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Flak Corps

A Flak Corps (German: Flakkorps, also spelt Flak-Korps) was a massed anti-aircraft (AA) artillery formation employed by the Luftwaffe for anti-aircraft, antitank, and fire support operations in World War II. A Flakkorps was a flexible organization that was made up of a varying number of AA regiments, brigades, or divisions. A total of six flak corps were organized by Germany during the war. The flak corps, while mainly intended to support ground units with concentrated anti-aircraft fire, in many cases provided also antitank support.

History Edit

Flak corps did not exist before World War II. Until the end of war Germany eventually organized a total of six flak corps, being numbered one through six in Roman numerals (I, II, III, IV, V, VI),[1]: 363  plus one short-lived special flak corps.

I Flak Corps Edit

I Flak Corps was formed twice, once in 1939 and once in 1941. The initial formation was assembled in October 1939 in Berlin from the staff of Luftgaukommando III. It was used in the Battle of France in support of Army Group A. On 16 August 1940, it consisted of the Flak Regiments 101, 102, and 104, as well as a heavy detachment, an air signals regiment and a resupply staff. On 1 June 1940, I Flak Corps was split into two brigades of two regiments each (after the addition of Flak Regiment 103), with 1st Flak Brigade receiving the Flak Regiments 102 and 103, and 2nd Flak Brigade receiving the Flak Regiments 101 and 104. In March 1941, I Flak Corps was used to form the staff "Luftwaffenbefehlshaber Mitte".[2]: 15 

I Flak Corps was quickly reformed on 1 April 1941 in Berlin, using the staff of 1st Flak Brigade. By 6 June, it was in Warsaw. In Operation Barbarossa, it was used in Army Group Center with Panzer Group 2 and provided fire support using its Flak Regiments 101 and 104.[2]: 16  It was also used by Army Group South.[1]: 363  In May 1942, it was repurposed as an administrative leadership unit near Poltava and was assigned 9th Flak Division (at Kharkov), 10th Flak Division (at Kursk), 15th Flak Division (at Mariupol) and 17th Flak Division (at Stalino). 10th Flak Division was removed near the end of 1942. 9th Flak Division was annihilated in January/February 1943 in the cauldron of Stalingrad. I Flak Corps withdrew via southern Russia and Crimea in 1943 and through northern Ukraine and Galicia in 1944. In October 1944, it was at Kraków with Army Group A. At the end of the war, it was in Schweidnitz under Army Group Center.[2]: 16 

II Flak Corps Edit

II Flak Corps was formed twice, once in 1939 and once in 1943. The initial formation was assembled in October 1939 from elements of the 6th Air Division and was deployed near Mönchengladbach at the disposal of Army Group B for the Battle of France. In May 1940, it consisted of the Flak Regiments 103, 201, and 202, as well as an air signals regiments and a resupply staff. After the Battle of France, II Flak Corps was earmarked for Operation Sea Lion and prepared at the coast of the English Channel for operations. At this point, it supervised the Flak Regiments 6 (at Ostende), 136 (at Boulogne), 201 (at Calais) and 202 (at Dunkirk).[2]: 96  Flak Regiment 103 had, after the victory over France, already been transferred to I Flak Corps, from where it was assigned to 1st Flak Brigade.[2]: 15  After Sea Lion was cancelled, Flak Regiment 136 was withdrawn in October and the entire corps redeployed to Tours on 16 December 1940. It protected the German-occupied Atlantic coast with 6th Flak Brigade (at Fontenay le Comte), which in turn oversaw the Flak Regiments 40 and 45. On 3 March 1941, the II Flak Corps staff was recalled to Germany and deployed with Flak Regiment 6 and Flak Regiment General Göring to serve on the Eastern Front. In April 1942, the corps staff was dissolved and used for the formation of 18th Flak Division.[2]: 96 

