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Operation Bodenplatte

Operation Bodenplatte
Part of the Battle of the Bulge, World War II

A Fw 190D-9 of 10./JG 54 Grünherz, (pilot Leutnant Theo Nibel), downed by a partridge which flew into the nose radiator near Brussels on 1 January 1945.
Date1 January 1945
Location
Belgium, the Netherlands and France
Result

Operation failed[2]

Belligerents
 United Kingdom
 United States
 Canada
 New Zealand
 Poland [1][Notes 1]
 Germany
Commanders and leaders
Arthur Coningham
Jimmy Doolittle
Hoyt Vandenberg
Werner Kreipe
Joseph Schmid
Dietrich Peltz
Karl Hentschel
Gotthard Handrick
Units involved
2nd Tactical Air Force
Eighth Air Force
Ninth Air Force
II. Jagdkorps
3. Jagddivision
5. Jagddivision
Casualties and losses
See Aftermath and casualties See Aftermath and casualties

Operation Bodenplatte ([ˈboːdn̩ˌplatə]; "Baseplate"), launched on 1 January 1945, was an attempt by the Luftwaffe to cripple Allied air forces in the Low Countries during the Second World War. The goal of Bodenplatte was to gain air superiority during the stagnant stage of the Battle of the Bulge so that the German Army and Waffen-SS forces could resume their advance. The operation was planned for 16 December 1944, but was delayed repeatedly due to bad weather until New Year's Day, the first day that happened to be suitable. It resulted in almost 500 destroyed Allied airplanes.[8]

Secrecy for the operation was so tight that not all German ground and naval forces had been informed of the operation and some units suffered casualties from friendly fire. British signals intelligence recorded the movement and buildup of German air forces in the region, but did not realise that an operation was imminent.

The operation achieved some surprise and tactical success, but was ultimately a failure. A great many Allied aircraft were destroyed on the ground but replaced within a week. Allied aircrew casualties were quite small, since the majority of Allied losses were grounded aircraft. The Germans, however, lost many pilots who could not be readily replaced.[6]

Post-battle analysis suggests only 11 of the Luftwaffe's 34 air combat Gruppen (groups) made attacks on time and with surprise.[6] The operation failed to achieve air superiority, even temporarily, while the German ground forces continued to be exposed to Allied air attack. Bodenplatte was the last large-scale strategic offensive operation mounted by the Luftwaffe during the war.[9][10]

Background edit

 
Focke-Wulf Fw 190A shot down by a fighter of the USAAF XXIX Tactical Air Command in 1944 or 1945. German losses were very heavy by late 1944.

The armies of the Western Allies were supported by the Allied Air Forces as they advanced across Western Europe in 1944. The Royal Air Force (RAF) and its Second Tactical Air Force—under the command of Air Marshal Arthur Coningham—moved No. 2 Group RAF, No. 83 Group RAF, No. 84 Group RAF and No. 85 Group RAF to continental Europe in order to provide constant close air support. The RAF harassed the German air, sea and ground forces by hitting strong points and interdicting their supply lines while reconnaissance units apprised the Allies of German movements. With Allied air superiority, the German Army could not operate effectively. The Luftwaffe, equally, found it difficult to provide effective air cover for the German Army. Although German aircraft production peaked in 1944 the Luftwaffe was critically short of pilots and fuel, and lacked experienced combat leaders.[11]

The land battles moved towards the River Rhine, to the east of which lay the German heartland. Most of France had been liberated, as had the Belgian cities Brussels and Antwerp. Although Operation Market Garden had failed in 1944, by 1945 the Allies had overrun most of the southern Netherlands and the Scheldt Estuary. As the ground forces moved across Europe, the Allied tactical air forces moved into new bases on the continent, to continue providing close support. The only limiting factor for the Allies was the weather. As winter came, rain and mud turned airfields into quagmires, so large-scale air and land operations came to a halt.[12]

The situation might well have continued until the spring thaw had the German High Command (Oberkommando der Wehrmacht) not launched the Battle of the Bulge on 16 December 1944. This land offensive was intended to improve the German military position by capturing Antwerp and separating the British Army from United States Army forces. Part of the planning for the German land operation required the attack to be conducted under the cover of bad winter weather, which kept the main Allied asset, the Tactical Air Forces, on the ground. It initially succeeded, but the weather also grounded the Luftwaffe for the most part. Nevertheless, the Luftwaffe did manage to put 500 aircraft into the air on 16 December, more than had been achieved for a long time. This first day had been the originally planned date for the strike against Allied airfields, named Operation Bodenplatte.[13] However, the weather proved particularly bad and operations were shut down.[14]

The offensive achieved surprise and much initial success. To counter the attack from the air, the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) handed operational control of its XXIX Tactical Air Command and part of its Ninth Air Force, under the command of Major General Hoyt Vandenberg, to the RAF and Arthur Coningham. On 23 December, the RAF Second Tactical Air Force provided the American forces with much needed support, and helped prevent a German capture of Malmedy and Bastogne. This left the Germans with only the logistical bottleneck of St. Vith to support their operations. The German attack faltered.[14]

The Luftwaffe had been far from absent over the front in December. It flew several thousand sorties over the theatre. Its encounters with the RAF and USAAF had meant heavy losses in matériel and pilots. On the eight days of operations between 17 and 27 December 1944, 644 fighters were lost and 227 damaged. This resulted in 322 pilots killed, 23 captured and 133 wounded. On the three days of operations 23–25 December, 363 fighters were destroyed. None of the Geschwaderkommodoren expected any large-scale air operations by the end of the month.[15]

Plan edit

In September 1944, Adolf Hitler resolved to recover Germany's deteriorating fortunes by launching an offensive in the West. On 16 September, Hitler directed Generalleutnant Werner Kreipe—Chief of the Luftwaffe's General Staff—to prepare the necessary aircraft for the offensive. On 21 October, Kreipe ordered the air fleet defending the Greater German Reich (Luftflotte Reich) to hand over seven Jagdgeschwader and Schlachtgeschwader to Air Command West (Luftwaffenkommando West) for a future offensive.[16]

On 14 November, Hermann Göring—Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe—ordered the 2. Jagddivision and the 3. Jagddivision to prepare their units for a large-scale ground attack operation in the Ardennes. Preparations were to be complete by 27 November. The attack was to be carried out on the first day of the offensive.[17]

Generalmajor Dietrich Peltz was to plan the operation having been appointed C-in-C of II. Fliegerkorps on 8 December. Luftwaffenkommando West had ordered all units—except Jagdgeschwader 300 and 301—to attend the main planning meeting in Flammersfeld on 5 December. On 14 December, Peltz officially initiated plans for a major blow against the Allies in northwest Europe. Peltz was not a fighter pilot; his combat record was as a dive bomber pilot, flying the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka. His experiences in Poland, in France, and during the early campaigns on the Eastern Front had moulded him into an outstanding ground attack specialist, making him an ideal candidate for planning Bodenplatte.[18]

On 15 December, this plan was worked out with the help of the Luftwaffe's Jagd-Geschwaderkommodore, among them Gotthard Handrick (Jagdabschnittsführer Mittelrhein; Fighter Sector Leader Middle Rhine), Walter Grabmann and Karl Hentschel, commanders of 3. and 5. Jagddivision respectively. It was originally scheduled to support the Battle of the Bulge, the German Army's offensive, which began 16 December 1944. However, the same bad weather that prevented the RAF and USAAF from supporting their own ground forces also prevented the Luftwaffe from carrying out the operation. It was therefore not launched until 1 January 1945. By this time, the German Army had lost momentum owing to Allied resistance and clearing weather, which allowed Allied Air Forces to operate. The German Army attempted to restart the attack by launching Operation Northwind (Unternehmen Nordwind). The Luftwaffe was to support this offensive through Bodenplatte.[18]

The plan of Bodenplatte called for a surprise attack against 17 Allied air bases in Belgium, the Netherlands and France.[18] The object was to destroy or cripple as many Allied aircraft, hangars and airstrips as possible. Every fighter and fighter-bomber Geschwader (Wing) currently occupied with air defence along the Western Front was redeployed. Additional night-fighter units (Nachtjagdgeschwader) and medium bomber units (Kampfgeschwader) acted as pathfinders. The strike formations themselves were mostly single-engine Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighters.[2]

However, in a blunder, the planners had set flight paths that took many units over some of the most heavily defended areas on the continent, namely the V2 launch sites around The Hague. These sites were protected by large numbers of German anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) units. At the turn of 1944/45 Air Command West had 267 heavy and 277 medium or light AAA batteries, and in addition to this there were 100 Kriegsmarine AAA batteries along the Dutch coast. Most of these lay in the sector of the 16th AAA Division, with its control station at Doetinchem, 15 mi (24 km) northeast of Arnhem.[19] Some of the AAA units had been warned about the air operation but were not kept up to date with developments about changing timetables and the flight plan of German formations. As a result, one quarter of the German fighter units lost aircraft to friendly fire before the attacks could be initiated.[9]

After five years of war and heavy attrition many of the Luftwaffe's pilots were inexperienced and poorly trained, deficient in marksmanship and flight skills. There was a shortage of experienced instructors, and many of the training units were forced to fly front-line operations in order to bolster the front-line Jagdgeschwader.[20] Aviation fuel supplies were also at a premium, limiting the duration of training. Long-range Allied fighters exacerbated this situation by shooting down many training aircraft. By late 1944 there were no safe areas in which pilots could be trained without the possibility of air attack. The result was a "vicious circle": poorly trained pilots were quickly lost in combat or accidents, and the need to replace them put more pressure on the training system.[21] Allied personnel who witnessed the attacks remarked on the poor aim of the strafing aircraft, and many of the Luftwaffe aircraft shot down by Allied anti-aircraft fire were caught because they were flying too slowly and too high.[22]

The plan called for strict radio silence and secrecy in order to maintain surprise. Maps were also only half complete, identified only enemy installations, and left out flight paths, lest the document fall into Allied hands enabling them to trace the whereabouts of German fighter bases. Most commanders were also refused permission to brief their pilots until moments before take-off. This created operational confusion. Commanders got across only the bare essentials of the plan. When the operation got under way, many German pilots still did not understand what the operation was about, or what exactly was required of them.[2][23] They were convinced it was just a reconnaissance in force over the front, and were happy to follow their flight leaders on this basis.[2]

