and sexual harassment from their suspicious male
counterparts, the women kept on flying. Eventually the Soviets formed three
regiments of women combat pilots -- the 586th, the 587th and the 588th.
The 586th
also trained at Engels, first in the two-seat Yak-7 trainers and later on in
the Yak-1 fighters. The women proved themselves to be as good as the men. The
most outstanding pilots were Raisa Belyaeva and Valeria Khomyakova. The later
was allowed to fly solo in the Yak-1 after just 52 minutes of dual
instruction. She earned the grade of "excellent" during one trial
flight but on a subsequent flight crash-landed on the frozen Volga River when
she switched to an empty fuel tank. All of the women had their hands full,
learning so much information in such a short amount of time.
The female
mechanics also had their hands full with the demanding task of keeping the
planes flying. The winter of 1942 was brutally cold, with temperatures
plunging as low as -54F and countless snow storms. One night in March of that
year the women were called upon to save the aircraft from being blown over by
gale-force winds. Several women would literally lie on the wings and
horizontal stabilizers of each plane, using the weight of their bodies to
keep the planes from blowing away. When the wind subsided, the women looked
like snowmen, but the planes were intact. Their respite was brief however. By
noon the storm had resumed, and again the women rushed to the airfield to
save the planes. The storm finally blew itself out around midnight, and the
exhausted women, soaked to the skin and half frozen, could finally rest.
Tactics used by the Night Witches
The Night
Witches practiced what is known as harassment bombing. Their targets were
encampments, supply depots, rear base areas, etc. Their constant raids made
rest for the troops difficult and left them feeling very insecure.
The top speed
of the Po-2 biplane was 94 mph ((82 knots). This is slower than even most
World War I fighters and left them very vulnerable to enemy night fighters.
But the Night Witches learned their craft well. The Po-2 was very slow, but
it was also extremely maneuverable. When a German Me-109 tried to intercept
it, the Night Witches would throw their Po-2 biplanes into a tight turn at an
airspeed that was below the stalling speed of the Me-109. This forced the
German pilot to make a wider circle and come back for another try, only to be
met by the same tactic, time after time. Many of the Witches flew so low to
the ground that they were hidden by hedgerows! Completely frustrated, the
German pilots would finally simply give up and leave the Po-2 biplanes alone.
German pilots were promised an Iron Cross for shooting down a Po-2!
The stall
speed of an Me-109 E,F and G models was about 120 mph ((104 knots). This made
the top speed of the Po-2 biplanes slower than the stalling speed of the
German fighters. The Focke-Wulf, also used in the Eastern front, had a high
stalling speed as well, so it suffered the same fate.
The Witches
developed the technique of flying close to their intended targets, then
cutting their engines. Silently they would glide to their targets and release
their bombs. Then they would restart their engines and fly away. The first
warning the Germans had of an impending raid was the sound of the wind
whistling against the wing bracing wires of the Po-2s, and by then it was too
late.
The Po-2
would often pass undetected by the radar of the German fighters due to the
unreflective nature of the canvas surfaces and also because they flew so low
to the ground. Planes equipped with infrared heat seekers fared no better at
detecting them due to the small heat emission from their puny little 110-hp
engines.
Searchlights,
however presented a big problem. The Germans at Stalingrad developed what the
Russians called a "flak circus". They would arrange flak guns and
searchlights (hidden during the day) in concentric circles around probable
targets. Planes flying in pairs in a straight-line flight path across the
perimeter were often ripped to shreds by the flak guns. So the Night Witches
of the 588th developed their own technique to deal with the problem. They
flew in groups of three. Two would go in and deliberately attract the
attention of the Germans. When all the searchlights were pointed at them, the
two pilots would suddenly separate, flying in opposite directions and
maneuvering wildly to shake off the searchlight operators who were trying to
follow them. In the meantime the third pilot would fly in through the dark
path cleared by her two teammates and hit the target virtually unopposed. She
would then get out, rejoin the other two, and they would switch places until
all three had delivered their payloads. As Nadya Popova noted, it took nerves
of steel to be a decoy and willingly attract enemy fire, but it worked very
well.
In 1938
Marina Raskova and two other women set a world record for non-stop direct
flight by women when they flew an ANT-37, a Soviet-built twin-engine aircraft
named Rodina (homeland), 6,000 kilometers (3,240 nautical miles) from Moscow
to Komsomolsk-on-Amur on the southeastern tip of Siberia.
The aircraft
started icing up over Siberia, and the women struggled to gain altitude. They
threw everything they could move out of the airplane, but still they
continued to lose altitude. Realizing they were out of options and a crash was
inevitable unless they could further lighten the plane, Marina, who was the
navigator on the flight, decided upon a daring course of action. Noting their
position on a map she bailed out into the frigid darkness of Siberia. The two
remaining women eventually landed safely at their destination, and a hunter
rescued Marina.
Marina and
the other two women were the first women to be awarded the Hero of the Soviet
Union medal for their record-breaking flight. It was Marina's accomplishments
and visibility that helped her persuade Stalin to form the three regiments of
women combat pilots.
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Thursday, January 22, 2015
BIG SALUTE TO RUSSIAN LADY PILOTS
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