II Flak Corps was reformed in central Russia in October 1943 from the command of III Luftwaffe Field Corps, headquartered at Babruysk and tasked with the supervision of 12th Flak Division (at Babruysk, provision of support for 2nd Army and 9th Army), 18th Flak Division (at Orsha, provision of support for 4th Army) and 10th Flak Brigade (at Vitebsk, provision of support for 3rd Panzer Army). 10th Flak Brigade was restructured into the 23rd Flak Division in August 1944. During the great Soviet offensive of January 1945, the II Flak Corps oversaw a total of four flak divisions and an autonomous flak brigade (23rd Flak Division in support of 9th Army between Warsaw and Modlin, 12th Flak Division in support of 2nd Army between Modlin and Lomza, 18th Flak Division in support of 4th Army between Lomza and Ebenrode, 27th Flak Division in support of 3rd Panzer Army between Ebenrode and Rusnė, 15th Flak Brigade in reserves at Danzig). At the end of the war, the II Flak Corps was part of Army Group Vistula and oversaw, as of 27 April 1945, the 23rd Flak Division behind 9th Army, the 6th and 15th Flak Brigades as well as the 27th Flak Division behind the 3rd Panzer Army and the 14th Flak Division as well as the 16th Flak Brigade in the Prignitz region with the 12th Army.[2]: 97 

III Flak Corps Edit

The III Flak Corps was formed on 22 February 1944 from the staff of the 11th Flak Division to cooperate with Panzer Group West against an anticipated invasion by the Western Allies. It consisted of the Flak Assault Regiments 1 through 4 (formed from the Flak Regiments 431, 653, 37 and 79) as well as an air force signals detachment. Following the Allied invasion of Normandy (6 June 1944), much of the III Flak Corps' fielded flak forces were destroyed in the Falaise Pocket in August 1944.[2]: 161  In September 1944, the staff of III Flak Corps was headquartered at Cochem and reused to oversee the 1st Flak Brigade, 18th Flak Brigade, 19th Flak Brigade and 20th Flak Brigade in support of Army Group B. In February 1945, the corps HQ was at Bonn and oversaw the 1st Flak Brigade (at Rheydt, in support of 15th Army), 2nd Flak Division (at Altenahr, in support of 5th Panzer Army) and the 19th Flak Brigade (at Kyllburg, in support of 7th Army).[2]: 161  III Flak Corps was destroyed in the Ruhr pocket in April 1945.[2]: 161 

IV Flak Corps Edit

The IV Flak Corps was formed in Breslau in June 1944 to support Luftflotte 1 on the Eastern Front. Its initial deployment remained uncompleted and was aborted shortly after.[2]: 232 

The deployment of IV Flak Corps was reattempted in September 1944, this time for the Western Front. It was deployed to Edenkoben and served in the sector of Army Group G between the Meuse river and the France–Switzerland border. It oversaw the 9th Flak Division (at Landstuhl, in support of 1st Army) and 13th Flak Division (at Schlettstedt (later: Todtnau/Schwarzwald), in support of 19th Army) and was reinforced in January 1945 by the insertion of 28th Flak Division between the two previous division. Additionally, in March 1945, it received the 21st Flak Division and 26th Flak Division in March 1945.[2]: 232 

V Flak Corps Edit

The V Flak Corps was formed under supervision of the "Luftwaffenkommando Südost" staff for the southern sector of the Eastern Front on 15 November 1944 to support the withdrawals of Army Group E and Army Group South. It initially was placed in charge of the 19th Flak Division in the Independent State of Croatia (in support of Army Group E), the 20th Flak Division in Pécs (in support of 6th Army, 3rd Hungarian Army and Army Group Fretter-Pico) and the 15th Flak Division at Debrecen (in support of Army Group Wöhler, 8th Army, 1st Hungarian Army).[2]: 285 

Initially deployed east of Budapest, V Flak Corps was pushed to Bratislava by December 1944. After redeployment to Wiener Neustadt, V Flak Corps was also placed in charge of the air defenses of Wehrkreis XVII, including 24th Flak Division in Vienna and 7th Flak Brigade in Linz. On 2 April 1945, the corps was at Sankt Pölten and on 13 April at Traun. On 7 May 1945, the corps goes into captivity at Admont.[2]: 285 