Targets and order of battle edit

It is unclear whether all of the following were deliberately targeted. Evidence suggests that Grimbergen, Knocke and Ophoven were targeted in error,[24] as was Heesch.[25] In all, the Oberkommando der Luftwaffe (OKL) deployed 1,035 aircraft[26] from several Jagdgeschwader (JG—fighter wings) Kampfgeschwader (KG—bomber wings), Nachtjagdgeschwader (NJG—night fighter wings) and Schlachtgeschwader (SG—ground attack wings); of these, 38.5% were Bf 109s, 38.5% Fw 190As, and 23% Fw 190Ds.[27]

Below is the German target list:[28]

Target Target Code (Allied) Allied Air Force Main aircraft type(s) targeted Luftwaffe
combat wing
Antwerpen—Deurne B.70 RAF Hawker Typhoon/Supermarine Spitfire/North American Mustang JG 77 "Herz As"
Bf 109G-14 and K-4
Asch Y-29 USAAF Republic P-47D Thunderbolt/P-51D Mustang JG 11
Fw 190A-8
BrusselsEvere B.56 USAAF / RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk.V and Mk.IX LF JG 26 "Schlageter" and JG 54 "Grünherz"
Fw 190D-9 and D-12
Grimbergen B.60 USAAF Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress/P-51 Mustang[29] JG 26 "Schlageter" and JG 54 "Grünherz"
Brussels—Melsbroek B.58 RAF / RCAF North American B-25G Mitchell[29] JG 27 "Afrika" and JG 54 "Grünherz"
Bf 109K-4
Eindhoven B.78 RAF / RCAF Hawker Typhoon Mk.IIb /Supermarine Spitfire Mk.V and Mk.IX LF JG 3 "Udet"
Fw 190A-8 and Fw 190D-9
Ghent/Sint-Denijs-Westrem B.61 RAF / Polish Wing "Polskie Siły Powietrzne" Supermarine Spitfire Mk.V and Mk.IX JG 1 "Oesau"
Fw 190A-8
Gilze en Rijen B.77 RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk.V and Mk.IX LF/P-51D Mustang KG 51 "Edelweiss" and JG 3 "Udet"
Me 262A-1 and Fw 190D-9
Heesch B.88 RCAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk.V and Mk.IX LF JG 6 "Horst Wessel"
Fw 190G-1
Le Culot A-89 USAAF Lockheed P-38J Lightning JG 4 (Sturmgruppe)
Fw 190A-8/R8
Maldegem B.65 RAF / RNZAF / RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk.V and Mk.IX LF[29] JG 1 "Oesau"
Fw 190A-8/R2 and /R4
Metz—Frescaty A-90 USAAF / RAF P-47D Thunderbolt JG 53 "Pik 'As"
Bf 109G-14 and Bf 109K-4
Ophoven Y-32 RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk.V and Mk.IX LF JG 4 (Sturmgruppe)
Fw 190A-8/R8
Sint-Truiden A-92 USAAF P-47D Thunderbolt SG 4 and JG 2 "Richthofen"
Volkel B.80 RAF Hawker Typhoon Mk.IIb/Hawker Tempest JG 6 "Horst Wessel"
Fw 190G-1
Woensdrecht B.79 RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk.IX LF JG 77 "Herz As"
Bf 109G-14 and K-4
Ursel B.67 USAAF /RAF de Havilland Mosquito F Mk.XV/Avro Lancaster B.IV /B-17G (small numbers)[30] JG 1 "Oesau"
Fw 190A-8

Codenames edit

Following the Operation Bodenplatte raids, the Allies retrieved several log-books from crashed German aircraft. In several of these, the entry "Auftrag Hermann 1.1. 1945, Zeit: 9.20 Uhr" was translated as "Operation Hermann to commence on 1 January 1945, at 9:20am." This led the Allies to believe the operation itself was named Hermann for Hermann Göring.[31] Five further different codes were used for the attack:

  • Varus: Indicating that the operation was "a go" and that it would take place within 24 hours of the Varus order being given.[17]
  • Teutonicus: Authority to brief the pilots and to arrange for the aircraft to be armed and ready at the edge of the airfield.[17]
  • Hermann: Giving the exact date and time of the attack.[17]
  • Dorothea: Indicating a delay in the attack.[17]
  • Spätlese ("late harvest"): Cancelling of the attack after formations are airborne.[17]

Allied intelligence edit

Allied intelligence failed to detect the German intention. In Ultra transcripts, there were only a few indications of what was happening on the other side of the front. On 4 December 1944, II Jagdkorps had ordered stockpiling for navigational aids, such as "golden-rain" flares and smoke bombs. Allied intelligence made no written observations of this communication. They also disregarded communications to Junkers Ju 88 groups regarding the use of flares when leading formations. Intelligence concluded that these instructions were designed for a ground support mission rather than an interception operation. This was reasonable, but no indications of possible ground targets were given.[15]

On 20 December, a 3. Jagddivision message was intercepted confirming that the locations for emergency landing grounds during a "special undertaking" had remained unchanged. This was a clear indication that something was amiss, but Allied intelligence did not comment on it. It also ignored more messages indicating that low-level attacks were being practised.[15] Allied intelligence, by 16 December, had monitored the reshuffling of both German Army and Luftwaffe formations opposite the American-held front at the Ardennes. Yet nothing major was suspected.[32]

Battle edit

Maldegem, Ursel and St. Denijs Westrem edit

Units I., II., III./JG 1
Aircraft 71
Aircraft lost 29
Damaged unknown
Pilots killed or captured 25

Jagdgeschwader 1 (JG 1) was responsible for the attack on the Ursel and Maldegem airfields. Oberstleutnant Herbert Ihlefeld led the Geschwader. The formation was mixed; Stab., (headquarters flight or Stabschwarm, attached to every Geschwader), I. and II./JG 1 operated the Fw 190 while the III./JG 1 flew the Bf 109. I./JG 1 lost four of their number to friendly anti-aircraft fire. Three of the four pilots were killed.[33]

The attacks at Maldegem and Ursel began at 08:30. Both I. and II./JG 1 became involved in intense dogfights. III./JG 1 had lost only one aircraft over the target (and not to enemy fire).[34] I./JG lost a further Fw 190 to friendly anti-aircraft fire as it made its way to Ursel. I./JG 1 lost at least two further Fw 190s to friendly anti-aircraft fire.[35] Casualties could have been heavier, had the British anti-aircraft defences of Maldegem airfield not been moved in December.[36]

Stab. and I./JG 1 lost 13 Fw 190s and nine pilots were missing; five were killed and four were captured. Thus the loss rates in personnel and matériel were 39 and 56%, respectively. III./JG 1 lost only three Bf 109s with one pilot dead and two captured. I./JG 1 claimed 30 British or New Zealand Spitfires on the ground and two shot down over Maldegem. At Maldegem, 16 aircraft were destroyed, and at Ursel only six were lost. The claims of I./JG 1 were actually more in line with British and New Zealand total losses at both Maldegem and Ursel. No. 131 Wing RAF / Polish Wing lost 13 Spitfires plus two damaged beyond repair, a total of 15 lost.[37] At Ursel, six aircraft were destroyed, including, a B-17, two Lancasters and a Mosquito. I. and III./JG 1 lost a total of 16 aircraft and 12 pilots.[38]

II./JG 1 attacked the airfield at St. Denijs Westrem. Of the 36 II./JG 1 Fw 190s that took off, 17 were shot down, a staggering 47% loss rate. Among the pilots lost were several experienced fliers. In exchange, the Germans shot down two Spitfires, and seven forced-landed. At St. Denijs Westrem 18 Spitfires were destroyed on the ground.[39][40]

Altogether JG 1 lost 25 pilots and 29 aircraft. This return for around 60 enemy aircraft (54 on the ground) cannot be considered a complete success, although the damage at St. Denijs Westrem and Maldegem had been significant.[41] Just nine of the fighters lost by JG 1 are confirmed to have been shot down in combat with Spitfires. It is possible a further three were shot down by Spitfires, or perhaps ground fire.[42] Two Spitfires were shot down and destroyed, with two more damaged.[43] One pilot of each squadron (308 and 317) was killed. The total Spitfire losses were perhaps 32.[40]

Sint-Truiden edit

Units I., II., III./JG 2 and SG 4
Aircraft 144
Aircraft lost 46
Damaged 12
Pilots killed or captured 23

Schlachtgeschwader 4 and Jagdgeschwader 2 (SG 4 and JG 2) were to strike at Sint-Truiden airfield. JG 2 was commanded by Kurt Bühligen. I./JG 2's ground crews made ready 35 of 46 Fw 190s, 29 of which were Fw 190Ds. Only 33 pilots were fit for operations, so the Gruppe reported only 33 Fw 190s ready. II./JG 2 could field 20 of 29 Bf 109s. Stab./JG 2 had three Fw 190s ready for the mission. It is not clear whether Bühligen took part in the mission. III./JG 2 (Siegfried Lemke) reported 40 Fw 190s operational, 34 of them Fw 190Ds. However, only 28 of the 43 pilots in the unit were fit for operations and the formation fielded only 28 fighters. In total, 84 aircraft were ready on 31 December, including 28 Fw 190D-9s.[44]

SG 4 was led by Alfred Druschel. It had 152 machines on strength, of which just 60 were operational, yet the 129 pilots were fit for action. Stab./SG 4 had three Fw 190s and two pilots. I./SG 4 had 21 Fw 190s operational and 27 pilots ready. II./SG 4 reported 27 Fw 190s ready, but pilot strength is unknown. III./SG 4 reported 24 Fw 190s, but only 16 were available at the forward airfields. Pilot strength is unknown. Best estimations make it around 60 Fw 190s operational, of which 55 took part.[45]

At 09:12, JG 2 crossed the front line at Malmedy and was greeted by an enormous volume of Allied ground fire. The entire area was heavily defended by anti-aircraft artillery, since the area had been the scene of heavy fighting, but also had been attacked by V-1 and V-2 missiles. I./JG 2 lost at least seven fighters to ground fire alone. III./JG 2 lost 10 fighters. A possible seven Bf 109s from II./JG 2 were also lost to ground fire. JG 2 attacked Asch and Ophoven airfields by mistake.[46]

JG 2's mission was a disaster. I./JG 2 lost 18 Fw 190s and six more were damaged by ground fire and enemy aircraft. This represented 73% of their force. Of the 15 pilots missing, six would survive as POWs. II./JG 2 lost five Bf 109s and three were damaged a loss rate of 40%. Pilot losses were three missing, one dead and one wounded. III./JG 2 lost 19 Fw 190s and three were damaged, a loss rate of 79%. Nine pilots were killed, two were wounded and four were captured.[47] JG 2 losses, according to another source, amounted to 40% of its force. Pilot losses were 24 killed or posted missing, 10 captured and four wounded.[48] Another source asserts that pilot losses stood at 23 killed or missing.[49]

SG 4's mission was also a disaster. During the assembly phase, they flew across JG 11's flight path, and the formation was broken up. Some of the pilots joined JG 11 in the confusion. Unable to recover the formation, I. and II./SG 4 then decided to head home. The Geschwaderkommodore, Druschel, had continued with five other pilots from III./SG 4 who had lost contact with their Gruppe. They crossed the front near Hürtgenwald around 09:10. As they did so, American anti-aircraft batteries opened fire, claiming seven aircraft in the next 30 minutes. Only six of the 50 Fw 190s of SG 4 carried out an attack, against airfields near Aachen and the Asch aerodrome. Of these six, four did not return. Druschel himself was reported missing.[50]

Volkel and Heesch edit

Units I., II., III./JG 6
Aircraft 78
Aircraft lost 27
Damaged 5
Pilots killed or captured 23

The target of Jagdgeschwader 6 (JG 6) was Volkel. I. and III./JG 6 were to attack while II./JG 6 was to provide cover against Allied fighters. I./JG 6 got 29 of its 34 Fw 190s ready, while 25 of II./JG 6's fighters took part. Overall, most of the 99 Fw 190s were made available for the operation. III./JG 6 received orders to target petrol installations on the airfield only. Only 78 Fw 190s took off.[51]

While on course, JG 6 approached the airfield of Heesch and some of its pilots assumed it to be Volkel airfield. It is unlikely that the Heesch strip, built in October 1944, was known to the Luftwaffe. No. 126 Wing RCAF was based there and had dispatched its 411 and 442 Squadrons on recce missions early that morning so the majority of its units were airborne. Its 401 Squadron was readying for takeoff when JG 6 appeared at 09:15. Most of the German pilots had failed to notice the airfield, concentrating on keeping formation at low altitude. 401 Squadron scrambled. Some of the German fighters were authorised to engage, while the main body continued to search for Volkel. Stab., and II./JG 6 stumbled on another strip at Helmond, which contained no aircraft. Several German pilots believed it to be Volkel and attacked, losing several of their number to ground fire.[52] II./JG 6 suffered severely from Spitfire and Tempests based at Helmond. Very little damage was done at Heesch or Helmond.[53]

In the event, all four Gruppen failed to find Volkel and its Hawker Tempests remained untouched.[54] The only success JG 6 had was I./JG 6's erroneous attack on Eindhoven, which claimed 33 fighters and six medium bombers. Like Volkel, Helmond and Heesch had escaped damage. In the dogfights over Helmond, JG 6 claimed six victories. In fact, only two Spitfires were shot down and one badly damaged. Only one further fighter, a Hawker Typhoon, was shot down. Stab./JG 6 lost the Geschwaderkommodore, Kogler, as a POW. Of I./JG 6's 29 Fw 190s, seven were lost and two damaged; of II./JG 6's 25 Fw 190s, eight were destroyed and two damaged; III./JG 6 lost 12 out 20 Bf 109s. In total, JG 6 lost 43% of its strength and suffered 16 pilots killed or missing and seven captured. As well as Kogler, one other commanding officer was lost—Gruppenkommandeur Helmut Kühle. Three Staffelkapitäne were lost: Hauptmann Ewald Trost was captured, Hauptmann Norbert Katz was killed and Lothar Gerlach was posted missing, presumed killed.[55][56]

Antwerp-Deurne and Woensdrecht edit

Units I., II., III./JG 77
Aircraft 59
Aircraft lost 11
Damaged
Pilots killed or captured 11

Deurne airfield was to be destroyed by Jagdgeschwader 77 (JG 77). Antwerp housed the largest Allied contingent of nine Squadrons. It had been incessantly attacked by V-1 cruise missiles and V-2 SRBM ballistic missiles, and had been given a strong anti-aircraft defence.[57]

At 08:00, two formations of 18 Bf 109s of I. and III./JG 77, led by Major Siegfried Freytag, took off with their pathfinders. At the same time 23 Bf 109s of II./JG 77 took off. Around the Bocholt area they formed up with the other two Gruppen. Heading south and still north of Antwerp, JG 77 passed Woensdrecht airfield. It was home to No. 132 Wing RAF and its five Spitfire squadrons; No. 331 Squadron RAF, No. 332 Squadron RAF (Norwegian), No. 66 Squadron RAF and No. 127 Squadron RAF, and No. 322 Squadron RAF (Dutch). Some pilots from II./JG 77 either mistakenly believed it to be Antwerp, or thought the opportunity was too good to pass up. Two German fighters were claimed shot down, and one pilot captured. However, none of the JG 77 casualties fit this description.[58]

The main body continued to Antwerp. Some 12–30 German fighters attacked the airfield from 09:25 to 09:40. The ground defences were alert and the German formations attacked in a disorganised manner. 145 Wing RAF was missed completely and considering the large number of targets the destruction was light; just 12 Spitfires were destroyed.[59]

In total, 14 Allied aircraft were destroyed and nine damaged. JG 77 lost 11 Bf 109s and their pilots were lost. Six were killed and five captured according to Allied sources. However, German records show the loss of only 10 pilots. Four are listed as captured.[60][61]

Metz-Frescaty edit

 
Destroyed P-47s at Y-34 Metz-Frescaty airfield.
Units Stab., II., III., IV./JG 53
Aircraft 80
Aircraft lost 30
Damaged 8
Pilots killed or captured 17

Jagdgeschwader 53 (JG 53) was tasked with the operation against the USAAF airfield at Metz-Frescaty Air Base. Stab., II., III., and IV./JG 53 were available.[62] III./JG 53 was to destroy anti-aircraft installations in the Metz area, while the other Gruppen knocked out the airfields.[63]

The USAAF XIX Tactical Air Command had established a strong presence in northeast France and was supporting the U.S. 3rd Army. JG 53 was to knock out its airfields.[64] Some 26 Bf 109s took off but were intercepted by 12 P-47s of the 367th Fighter Squadron, 358th Fighter Group. The P-47s claimed 13 destroyed, one probable and six damaged for no losses. On the way home at 09:20, III./JG 53 were intercepted by 366th Fighter Squadron. Altogether, III./JG 53 lost 10 Bf 109s and one damaged to the 358th Fighter Group.[65] Of the 25 III./JG 53 Bf 109s that took part, 11 were shot down representing 40% of the attacking force. The 358th Fighter Group received the Distinguished Unit citation for preventing the attack on the 362nd Fighter Groups airfield.[66]

Although III./JG 53 failed, the main attack was a success by comparison. Stab,. II. and IV./JG 53 encountered no difficulties on the outward leg. The Germans caused significant damage among the parked USAAF fighters on the field. When the attack against the Metz airfield was over, the three JG 53 Gruppen reported the loss of 20 Bf 109s and seven damaged. This represented more than 50 percent of the attacking 52 fighters. Some 13 pilots were missing; three were killed, six remain missing as of today, and four were captured. A further three were wounded. JG 53 claimed 27 USAAF fighters on the ground and eight damaged. Added to this total is four aerial victories. In total JG 53 lost 30 Bf 109s and eight damaged in the two operations. This was a total loss of 48%.[67] The losses of the USAAF were 22 destroyed, 11 damaged (all P-47s).[68] However, the negative effects of Bodenplatte on JG 53 outweighed any advantages gained.[67]

Le Culot and Ophoven edit

Units I., II., III./JG 4
Aircraft 55–75
Aircraft lost 25–26
Damaged ~ 6
Pilots killed or captured 17

Le Culot airfield (later known as Beauvechain) was 45 km (28 mi) northeast of Charleroi and was the target of Jagdgeschwader 4 (JG 4). The main strip (A-89) was known locally as Beauvechain, and an auxiliary field known as Le Culot East (Y-10), known to the locals as Burettes, was nearby. It was known to the Luftwaffe because several of its units had operated there.[69]

Geschwaderkommodore Major Gerhard Michalski commanded the force. Five pilots were shot down by ground fire. Another pilot got lost during the flight and ended up near Eindhoven where he was shot down and killed. Reduced in number, 8–10 fighters of IV./JG 4 continued to their target. After 10 minutes, they located a fairly large airfield and attacked, believing it to be Le Culot. It was in fact Sint-Truiden.[70]

The mistake was easy to make, Le Culot was located nearby. Sint-Truiden housed the 48th Fighter Group and 404th Fighter Group. The 492nd Fighter Squadron was readying to take off at 09:20. JG 4 hit the airfield at 09:15. Several P-47s taxiing out were abandoned by pilots and strafed to destruction.[71] The small-scale attack by JG 4 had achieved considerable damage. Total American losses were 10 destroyed and 31 damaged. The Germans lost eight fighters, including seven Bf 109s, and three damaged.[72] No damage was done at Le Culot airfield.[73]

II.(Sturm)/JG 4 took off for Le Culot at 08:08. Getting lost, they stumbled upon Asch airfield and claimed one P-47 destroyed and two twin-engine aircraft damaged, as well as two trains and trucks destroyed. The unit claimed an Auster reconnaissance aircraft shot down. The machine was probably a Stinson L-1 Vigilant of the 125th Liaison Squadron, U.S. Army. However, virtually the entire Gruppe of 17 Fw 190s was wiped out.[74]

I. and III./JG 4 were to strike Le Culot together. Taking off at 08:20 and heading northwest, they comprised a force of 35 Bf 109s (nine from III./JG 4). Two Ju 88G-1s of II./NJG 101 lead as pathfinders. Some of I./JG 4 attacked No. 125 Wing RAF Spitfires at Ophoven airfield. Spitfire losses are unclear. Two P-47s and a B-17 were destroyed. I./JG 4 reported two Bf 109s missing, one damaged and one destroyed. Just a hangar, one P-47 and several vehicles were claimed, and the anti-aircraft battery was silenced. The attack on the Spitfires at Ophoven and the mentioned B-17 and two P-47s are not included in the total.[75] Another source suggests two Spitfires destroyed and 10 damaged at Ophoven.[76]

According to one source, JG 4's losses were 25 fighters of the 55 that took part. With 17 pilots killed or missing and seven captured,[77] JG 4 suffered a 42% loss rate.[78] A more recent source claims a total of 75 aircraft of JG 4 took part, with only 12 attacking ground targets. Two Ju 88 pathfinders were lost, as well as 26 fighters with six more damaged.[79]

Asch edit

Units Stab. I., II., III./JG 11
Aircraft 61
Aircraft lost 28
Damaged unknown
Pilots killed or captured 24
 
Kurt Tank and Major Günther Specht (left) inspecting the rudder of his Bf 109. Specht's loss was a bitter blow for JG 11.