VI Flak Corps Edit

The VI Corps was formed on 10 February 1945 in the north of the Western Front, the sector of Army Group H, from the dissolved 16th Flak Division at Doetinchem. It initially oversaw 9th Flak Brigade (at Huis ter Heide in support of 25th Army) and 18th Flak Brigade (at Winkel in Guelders in support of 1st Parachute Army) as well as 4th Flak Division (at Duisburg). During the withdrawal of the German forces in Northwest Germany from the Rhine towards the Elbe, VI Flak Corps additionally was placed in charge of 3rd Flak Division (at Hamburg) and 8th Flak Division (at Bremen).[3]: 10 

Flak Corps z.b.V. Edit

The Flak Corps z.b.V. was formed on 2 April 1945 from the Luftgau-Kommando VI staff, initially formed on 12 October 1937. Luftgau VI was dissolved in early April 1945 after it had passed the 4th Flak Division to VI Flak Corps and 7th Flak Division to III Flak Corps. Its staff was used to form a reserve staff for a flak corps.[3]: 12 

Organization Edit

Flak corps were large organizations of pre-existing AA units (regiments, brigades, and divisions) rather than being formed as new units from scratch. In 1943 Allied intelligence noted:

The Flak Corps is a wartime organization, and constitutes an operational reserve of the commander in chief of the German Air Force. It combines great mobility with heavy fire power. It can be employed in conjunction with spearheads composed of armored and motorized forces, and with nonmotorized troops in forcing river crossings and attacking fortified positions. It can also be deployed as highly mobile artillery to support tank attacks.[4]

Flak corps did not include the majority of the Germany's flak force. Even considering only the Luftwaffe's flak units dedicated to direct support of Wehrmacht ground troops, most of them were not subordinated to flak corps.

Flak corps were either partially motorized or fully motorized, depending on the degree of motorization of their subordinate units.

Assessment Edit

Although the AA guns of all nations in World War II could be used against ground targets, Germany in particular used AA guns in multiple roles. The need for command and control of these assets led to the organization of larger units, culminating with the organization of flak corps. Although the Soviets also organized large air defense units, they were typically not used against ground targets. The flak corps above all provided additional antitank support for the German ground forces. In some cases, such as at Cagny in Normandy, these units achieved significant success against attacking Allied armored vehicles. The use of flak corps as ground warfare assets was complicated because they were part of the air force (Luftwaffe) chain of command even when supporting ground forces (either Heer or Waffen SS).

Given the expense of producing AA guns – in relation to the cost of antitank guns of the same capabilities – it is questionable if their use as antitank weapons was economical.

As an organizational form, massed AA-gun formations represented a dead-end as large-caliber AA guns were phased out of military service in the 1950s and replaced by surface to air missiles.[5][6]

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ a b Tessin, Georg (1977). Die Waffengattungen - Gesamtübersicht. Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939-1945 (in German). Vol. 1. Osnabrück: Biblio Verlag. ISBN 3764810971.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Tessin, Georg (1966). Die Landstreitkräfte 001–005. Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939-1945. Vol. 2. Verlag E. S. Mittler & Sohn GmbH. ISBN 3764808713.
  3. ^ a b Tessin, Georg (1967). Die Landstreitkräfte 006–014. Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939–1945 (in German). Vol. 3. Frankfurt/Main: Verlag E. S. Mittler & Sohn GmbH.
  4. ^ Lone Sentry
  5. ^ www.coldwarrelics.com
  6. ^ Werrell, p. 74

References Edit

  • "Tactical Employment of Flak in the Field" from Intelligence Bulletin, November 1943 at LoneSentry.com
  • The Luftwaffe, 1933-1945
  • Luftwaffe airborne and field units By Martin Windrow
  • Tessin, Georg, Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS 1939 - 1945, Osnabrück: Biblio Verlag, 1979. ISBN 3-7648-1170-6.
  • Werrell, Kenneth P. Archie to SAM, Maxwell AFB: Air University Press, 2005. Accessible on-line here.