The Asch Airfield (Designated: Y-29) had been constructed in November 1944 and was home to the 352nd Fighter Group, 8th Air Force, and the 366th Fighter Group, Ninth Air Force.[80] Jagdgeschwader 11 (JG 11) was to destroy the airfield. I./JG 11 had only 16 Fw 190s on strength and only six fit and operational pilots. Only six of I./JG 1's pilots took part, and just four of Stab./JG 1's pilots participated. III./JG 11 had more aircraft than pilots, and so other Staffeln made up the numbers.[81] Just 41 Fw 190s of JG 11 took part in Bodenplatte; four from the Stab., six from I. Gruppe and 31 of III. Gruppe. The 20 fighters from II. Gruppe were Bf 109s.[82]

The plan called for a low-level strike by I. and III./JG 11, while II./JG 11 flew as top cover against USAAF fighters. The pilots were shown maps and photographs of the airfield, but were not told the targets' identity until the morning of the attack.[81] After crossing Allied lines, four fighters were lost to AAA fire. The course of JG 11 took it directly over Ophoven. Large formations of JG 11 attacked, in the mistaken belief it was Asch. The other half continued to Asch. Ophoven housed No. 125 Wing RAF, just 5 km (3.1 mi) north of Asch. About half, or some 30 Fw 190s and Bf 109s attacked the airfield.[83][84]

Asch was notable for a chance event. The 390th Squadron of the 366th Fighter Group had launched two fighter sweeps that morning, which played a crucial role in the failure of JG 11's attack.[85] The leader of the 487th squadron, 352nd Fighter Group, John Charles Meyer, anticipated German activity and had a flight of 12 P-51s about to take off on a combat patrol when the attack began. They took off under fire.[86]

Several pilots made "Ace" status that day. No P-51s were lost; two were damaged and one was damaged on the ground. The 336th Fighter Group lost one P-47.[87] The 366th was credited with eight enemy aircraft, and AAA claimed seven more. However, overclaiming is likely. Luftwaffe records indicate JG 11 lost 28 fighters. Four German pilots (two wounded) made it back to German-held territory, while four were captured and the remaining twenty were killed.[88] Some 24 of the Bf 109s and Fw 190s lost were lost over enemy lines.[89] German pilots Günther Specht and Horst-Günther von Fassong were among those German pilots killed.[90]

Little is known about the claims of JG 11. According to one German document, 13 fighters, two twin-engine and one four-engine aircraft were claimed destroyed. Five fighters were claimed damaged on "Glabbeek airfield"—in reality it was Ophoven. Ten aerial victories and one probable were also claimed. But U.S. Fighter Group losses indicate these claims are excessive.[91]

The Americans claimed 35 German aircraft destroyed.[92] Only 14 can be judged with a degree of certainty to have been shot down by USAAF fighters, and possibly two more. Four are confirmed to have been shot down by AAA fire. Total JG 11 losses were 28.[93][94] The air battle over Asch had lasted 45 minutes and came to be known as, "The Legend of Y-29".[95]

Brussels-Evere/Grimbergen edit

Units Stab., I., II., III./JG 26 and III./JG 54
Aircraft 127
Aircraft lost 40
Damaged unknown
Pilots killed or captured 30

Jagdgeschwader 26 (JG 26) and the III. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 54 (JG 54) were to strike at Brussels-Evere. At the end of December, II./JG 26 had 39 Fw 190D-9s and III./JG 26 had 45 Bf 109s.[96] Records of available aircraft indicate 110 aircraft of JG 26 flew that day; all but 29 were Fw 190s, the remainder were Bf 109s.[82] 17 Fw 190s from III./JG 54 took part with JG 26.[45]

Unknown to the Luftwaffe the Grimbergen Airfield was almost completely abandoned. The Evere airfield was located to the south. It was one of the most densely populated airfields in Belgium and had plenty of targets. The main force consisted of 60 Spitfire XVIs of No. 127 Wing RAF. Also present were B-17s and B-24s of the Eighth Air Force. Overall, well over 100 aircraft were on the field.[97]

At 08:13, the first formations took off. In total, 64 Fw 190D-9s participated. Before the target was reached, some 14 Fw 190D-9s were forced to turn back due to AAA damage or mechanical difficulties. Three Fw 190s were lost to German AAA fire. At 09:10, when the front was reached, Allied heavy AAA units began to engage the formation and another five were shot down. Most of the fire was from British Naval AAA defences defending the Scheldt Estuary. As the formation crossed the Dutch and Belgian border, I./JG 26 and III./JG 54 were intercepted by Spitfires. Five of the Fw 190s were shot down. I./JG 26 destroyed or damaged the few aircraft at the airfield. AAA defences claimed five kills and I./JG 26 reported two Fw 190s lost to Spitfires. Several others were lost over the airfield. Other losses occurred against friendly fire again on the return flight.[98]

The raid was a disaster. Just six machines were destroyed at Grimbergen for the loss of 21 Fw 190s and two damaged. Another eight sustained minor damage. Seventeen pilots were missing, including eight captured.[99]

Only II. and III./JG 26 hit Evere. Between 44 and 52 Fw 190s from these units took off. II. and III./JG 26 knocked out the flak towers and destroyed anything combustible: hangars, trucks, fuel dumps and aircraft.[100] 127 Wing RCAF lost one Spitfire in the air and 11 on the ground; 11 vehicles were damaged and one was destroyed. A total of 60–61 Allied aircraft were destroyed at Evere.[101] A large number of transports were located there and attracted the attention of German pilots, which left many more Spitfires undamaged. Given the number of Spitfires on the field, the Canadian wing suffered "low" losses. The Canadian wing commander—Johnnie Johnson—blamed the poor marksmanship of German pilots for failing to achieve further success.[102][103]

Allied losses are given at Evere as 32 fighters, 22 twin-engine aircraft and 13 four-engine aircraft destroyed, plus another nine single-, six twin- and one four-engine aircraft damaged. In total, II./JG 26 losses included 13 Fw 190s destroyed and two damaged. Nine of its pilots were missing; five were killed and four captured. III./JG 26 lost six Bf 109s and four pilots. Only one of them was captured, the remainder were killed. The amount of damage the Germans inflicted made up for the losses; the Evere strike was a success.[102]

Brussels-Melsbroek edit

 
Fire crews attempt to save an Avro Lancaster from burning at Melsbroek, Belgium. This aircraft had landed at Melsbroek with the number 3 (starboard inner) engine out of action, its propeller feathered.
Units I., II., III./JG 27 and IV./JG 54
Aircraft 43
Aircraft lost 21
Damaged 1
Pilots killed or captured 17

Jagdgeschwader 27 and IV./Jagdgeschwader 54 (JG 27 and JG 54) targeted Melsbroek airfield. On 31 December, JG 27 could only muster the following operational pilots and aircraft: 22 (22) from I., 19 (13) from II., 13 (15) from III., and 16 (17) from IV. Gruppe.[104][105][106] Geschwaderkommadore Wolfgang Späte had rebuilt IV./JG 54. It had only 21 pilots and 15 of its 23 Fw 190s were operational. Altogether 28 Bf 109s of JG 27 and 15 Fw 190s of JG 54 took off. Seven fighters were lost to enemy aircraft and friendly AAA fire before they reached the target.[107]

The Germans hit Melsbroek hard. According to Emil Clade (leading III./JG 27), the AAA positions were not manned, and aircraft were bunched together or in lines, which made perfect targets. The attack caused considerable damage among the units based there and was a great success. The Recce Wings had lost two entire squadrons' worth of machines. No. 69 Squadron RAF lost 11 Vickers Wellingtons and two damaged. No. 140 Squadron RAF lost four Mosquitoes, the losses being made good the same day.[108] At least five Spitfires from No. 16 Squadron RAF were destroyed. No. 271 Squadron RAF lost at least seven Harrow transports "out of action". A further 15 other aircraft were destroyed. 139 Wing reported five B-25s destroyed and five damaged. Some 15 to 20 USAAF bombers were also destroyed.[109][110] Another source states that 13 Wellingtons were destroyed, as were five Mosquitoes, four Auster and five Avro Ansons from the Tactical Air Forces 2nd Communications Squadron. Three Spitfires were also lost and two damaged.[111] At least one RAF Transport Command Douglas Dakota was destroyed.[112]

The pilots of JG 27 and JG 54 claimed 85 victories and 40 damaged. German reconnaissance was able to confirm 49. JG 27 suffered unacceptable losses; 17 Bf 109s, 11 pilots killed, one wounded and three captured. IV./JG 54 lost two killed and one captured. Three Fw 190s were lost and one damaged.[113][114]

Gilze-Rijen and Eindhoven edit

Units Stab. I., III., IV./JG 3 and KG 51
Aircraft 81
Aircraft lost 15–16
Damaged Unknown
Pilots killed or captured 15–16

Jagdgeschwader 3 (JG 3) and Kampfgeschwader 51 (KG 51) were tasked with eliminating the Allied units at the Eindhoven base and Gilze-Rijen airfield. The field contained three RCAF reconnaissance squadrons operating a mix of Spitfires and Mustangs and eight Typhoon squadrons of the RAF and RCAF.[115] Some 22 Bf 109s of I./JG 3 took off,[116] along with four from Stab./JG 3, 15 from III./JG 3 and 19 Fw 190s from IV./JG 3.[82] KG 51 contributed some 21 of their 30 Messerschmitt Me 262 jets to the action.[117] Some histories mistakenly include Kampfgeschwader 76 (KG 76) on the order of battle, but KG 76 did not take part in the mission.[118]

Each Staffel was expected to make at least three firing passes. I./JG 3 took off and joined the lead Gruppe, IV. (Sturm)/JG 3, with III./JG 3 following in the rear. The Bf 109s and Fw 190s of the Geschwader reached the area at about 09:20. Geschwaderkommodore Heinrich Bär led the attack. Some pilots made four passes, destroying AAA emplacements, fuel storage stations and vehicles.[115][119] Nearly 300 aircraft were on the field, along with huge stores of equipment and fuel. The attack caused fires all over the airfield.[120]

JG 3 claimed 53 single-engine and 11 twin-engine aircraft destroyed. Five fighters and one four-engine bomber were also claimed damaged.[121] Four Typhoons, three Spitfires, one Tempest and another unidentified aircraft were claimed shot down.[121] All in all, JG 3 destroyed 43 aircraft according to British records, and damaged a further 60, some seriously. The Geschwader believed it had destroyed 116. JG 3 did not come away unscathed. I./JG 3 lost nine of its aircraft and pilots, a 50% loss rate. Damage to the returning Gruppe aircraft meant the entire unit was unserviceable.[115] RAF AAA were credited with shooting down five.[122] JG 3 lost, altogether, 15 of the 60 fighters sent, a 25% loss rate. Some 15 pilots were missing; nine were killed and five captured, and another pilot was posting as missing in action and his fate remains unknown.[123] Another source says 16 pilots; ten killed or missing and six captured.[124]

The damage done to Eindhoven was significant and can be considered a victory for JG 3. It was also assisted by elements of JG 6 which had misidentified Eindhoven as one their targets. The greatest losses were amongst the Recce squadrons of the Canadian 39 Wing, which suffered 24 aircraft destroyed or damaged. The visiting 124 Wing RAF lost 30 aircraft destroyed or damaged. No. 143 Wing RCAF lost 29 damaged or destroyed.[125] It is likely that I./JG 3 was responsible for about 2/3 of the damage.[123] Another source gives 47 aircraft destroyed and 43 damaged.[126]

Possible V-2 missile launch attempts edit

At least one V-2 missile on a mobile Meillerwagen launch trailer was observed being elevated to launch position by a USAAF 4th Fighter Group pilot over the northern German attack route near the town of Lochem on 1 January 1945. Possibly on account of the launch crew sighting the American fighter, the rocket was quickly lowered from a near launch-ready 85° elevation to 30°.[127]

Results of raid edit

The results of the raid are difficult to judge given the confusion over loss records. It is likely more aircraft were destroyed than listed. The Americans failed to keep a proper record of their losses and it appears the U.S. 8th Air Force losses were not included in loss totals. When these estimates and figures are added to the losses listed in the table below, it is likely that the correct figures are 232 destroyed (143 single-engine, 74 twin-engine and 15 four-engine) and 156 damaged (139 single-engine, 12 twin-engine and five four-engine). Researching individual squadron records confirms the destruction of even more USAAF aircraft. This suggests at least a further 16 B-17s, 14 B-24s, eight P-51s, and at least two P-47s were destroyed on top of that total. A total of 290 destroyed and 180 damaged seems a more realistic summation than the conservative figures given by the USAAF, RAF, and RCAF. Including the 15 Allied aircraft shot down and 10 damaged in aerial combat, 305 destroyed and 190 damaged is the sum total of the attack.[128]

The results of the attacks are listed:[129]
  little to no damage
  light damage
  medium damage
  heavy damage

Target Target Code (Allied) Luftwaffe unit (wing) Allied forces Effect on Allied Squadrons
(according to official figures)
Antwerp—Deurne B-70 JG 77 No. 146 Wing RAF, No. 145 Wing RAF and USAAF Bomb Group also present[130] One aircraft confirmed destroyed, around 15 damaged, including three possibly destroyed.[131] [Notes 2]
Asch Y-29 JG 11 USAAF 366th Fighter Group, 352nd Fighter Group.[132] One abandoned B-17 destroyed, three damaged.[130]
Brussels—Evere B-56 JG 26 and JG 54 No. 127 Wing RCAF, Second Tactical Air Force Communication Squadron, and visiting units No. 147 Squadron RAF and No. 271 Squadron RAF. USAAF 361st Fighter Group and 358th Fighter Group elements also present.[133] 34 destroyed, 29 damaged.[134]
Brussels—Grimbergen B-60 JG 26 and JG 54 Only six aircraft were present All six aircraft destroyed.[29]
Brussels—Melsbroek B-58 JG 27, JG 54 and JG 4 No. 34 Wing RAF, No. 139 Wing RAF, 2nd Tactical Air Force Communication Squadron RAF and No. 85 Group Communication Squadron RAF. 35 destroyed, 9 severely damaged.[135]
Eindhoven B-78 JG 3 No. 124 Wing RAF, No. 143 Wing RCAF and No. 39 Wing RCAF.[136] 124 and 143 Wings lost 26 Typhoons destroyed, plus around 30 damaged.[137] 39 Wing lost a further 11 reconnaissance Spitfires destroyed, one of which was destroyed via a collision with a shot down Fw 190,[138] and 5 Mustangs Mk.I destroyed.
Ghent/Sint-Denijs-Westrem B-61 JG 1 No. 131 (Polish) Wing RAF 16 destroyed, several damaged.[30]
Gilze—Rijen B-77 JG 3 and KG 51 No. 35 Recce Wing RAF[132] One destroyed and one damaged.[133]
Heesch B-88 JG 6 No. 401 Squadron RCAF, No. 402 Squadron RCAF, No. 411 Squadron RCAF, No. 412 Squadron RCAF, No. 442 Squadron RCAF.[139] No losses
Le Culot A-89 JG 4 USAAF 36th Fighter Group, 373d Fighter Group, 363rd TRG[132] No damage
Maldegem B-65 JG 1 No. 485 Squadron RNZAF and No. 349 (Belgian) Squadron RAF 13 destroyed, two damaged beyond repair.[135]
Metz—Frescaty A-90 JG 53 USAAF. IX Tactical Air Force; 354th Fighter Group, 362nd Fighter Group, 40th Fighter Group, 406th Fighter Group, 425th Fighter Group, 367th Fighter Group, 368th Fighter Group, 361st Fighter Group. XII Tactical Air Force's 64th Fighter Wing; 1 ere, Escadre of the French Air Force, 50th Fighter Group, 358th Fighter Group 22 destroyed, 11 damaged (all Republic P-47 Thunderbolts).[68]
Ophoven Y-32 JG 4 No. 130 Squadron RAF, No. 350 (Belgian) Squadron RAF One destroyed, about six damaged.[140]
Sint—Truiden A-92 JG 2, JG 4 and SG 4 USAAF 48th Fighter Group and 404th Fighter Group 10 destroyed, 31 damaged.[140]
Volkel B-80 JG 6 No. 56 Squadron RAF, No. 486 Squadron RNZAF One aircraft destroyed.[140]
Woensdrecht B-79 JG 77 No. 132 Wing RAF No effect
Ursel B-67 JG 1 USAAF 486th Bomb Group and No. 61 Squadron RAF Three aircraft destroyed.[140]

Aftermath and casualties edit

The operation achieved tactical surprise,[141] but it was undone by poor execution due to low pilot skill resulting from poor training.[141] The operation failed to achieve its aim[2] and that failure was very costly to German air power.[142] Some of the units of the RAF, RCAF and USAAF on the receiving end of Bodenplatte had been badly hit, others not so badly, but most had sustained some losses. The Germans, however, launched Bodenplatte under a set of conditions, such as poor planning and low pilot skill, which clearly indicated any advantage gained would be outweighed by possible losses.[3] Bodenplatte weakened the Jagdwaffe past any hope of rebuilding.[6][7] General of the Luftwaffe Adolf Galland said, "We sacrificed our last substance."[143]

The Luftwaffe lost 143 pilots killed and missing, while 70 were captured and 21 wounded including three Geschwaderkommodore, five Gruppenkommandeure, and 14 Staffelkapitäne—the largest single-day loss for the Luftwaffe.[144] Many of the formation leaders lost were experienced veterans, which placed even more pressure on those who were left.[144] Thus, Bodenplatte was a very short-term success but a long-term failure. Allied losses were soon made up, while lost Luftwaffe aircraft and especially pilots were irreplaceable. German historian Gerhard Weinberg wrote that it left the Germans "weaker than ever and incapable of mounting any major attack again."[145]