flak, corps, german, flakkorps, also, spelt, flak, korps, massed, anti, aircraft, artillery, formation, employed, luftwaffe, anti, aircraft, antitank, fire, support, operations, world, flakkorps, flexible, organization, that, made, varying, number, regiments, . A Flak Corps German Flakkorps also spelt Flak Korps was a massed anti aircraft AA artillery formation employed by the Luftwaffe for anti aircraft antitank and fire support operations in World War II A Flakkorps was a flexible organization that was made up of a varying number of AA regiments brigades or divisions A total of six flak corps were organized by Germany during the war The flak corps while mainly intended to support ground units with concentrated anti aircraft fire in many cases provided also antitank support Contents 1 History 1 1 I Flak Corps 1 2 II Flak Corps 1 3 III Flak Corps 1 4 IV Flak Corps 1 5 V Flak Corps 1 6 VI Flak Corps 1 7 Flak Corps z b V 2 Organization 3 Assessment 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 ReferencesHistory EditFlak corps did not exist before World War II Until the end of war Germany eventually organized a total of six flak corps being numbered one through six in Roman numerals I II III IV V VI 1 363 plus one short lived special flak corps I Flak Corps Edit I Flak Corps was formed twice once in 1939 and once in 1941 The initial formation was assembled in October 1939 in Berlin from the staff of Luftgaukommando III It was used in the Battle of France in support of Army Group A On 16 August 1940 it consisted of the Flak Regiments 101 102 and 104 as well as a heavy detachment an air signals regiment and a resupply staff On 1 June 1940 I Flak Corps was split into two brigades of two regiments each after the addition of Flak Regiment 103 with 1st Flak Brigade receiving the Flak Regiments 102 and 103 and 2nd Flak Brigade receiving the Flak Regiments 101 and 104 In March 1941 I Flak Corps was used to form the staff Luftwaffenbefehlshaber Mitte 2 15 I Flak Corps was quickly reformed on 1 April 1941 in Berlin using the staff of 1st Flak Brigade By 6 June it was in Warsaw In Operation Barbarossa it was used in Army Group Center with Panzer Group 2 and provided fire support using its Flak Regiments 101 and 104 2 16 It was also used by Army Group South 1 363 In May 1942 it was repurposed as an administrative leadership unit near Poltava and was assigned 9th Flak Division at Kharkov 10th Flak Division at Kursk 15th Flak Division at Mariupol and 17th Flak Division at Stalino 10th Flak Division was removed near the end of 1942 9th Flak Division was annihilated in January February 1943 in the cauldron of Stalingrad I Flak Corps withdrew via southern Russia and Crimea in 1943 and through northern Ukraine and Galicia in 1944 In October 1944 it was at Krakow with Army Group A At the end of the war it was in Schweidnitz under Army Group Center 2 16 II Flak Corps Edit II Flak Corps was formed twice once in 1939 and once in 1943 The initial formation was assembled in October 1939 from elements of the 6th Air Division and was deployed near Monchengladbach at the disposal of Army Group B for the Battle of France In May 1940 it consisted of the Flak Regiments 103 201 and 202 as well as an air signals regiments and a resupply staff After the Battle of France II Flak Corps was earmarked for Operation Sea Lion and prepared at the coast of the English Channel for operations At this point it supervised the Flak Regiments 6 at Ostende 136 at Boulogne 201 at Calais and 202 at Dunkirk 2 96 Flak Regiment 103 had after the victory over France already been transferred to I Flak Corps from where it was assigned to 1st Flak Brigade 2 15 After Sea Lion was cancelled Flak Regiment 136 was withdrawn in October and the entire corps redeployed to Tours on 16 December 1940 It protected the German occupied Atlantic coast with 6th Flak Brigade at Fontenay le Comte which in turn oversaw the Flak Regiments 40 and 45 On 3 March 1941 the II Flak Corps staff was recalled to Germany and deployed with Flak Regiment 6 and Flak Regiment General Goring to serve on the Eastern Front In April 1942 the corps staff was dissolved and used for the formation of 18th Flak Division 2 96 II Flak Corps was