In the remaining 17 weeks of war the Jagdwaffe struggled to recover sufficiently from the 1 January operation to remain an effective force. In strategic terms, German historian Werner Girbig wrote, "Operation Bodenplatte amounted to a total defeat".[146] The exhausted German units were no longer able to mount an effective defence of German air space during Operation Plunder and Operation Varsity, the Allied crossing of the Rhine River, or the overall Western Allied invasion of Germany. Subsequent operations were insignificant as a whole, and could not challenge Allied air supremacy. The only service in the Luftwaffe capable of profitable sorties was the night fighter force.[147] In the last six weeks of the war the Luftwaffe was to lose another 200 pilots killed.[148] Girbig wrote, "it was not until the autumn of 1944 that the German fighter forces set foot down the sacrificial path; and it was the controversial Operation Bodenplatte that dealt this force a mortal blow and sealed its fate. What happened from then on was no more than a dying flicker."[7]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Agreement #4 of the 11 June 1940 between the United Kingdom and Poland recognised the Polish Navy and Army as sovereign but that of the Air Force was refused. Agreement #7 reversed this decision in June 1944, and the Polish Air Force was "returned" to full Polish jurisdiction (with the exception of combat assignments, although the Poles retained the right to veto).[1]
  2. ^ Other sources say as many as 10 were destroyed along with another five possibles. Another nine confirmed damaged plus another few damaged.[130]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Peszke 1980, p. 134.
  2. ^ a b c d e Girbig 1975, p. 73.
  3. ^ a b Franks 1994, pp. 163–165.
  4. ^ Zaloga 2004, p. 61.
  5. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 114.
  6. ^ a b c d Caldwell & Muller 2007, p. 262.
  7. ^ a b c Girbig 1975, p. 12.
  8. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 74.
  9. ^ a b Caldwell 1991, pp. 311–312.
  10. ^ Franks 1994, no page (inside cover).
  11. ^ Franks 1994, p. 10.
  12. ^ Franks 1994, pp. 10–11.
  13. ^ Price 2001, p. 113.
  14. ^ a b Franks 1994, p. 11.
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  16. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 7.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 8.
  18. ^ a b c Franks 1994, p. 13.
  19. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 75.
  20. ^ Caldwell & Muller 2007, p. 205.
  21. ^ Uziel 2011, p. 52.
  22. ^ Johnson 2000, pp. 294–295.
  23. ^ Parker 1998, p. 375.
  24. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 77.
  25. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 125.
  26. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 76 (given in footnote)
  27. ^ Franks 1994, p. 188.
  28. ^ Parker 1998, pp. 377, 381.
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  30. ^ a b Franks 1994, p. 197.
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  32. ^ Caldwell & Muller 2007, pp. 257–258.
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  91. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, pp. 164–165.
  92. ^ Franks 1994, p. 136.
  93. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 281.
  94. ^ Parker 1998, pp. 385–391.
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  96. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 169.
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  117. ^ de Zeng, Stankey & Creek 2007, p. 147.
  118. ^ de Zeng, Stankey & Creek 2008, p. 243.
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  121. ^ a b Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 85.
  122. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 80.
  123. ^ a b Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 91.
  124. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 92.
  125. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, pp. 86–88.
  126. ^ Franks 2000, pp. 132–134.
  127. ^ Ordway & Sharpe 1979, p. 256.
  128. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 272.
  129. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 78.
  130. ^ a b c Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 291.
  131. ^ Franks 1994, p. 193.
  132. ^ a b c Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 289.
  133. ^ a b Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 293.
  134. ^ Franks 1994, p. 195.
  135. ^ a b Franks 1994, p. 196.
  136. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 71.
  137. ^ Franks 1994, p. 204.
  138. ^ Parker 1998, p. 402.
  139. ^ Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 288.
  140. ^ a b c d Manrho & Pütz 2004, p. 295.
  141. ^ a b Johnson 2000, p. 292.
  142. ^ Prien & Stemmer 2002, p. 349.
  143. ^ Parker 1998, p. 486.
  144. ^ a b Manrho & Pütz 2004, pp. 272–273.
  145. ^ Weinberg 2005, p. 769.
  146. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 112.
  147. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 123.
  148. ^ Girbig 1975, p. 137.

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Forsythe, Robert. JV 44; The Galland Circus. Burgess Hill, West Sussex, UK: Classic Publications, 1996. ISBN 0-9526867-0-8
  • Forsythe, Robert & Laurier, Jagdverband 44: Squadron of Experten. Osprey. Oxford. 2008. ISBN 978-1-84603-294-3
  • Girbig, Werner. Start im Morgengrauen. Germany: Pietsch-Verlag Paul Pietsch Verlage GmbH + Co, 1997. ISBN 3-613-01292-8
  • Weal, John. Bf 109 Defence of the Reich Aces. Osprey, Oxford. 2006. ISBN 1-84176-879-0

External links edit

  • 439 Squadron Log 1 January 1945
  • Operation Strength of JG 1 at the time of Unternehmen Bodenplatte
  • To win the Winter Sky by Danny S. Parker

operation, bodenplatte, part, battle, bulge, world, 190d, grünherz, pilot, leutnant, theo, nibel, downed, partridge, which, flew, into, nose, radiator, near, brussels, january, 1945, date1, january, 1945locationbelgium, netherlands, franceresultoperation, fail. Operation BodenplattePart of the Battle of the Bulge World War IIA Fw 190D 9 of 10 JG 54 Grunherz pilot Leutnant Theo Nibel downed by a partridge which flew into the nose radiator near Brussels on 1 January 1945 Date1 January 1945LocationBelgium the Netherlands and FranceResultOperation failed 2 German tactical success 3 4 5 Strategic German exhaustion 6 7 Belligerents United Kingdom United States Canada New Zealand Poland 1 Notes 1 GermanyCommanders and leadersArthur Coningham Jimmy Doolittle Hoyt VandenbergWerner Kreipe Joseph Schmid Dietrich Peltz Karl Hentschel Gotthard HandrickUnits involved2nd Tactical Air Force Eighth Air Force Ninth Air ForceII Jagdkorps3 Jagddivision5 JagddivisionCasualties and lossesSee Aftermath and casualtiesSee Aftermath and casualties Operation Bodenplatte ˈboːdn ˌplate Baseplate launched on 1 January 1945 was an attempt by the Luftwaffe to cripple Allied air forces in the Low Countries during the Second World War The goal of Bodenplatte was to gain air superiority during the stagnant stage of the Battle of the Bulge so that the German Army and Waffen SS forces could resume their advance The operation was planned for 16 December 1944 but was delayed repeatedly due to bad weather until New Year s Day the first day that happened to be suitable It resulted in almost 500 destroyed Allied airplanes 8 Secrecy for the operation was so tight that not all German ground and naval forces had been informed of the operation and some units suffered casualties from friendly fire British signals intelligence recorded the movement and buildup of German air forces in the region but did not realise that an operation was imminent The operation achieved some surprise and tactical success but was ultimately a failure A great many Allied aircraft were destroyed on the ground but replaced within a week Allied aircrew casualties were quite small since the majority of Allied losses were grounded aircraft The Germans however lost many pilots who could not be readily replaced 6 Post battle analysis suggests only 11 of the Luftwaffe s 34 air combat Gruppen groups made attacks on time and with surprise 6 The operation failed to achieve air superiority even temporarily while the German ground forces continued to be exposed to Allied air attack Bodenplatte was the last large scale strategic offensive operation mounted by the Luftwaffe during the war 9 10 Contents 1 Background 2 Plan 2 1 Targets and order of battle 2 2 Codenames 2 3 Allied intelligence 3 Battle 3 1 Maldegem Ursel and St Denijs Westrem 3 2 Sint Truiden 3 3 Volkel and Heesch 3 4 Antwerp Deurne and Woensdrecht 3 5 Metz Frescaty 3 6 Le Culot and Ophoven 3 7 Asch 3 8 Brussels Evere Grimbergen 3 9 Brussels Melsbroek 3 10 Gilze Rijen and Eindhoven 3 11 Possible V 2 missile launch attempts 4 Results of raid 5 Aftermath and casualties 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Bibliography 7 3 Further reading 8 External linksBackground edit nbsp Focke Wulf Fw 190A shot down by a fighter of the USAAF XXIX Tactical Air Command in 1944 or 1945 German losses were very heavy by late 1944 The armies of the Western Allies were supported by the Allied Air Forces as they advanced across Western Europe in 1944 The Royal Air Force RAF and its Second Tactical Air Force under the command of Air Marshal Arthur Coningham moved No 2 Group RAF No 83 Group RAF No 84 Group RAF and No 85 Group RAF to continental Europe in order to provide constant close air support The RAF harassed the German air sea and ground forces by hitting strong points and interdicting their supply lines while reconnaissance units apprised the Allies of German movements With Allied air superiority the German Army could not operate effectively The Luftwaffe equally found it difficult to provide effective air cover for the German Army Although German aircraft production peaked in 1944 the Luftwaffe was critically short of pilots and fuel and lacked experienced combat leaders 11 The land battles moved towards the River Rhine to the east of which lay the German heartland Most of France had been liberated as had the Belgian cities Brussels and Antwerp Although Operation Market Garden had failed in 1944 by 1945 the Allies had overrun most of the southern Netherlands and the Scheldt Estuary As the ground forces moved across Europe the Allied tactical air forces moved into new bases on the continent to continue providing close support The only limiting factor for the Allies was the weather As winter came rain and mud turned airfields into quagmires so large scale air and land operations came to a halt 12 The situation might well have continued until the spring thaw had the German High Command Oberkommando der Wehrmacht not launched the Battle of the Bulge on 16 December 1944 This land offensive was intended to improve the German military position by capturing Antwerp and separating the British Army from United States Army forces Part of the planning for the German land operation required the attack to be conducted under the cover of bad winter weather which kept the main Allied asset the Tactical Air Forces on the ground It initially succeeded but the weather also grounded the Luftwaffe for the most part Nevertheless the Luftwaffe did manage to put 500 aircraft into the air on 16 December more than had been achieved for a long time This first day had been the originally planned date for the strike against Allied airfields named Operation Bodenplatte 13 However the weather proved particularly bad and operations were shut down 14 The offensive achieved surprise and much initial success To counter the attack from the air the United States Army Air Forces USAAF handed operational control of its XXIX Tactical Air Command and part of its Ninth Air Force under the command of Major General Hoyt Vandenberg to the RAF and Arthur Coningham On 23 December the RAF Second Tactical Air Force provided the American forces with much needed support and helped prevent a German capture of Malmedy and Bastogne This left the Germans with only the logistical bottleneck of St Vith to support their operations The German attack faltered 14 The Luftwaffe had been far from absent over the front in December It flew several thousand sorties over the theatre Its encounters with the RAF and USAAF had meant heavy losses in materiel and pilots On the eight days of operations between 17 and 27 December 1944 644 fighters were lost and 227 damaged This resulted in 322 pilots killed 23 captured and 133 wounded On the three days of operations 23 25 December 363 fighters were destroyed None of the Geschwaderkommodoren expected any large scale air operations by the end of the month 15 Plan editIn September 1944 Adolf Hitler resolved to recover Germany s deteriorating fortunes by launching an offensive in the West On 16 September Hitler directed Generalleutnant Werner Kreipe Chief of the Luftwaffe s General Staff to prepare the necessary aircraft for the offensive On 21 October Kreipe ordered the air fleet defending the Greater German Reich Luftflotte Reich to hand over seven Jagdgeschwader and Schlachtgeschwader to Air Command West Luftwaffenkommando West for a future offensive 16 On 14 November Hermann Goring Commander in Chief of the Luftwaffe ordered the 2 Jagddivision and the 3 Jagddivision to prepare their units for a large scale ground attack operation in the Ardennes Preparations were to be complete by 27 November The attack was to be carried out on the first day of the offensive 17 Generalmajor Dietrich Peltz was to plan the operation having been appointed C in C of II Fliegerkorps on 8 December Luftwaffenkommando West had ordered all units except Jagdgeschwader 300 and 301 to attend the main planning meeting in Flammersfeld on 5 December On 14 December Peltz officially initiated plans for a major blow against the Allies in northwest Europe Peltz was not a fighter pilot his combat record was as a dive bomber pilot flying the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka His experiences in Poland in France and during the early campaigns on the Eastern Front had moulded him into an outstanding ground attack specialist making him an ideal candidate for planning Bodenplatte 18 On 15 December this plan was worked out with the help of the Luftwaffe s Jagd Geschwaderkommodore among them Gotthard Handrick Jagdabschnittsfuhrer Mittelrhein Fighter Sector Leader Middle Rhine Walter Grabmann and Karl Hentschel commanders of 3 and 5 Jagddivision respectively It was originally scheduled to support the Battle of the Bulge the German Army s offensive which began 16 December 1944 However the same bad weather that prevented the RAF and USAAF from supporting their own ground forces also prevented the Luftwaffe from carrying out the operation It was therefore not launched until 1 January 1945 By this time the German Army had lost momentum owing to Allied resistance and clearing weather which allowed Allied Air Forces to operate The German Army attempted to restart the attack by launching Operation Northwind Unternehmen Nordwind The Luftwaffe was to support this offensive through Bodenplatte 18 The plan of Bodenplatte called for a surprise attack against 17 Allied air bases in Belgium the Netherlands and France 18 The object was to destroy or cripple as many Allied aircraft hangars and airstrips as possible Every fighter and fighter bomber Geschwader Wing currently occupied with air defence along the Western Front was redeployed Additional night fighter units Nachtjagdgeschwader and medium bomber units Kampfgeschwader acted as pathfinders The strike formations themselves were mostly single engine Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Focke Wulf Fw 190 fighters 2 However in a blunder the planners had set flight paths that took many units over some of the most heavily defended areas on the continent namely the V2 launch sites around The Hague These sites were protected by large numbers of German anti aircraft artillery AAA units At the turn of 1944 45 Air Command West had 267 heavy and 277 medium or light AAA batteries and in addition to this there were 100 Kriegsmarine AAA batteries along the Dutch coast Most of these lay in the sector of the 16th AAA Division with its control station at Doetinchem 15 mi 24 km northeast of Arnhem 19 Some of the AAA units had been warned about the air operation but were not kept up to date with developments about changing timetables and the flight plan of German formations As a result one quarter of the German fighter units lost aircraft to friendly fire before the attacks could be initiated 9 After five years of war and heavy attrition many of the Luftwaffe s pilots were inexperienced and poorly trained deficient in marksmanship and flight skills There was a shortage of experienced instructors and many of the training units were forced to fly front line operations in order to bolster the front line Jagdgeschwader 20 Aviation fuel supplies were also at a premium limiting the duration of training Long range Allied fighters exacerbated this situation by shooting down many training aircraft By late 1944 there were no safe areas in which pilots could be trained without the possibility of air attack The result was a vicious circle poorly trained pilots were quickly lost in combat or accidents and the need to replace them put more pressure on the training system 21 Allied personnel who witnessed the attacks remarked on the poor aim of the strafing aircraft and many of the Luftwaffe aircraft shot down by Allied anti aircraft fire were caught because they were flying too slowly and too high 22 The plan called for strict radio silence and secrecy in order to maintain surprise Maps were also only half complete identified only enemy installations and left out flight paths lest the document fall into Allied hands enabling them to trace the whereabouts of German fighter bases Most commanders were also refused permission to brief their pilots until moments before take off This created operational confusion Commanders got across only the bare essentials of the plan When the operation got under way many German pilots still did not understand what the operation was about or what exactly was required of them 2 23 They were convinced it was just a reconnaissance in force over the front and were happy to follow their flight leaders on this basis 2 Targets and order of battle edit Main article German and Allied order of battle for Operation Bodenplatte See also Organization of the Luftwaffe 1933 1945 It is unclear whether all of the following were deliberately targeted Evidence suggests that Grimbergen Knocke and Ophoven were targeted in error 24 as was Heesch 25 In all the Oberkommando der Luftwaffe OKL deployed 1 035 aircraft 26 from several Jagdgeschwader JG fighter wings Kampfgeschwader KG bomber wings Nachtjagdgeschwader NJG night fighter wings and Schlachtgeschwader SG ground attack wings of these 38 5 were Bf 109s 38 5 Fw 190As and 23 Fw 190Ds 27 Below is the German target list 28 Target Target Code Allied Allied Air Force Main aircraft type s targeted Luftwaffecombat wing Antwerpen Deurne B 70 RAF Hawker Typhoon Supermarine Spitfire North American Mustang JG 77 Herz As Bf 109G 14 and K 4 Asch Y 29 USAAF Republic P 47D Thunderbolt P 51D Mustang JG 11 Fw 190A 8 Brussels Evere B 56 USAAF RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk V and Mk IX LF JG 26 Schlageter and JG 54 Grunherz Fw 190D 9 and D 12 Grimbergen B 60 USAAF Boeing B 17G Flying Fortress P 51 Mustang 29 JG 26 Schlageter and JG 54 Grunherz Brussels Melsbroek B 58 RAF RCAF North American B 25G Mitchell 29 JG 27 Afrika and JG 54 Grunherz Bf 109K 4 Eindhoven B 78 RAF RCAF Hawker Typhoon Mk IIb Supermarine Spitfire Mk V and Mk IX LF JG 3 Udet Fw 190A 8 and Fw 190D 9 Ghent Sint Denijs Westrem B 61 RAF Polish Wing Polskie Sily Powietrzne Supermarine Spitfire Mk V and Mk IX JG 1 Oesau Fw 190A 8 Gilze en Rijen B 77 RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk V and Mk IX LF P 51D Mustang KG 51 Edelweiss and JG 3 Udet Me 262A 1 and Fw 190D 9 Heesch B 88 RCAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk V and Mk IX LF JG 6 Horst Wessel Fw 190G 1 Le Culot A 89 USAAF Lockheed P 38J Lightning JG 4 Sturmgruppe Fw 190A 8 R8 Maldegem B 65 RAF RNZAF RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk V and Mk IX LF 29 JG 1 Oesau Fw 190A 8 R2 and R4 Metz Frescaty A 90 USAAF RAF P 47D Thunderbolt JG 53 Pik As Bf 109G 14 and Bf 109K 4 Ophoven Y 32 RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk V and Mk IX LF