reformed in central Russia in October 1943 from the command of III Luftwaffe Field Corps headquartered at Babruysk and tasked with the supervision of 12th Flak Division at Babruysk provision of support for 2nd Army and 9th Army 18th Flak Division at Orsha provision of support for 4th Army and 10th Flak Brigade at Vitebsk provision of support for 3rd Panzer Army 10th Flak Brigade was restructured into the 23rd Flak Division in August 1944 During the great Soviet offensive of January 1945 the II Flak Corps oversaw a total of four flak divisions and an autonomous flak brigade 23rd Flak Division in support of 9th Army between Warsaw and Modlin 12th Flak Division in support of 2nd Army between Modlin and Lomza 18th Flak Division in support of 4th Army between Lomza and Ebenrode 27th Flak Division in support of 3rd Panzer Army between Ebenrode and Rusne 15th Flak Brigade in reserves at Danzig At the end of the war the II Flak Corps was part of Army Group Vistula and oversaw as of 27 April 1945 the 23rd Flak Division behind 9th Army the 6th and 15th Flak Brigades as well as the 27th Flak Division behind the 3rd Panzer Army and the 14th Flak Division as well as the 16th Flak Brigade in the Prignitz region with the 12th Army 2 97 III Flak Corps Edit The III Flak Corps was formed on 22 February 1944 from the staff of the 11th Flak Division to cooperate with Panzer Group West against an anticipated invasion by the Western Allies It consisted of the Flak Assault Regiments 1 through 4 formed from the Flak Regiments 431 653 37 and 79 as well as an air force signals detachment Following the Allied invasion of Normandy 6 June 1944 much of the III Flak Corps fielded flak forces were destroyed in the Falaise Pocket in August 1944 2 161 In September 1944 the staff of III Flak Corps was headquartered at Cochem and reused to oversee the 1st Flak Brigade 18th Flak Brigade 19th Flak Brigade and 20th Flak Brigade in support of Army Group B In February 1945 the corps HQ was at Bonn and oversaw the 1st Flak Brigade at Rheydt in support of 15th Army 2nd Flak Division at Altenahr in support of 5th Panzer Army and the 19th Flak Brigade at Kyllburg in support of 7th Army 2 161 III Flak Corps was destroyed in the Ruhr pocket in April 1945 2 161 IV Flak Corps Edit The IV Flak Corps was formed in Breslau in June 1944 to support Luftflotte 1 on the Eastern Front Its initial deployment remained uncompleted and was aborted shortly after 2 232 The deployment of IV Flak Corps was reattempted in September 1944 this time for the Western Front It was deployed to Edenkoben and served in the sector of Army Group G between the Meuse river and the France Switzerland border It oversaw the 9th Flak Division at Landstuhl in support of 1st Army and 13th Flak Division at Schlettstedt later Todtnau Schwarzwald in support of 19th Army and was reinforced in January 1945 by the insertion of 28th Flak Division between the two previous division Additionally in March 1945 it received the 21st Flak Division and 26th Flak Division in March 1945 2 232 V Flak Corps Edit The V Flak Corps was formed under supervision of the Luftwaffenkommando Sudost staff for the southern sector of the Eastern Front on 15 November 1944 to support the withdrawals of Army Group E and Army Group South It initially was placed in charge of the 19th Flak Division in the Independent State of Croatia in support of Army Group E the 20th Flak Division in Pecs in support of 6th Army 3rd Hungarian Army and Army Group Fretter Pico and the 15th Flak Division at Debrecen in support of Army Group Wohler 8th Army 1st Hungarian Army 2 285 Initially deployed east of Budapest V Flak Corps was pushed to Bratislava by December 1944 After redeployment to Wiener Neustadt V Flak Corps was also placed in charge of the air defenses of Wehrkreis XVII including 24th Flak Division in Vienna and 7th Flak Brigade in Linz On 2 April 1945 the corps was at Sankt Polten and on 13 April at Traun On 7 May 1945 the corps goes into captivity at Admont 2 285 VI Flak Corps Edit The VI Corps was formed on 10 February 1945 in the north of the Western Front the sector of Army Group H from the dissolved 16th Flak Division at Doetinchem It initially oversaw 9th Flak Brigade at Huis ter Heide in support of 25th Army and 18th Flak Brigade at Winkel in Guelders in support of 1st Parachute Army as well as 4th Flak Division at Duisburg During the withdrawal of the German forces in Northwest Germany from the Rhine towards the Elbe VI Flak Corps additionally was placed in charge of 3rd Flak Division at Hamburg and 8th Flak Division at Bremen 3 10 Flak Corps z b V Edit The Flak Corps z b V was formed on 2 April 1945 from the Luftgau Kommando VI staff initially formed on 12 October 1937 Luftgau VI was dissolved in early April 1945 after it had passed the 4th Flak Division to VI Flak Corps and 7th Flak Division to III Flak Corps Its staff was used to form a reserve staff for a flak corps 3 12 Organization EditFlak corps were large organizations of pre existing AA units regiments brigades and divisions rather than being formed as new units from scratch In 1943 Allied intelligence noted The Flak Corps is a wartime organization and constitutes an operational reserve of the commander in chief of the German Air Force It combines great mobility with heavy fire power It can be employed in conjunction with spearheads composed of armored and motorized forces and with nonmotorized troops in forcing river crossings and attacking fortified positions It can also be deployed as highly mobile artillery to support tank attacks 4 Flak corps did not include the majority of the Germany s flak force Even considering only the Luftwaffe s flak units dedicated to direct support of Wehrmacht ground troops most of them were not subordinated to flak corps Flak corps were either partially motorized or fully motorized depending on the degree of motorization of their subordinate units Assessment EditAlthough the AA guns of all nations in World War II could be used against ground targets Germany in particular used AA guns in multiple roles The need for command and control of these assets led to the organization of larger units culminating with the organization of flak corps Although the Soviets also organized large air defense units they were typically not used against ground targets The flak corps above all provided additional antitank support for the German ground forces In some cases such as at Cagny in Normandy these units achieved significant success against attacking Allied armored vehicles The use of flak corps as ground warfare assets was complicated because they were part of the air force Luftwaffe chain of command even when supporting ground forces either Heer or Waffen SS Given the expense of producing AA guns in relation to the cost of antitank guns of the same capabilities it is questionable if their use as antitank weapons was economical As an organizational form massed AA gun formations represented a dead end as large caliber AA guns were phased out of military service in the 1950s and replaced by surface to air missiles 5 6 See also EditFlak divisionFootnotes Edit a b Tessin Georg 1977 Die Waffengattungen Gesamtubersicht Verbande und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939 1945 in German Vol 1 Osnabruck Biblio Verlag ISBN 3764810971 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Tessin Georg 1966 Die Landstreitkrafte 001 005 Verbande und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939 1945 Vol 2 Verlag E S Mittler amp Sohn GmbH ISBN 3764808713 a b Tessin Georg 1967 Die Landstreitkrafte 006 014 Verbande und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939 1945 in German Vol 3 Frankfurt Main Verlag E S Mittler amp Sohn GmbH Lone Sentry www coldwarrelics com Werrell p 74References EditZetterling on III Flak Corps Tactical Employment of Flak in the Field from Intelligence Bulletin November 1943 at LoneSentry com The Luftwaffe 1933 1945 Luftwaffe airborne and field units By Martin Windrow Tessin Georg Verbande und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen SS 1939 1945 Osnabruck Biblio Verlag 1979 ISBN 3 7648 1170 6 Werrell Kenneth P Archie to SAM Maxwell AFB Air University Press 2005 Accessible on line here Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flak Corps amp oldid 1179905707 I Flak Corps, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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