JG 4 Sturmgruppe Fw 190A 8 R8 Sint Truiden A 92 USAAF P 47D Thunderbolt SG 4 and JG 2 Richthofen Volkel B 80 RAF Hawker Typhoon Mk IIb Hawker Tempest JG 6 Horst Wessel Fw 190G 1 Woensdrecht B 79 RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk IX LF JG 77 Herz As Bf 109G 14 and K 4 Ursel B 67 USAAF RAF de Havilland Mosquito F Mk XV Avro Lancaster B IV B 17G small numbers 30 JG 1 Oesau Fw 190A 8 Codenames edit Following the Operation Bodenplatte raids the Allies retrieved several log books from crashed German aircraft In several of these the entry Auftrag Hermann 1 1 1945 Zeit 9 20 Uhr was translated as Operation Hermann to commence on 1 January 1945 at 9 20am This led the Allies to believe the operation itself was named Hermann for Hermann Goring 31 Five further different codes were used for the attack Varus Indicating that the operation was a go and that it would take place within 24 hours of the Varus order being given 17 Teutonicus Authority to brief the pilots and to arrange for the aircraft to be armed and ready at the edge of the airfield 17 Hermann Giving the exact date and time of the attack 17 Dorothea Indicating a delay in the attack 17 Spatlese late harvest Cancelling of the attack after formations are airborne 17 Allied intelligence edit Allied intelligence failed to detect the German intention In Ultra transcripts there were only a few indications of what was happening on the other side of the front On 4 December 1944 II Jagdkorps had ordered stockpiling for navigational aids such as golden rain flares and smoke bombs Allied intelligence made no written observations of this communication They also disregarded communications to Junkers Ju 88 groups regarding the use of flares when leading formations Intelligence concluded that these instructions were designed for a ground support mission rather than an interception operation This was reasonable but no indications of possible ground targets were given 15 On 20 December a 3 Jagddivision message was intercepted confirming that the locations for emergency landing grounds during a special undertaking had remained unchanged This was a clear indication that something was amiss but Allied intelligence did not comment on it It also ignored more messages indicating that low level attacks were being practised 15 Allied intelligence by 16 December had monitored the reshuffling of both German Army and Luftwaffe formations opposite the American held front at the Ardennes Yet nothing major was suspected 32 Battle editMaldegem Ursel and St Denijs Westrem edit Units I II III JG 1 Aircraft 71 Aircraft lost 29 Damaged unknown Pilots killed or captured 25 Jagdgeschwader 1 JG 1 was responsible for the attack on the Ursel and Maldegem airfields Oberstleutnant Herbert Ihlefeld led the Geschwader The formation was mixed Stab headquarters flight or Stabschwarm attached to every Geschwader I and II JG 1 operated the Fw 190 while the III JG 1 flew the Bf 109 I JG 1 lost four of their number to friendly anti aircraft fire Three of the four pilots were killed 33 The attacks at Maldegem and Ursel began at 08 30 Both I and II JG 1 became involved in intense dogfights III JG 1 had lost only one aircraft over the target and not to enemy fire 34 I JG lost a further Fw 190 to friendly anti aircraft fire as it made its way to Ursel I JG 1 lost at least two further Fw 190s to friendly anti aircraft fire 35 Casualties could have been heavier had the British anti aircraft defences of Maldegem airfield not been moved in December 36 Stab and I JG 1 lost 13 Fw 190s and nine pilots were missing five were killed and four were captured Thus the loss rates in personnel and materiel were 39 and 56 respectively III JG 1 lost only three Bf 109s with one pilot dead and two captured I JG 1 claimed 30 British or New Zealand Spitfires on the ground and two shot down over Maldegem At Maldegem 16 aircraft were destroyed and at Ursel only six were lost The claims of I JG 1 were actually more in line with British and New Zealand total losses at both Maldegem and Ursel No 131 Wing RAF Polish Wing lost 13 Spitfires plus two damaged beyond repair a total of 15 lost 37 At Ursel six aircraft were destroyed including a B 17 two Lancasters and a Mosquito I and III JG 1 lost a total of 16 aircraft and 12 pilots 38 II JG 1 attacked the airfield at St Denijs Westrem Of the 36 II JG 1 Fw 190s that took off 17 were shot down a staggering 47 loss rate Among the pilots lost were several experienced fliers In exchange the Germans shot down two Spitfires and seven forced landed At St Denijs Westrem 18 Spitfires were destroyed on the ground 39 40 Altogether JG 1 lost 25 pilots and 29 aircraft This return for around 60 enemy aircraft 54 on the ground cannot be considered a complete success although the damage at St Denijs Westrem and Maldegem had been significant 41 Just nine of the fighters lost by JG 1 are confirmed to have been shot down in combat with Spitfires It is possible a further three were shot down by Spitfires or perhaps ground fire 42 Two Spitfires were shot down and destroyed with two more damaged 43 One pilot of each squadron 308 and 317 was killed The total Spitfire losses were perhaps 32 40 Sint Truiden edit Units I II III JG 2 and SG 4 Aircraft 144 Aircraft lost 46 Damaged 12 Pilots killed or captured 23 Schlachtgeschwader 4 and Jagdgeschwader 2 SG 4 and JG 2 were to strike at Sint Truiden airfield JG 2 was commanded by Kurt Buhligen I JG 2 s ground crews made ready 35 of 46 Fw 190s 29 of which were Fw 190Ds Only 33 pilots were fit for operations so the Gruppe reported only 33 Fw 190s ready II JG 2 could field 20 of 29 Bf 109s Stab JG 2 had three Fw 190s ready for the mission It is not clear whether Buhligen took part in the mission III JG 2 Siegfried Lemke reported 40 Fw 190s operational 34 of them Fw 190Ds However only 28 of the 43 pilots in the unit were fit for operations and the formation fielded only 28 fighters In total 84 aircraft were ready on 31 December including 28 Fw 190D 9s 44 SG 4 was led by Alfred Druschel It had 152 machines on strength of which just 60 were operational yet the 129 pilots were fit for action Stab SG 4 had three Fw 190s and two pilots I SG 4 had 21 Fw 190s operational and 27 pilots ready II SG 4 reported 27 Fw 190s ready but pilot strength is unknown III SG 4 reported 24 Fw 190s but only 16 were available at the forward airfields Pilot strength is unknown Best estimations make it around 60 Fw 190s operational of which 55 took part 45 At 09 12 JG 2 crossed the front line at Malmedy and was greeted by an enormous volume of Allied ground fire The entire area was heavily defended by anti aircraft artillery since the area had been the scene of heavy fighting but also had been attacked by V 1 and V 2 missiles I JG 2 lost at least seven fighters to ground fire alone III JG 2 lost 10 fighters A possible seven Bf 109s from II JG 2 were also lost to ground fire JG 2 attacked Asch and Ophoven airfields by mistake 46 JG 2 s mission was a disaster I JG 2 lost 18 Fw 190s and six more were damaged by ground fire and enemy aircraft This represented 73 of their force Of the 15 pilots missing six would survive as POWs II JG 2 lost five Bf 109s and three were damaged a loss rate of 40 Pilot losses were three missing one dead and one wounded III JG 2 lost 19 Fw 190s and three were damaged a loss rate of 79 Nine pilots were killed two were wounded and four were captured 47 JG 2 losses according to another source amounted to 40 of its force Pilot losses were 24 killed or posted missing 10 captured and four wounded 48 Another source asserts that pilot losses stood at 23 killed or missing 49 SG 4 s mission was also a disaster During the assembly phase they flew across JG 11 s flight path and the formation was broken up Some of the pilots joined JG 11 in the confusion Unable to recover the formation I and II SG 4 then decided to head home The Geschwaderkommodore Druschel had continued with five other pilots from III SG 4 who had lost contact with their Gruppe They crossed the front near Hurtgenwald around 09 10 As they did so American anti aircraft batteries opened fire claiming seven aircraft in the next 30 minutes Only six of the 50 Fw 190s of SG 4 carried out an attack against airfields near Aachen and the Asch aerodrome Of these six four did not return Druschel himself was reported missing 50 Volkel and Heesch edit Units I II III JG 6 Aircraft 78 Aircraft lost 27 Damaged 5 Pilots killed or captured 23 The target of Jagdgeschwader 6 JG 6 was Volkel I and III JG 6 were to attack while II JG 6 was to provide cover against Allied fighters I JG 6 got 29 of its 34 Fw 190s ready while 25 of II JG 6 s fighters took part Overall most of the 99 Fw 190s were made available for the operation III JG 6 received orders to target petrol installations on the airfield only Only 78 Fw 190s took off 51 While on course JG 6 approached the airfield of Heesch and some of its pilots assumed it to be Volkel airfield It is unlikely that the Heesch strip built in October 1944 was known to the Luftwaffe No 126 Wing RCAF was based there and had dispatched its 411 and 442 Squadrons on recce missions early that morning so the majority of its units were airborne Its 401 Squadron was readying for takeoff when JG 6 appeared at 09 15 Most of the German pilots had failed to notice the airfield concentrating on keeping formation at low altitude 401 Squadron scrambled Some of the German fighters were authorised to engage while the main body continued to search for Volkel Stab and II JG 6 stumbled on another strip at Helmond which contained no aircraft Several German pilots believed it to be Volkel and attacked losing several of their number to ground fire 52 II JG 6 suffered severely from Spitfire and Tempests based at Helmond Very little damage was done at Heesch or Helmond 53 In the event all four Gruppen failed to find Volkel and its Hawker Tempests remained untouched 54 The only success JG 6 had was I JG 6 s erroneous attack on Eindhoven which claimed 33 fighters and six medium bombers Like Volkel Helmond and Heesch had escaped damage In the dogfights over Helmond JG 6 claimed six victories In fact only two Spitfires were shot down and one badly damaged Only one further fighter a Hawker Typhoon was shot down Stab JG 6 lost the Geschwaderkommodore Kogler as a POW Of I JG 6 s 29 Fw 190s seven were lost and two damaged of II JG 6 s 25 Fw 190s eight were destroyed and two damaged III JG 6 lost 12 out 20 Bf 109s In total JG 6 lost 43 of its strength and suffered 16 pilots killed or missing and seven captured As well as Kogler one other commanding officer was lost Gruppenkommandeur Helmut Kuhle Three Staffelkapitane were lost Hauptmann Ewald Trost was captured Hauptmann Norbert Katz was killed and Lothar Gerlach was posted missing presumed killed 55 56 Antwerp Deurne and Woensdrecht edit Units I II III JG 77 Aircraft 59 Aircraft lost 11 Damaged Pilots killed or captured 11 Deurne airfield was to be destroyed by Jagdgeschwader 77 JG 77 Antwerp housed the largest Allied contingent of nine Squadrons It had been incessantly attacked by V 1 cruise missiles and V 2 SRBM ballistic missiles and had been given a strong anti aircraft defence 57 At 08 00 two formations of 18 Bf 109s of I and III JG 77 led by Major Siegfried Freytag took off with their pathfinders At the same time 23 Bf 109s of II JG 77 took off Around the Bocholt area they formed up with the other two Gruppen Heading south and still north of Antwerp JG 77 passed Woensdrecht airfield It was home to No 132 Wing RAF and its five Spitfire squadrons No 331 Squadron RAF No 332 Squadron RAF Norwegian No 66 Squadron RAF and No 127 Squadron RAF and No 322 Squadron RAF Dutch Some pilots from II JG 77 either mistakenly believed it to be Antwerp or thought the opportunity was too good to pass up Two German fighters were claimed shot down and one pilot captured However none of the JG 77 casualties fit this description 58 The main body continued to Antwerp Some 12 30 German fighters attacked the airfield from 09 25 to 09 40 The ground defences were alert and the German formations attacked in a disorganised manner 145 Wing RAF was missed completely and considering the large number of targets the destruction was light just 12 Spitfires were destroyed 59 In total 14 Allied aircraft were destroyed and nine damaged JG 77 lost 11 Bf 109s and their pilots were lost Six were killed and five captured according to Allied sources However German records show the loss of only 10 pilots Four are listed as captured 60 61 Metz Frescaty edit nbsp Destroyed P 47s at Y 34 Metz Frescaty airfield Units Stab II III IV JG 53 Aircraft 80 Aircraft lost 30 Damaged 8 Pilots killed or captured 17 Jagdgeschwader 53 JG 53 was tasked with the operation against the USAAF airfield at Metz Frescaty Air Base Stab II III and IV JG 53 were available 62 III JG 53 was to destroy anti aircraft installations in the Metz area while the other Gruppen knocked out the airfields 63 The USAAF XIX Tactical Air Command had established a strong presence in northeast France and was supporting the U S 3rd Army JG 53 was to knock out its airfields 64 Some 26 Bf 109s took off but were intercepted by 12 P 47s of the 367th Fighter Squadron 358th Fighter Group The P 47s claimed 13 destroyed one probable and six damaged for no losses On the way home at 09 20 III JG 53 were intercepted by 366th Fighter Squadron Altogether III JG 53 lost 10 Bf 109s and one damaged to the 358th Fighter Group 65 Of the 25 III JG 53 Bf 109s that took part 11 were shot down representing 40 of the attacking force The 358th Fighter Group received the Distinguished Unit citation for preventing the attack on the 362nd Fighter Groups airfield 66 Although III JG 53 failed the main attack was a success by comparison Stab II and IV JG 53 encountered no difficulties on the outward leg The Germans caused significant damage among the parked USAAF fighters on the field When the attack against the Metz airfield was over the three JG 53 Gruppen reported the loss of 20 Bf 109s and seven damaged This represented more than 50 percent of the attacking 52 fighters Some 13 pilots were missing three were killed six remain missing as of today and four were captured A further three were wounded JG 53 claimed 27 USAAF fighters on the ground and eight damaged Added to this total is four aerial victories In total JG 53 lost 30 Bf 109s and eight damaged in the two operations This was a total loss of 48 67 The losses of the USAAF were 22 destroyed 11 damaged all P 47s 68 However the negative effects of Bodenplatte on JG 53 outweighed any advantages gained 67 Le Culot and Ophoven edit Units I II III JG 4 Aircraft 55 75 Aircraft lost 25 26 Damaged 6 Pilots killed or captured 17 Le Culot airfield later known as Beauvechain was 45 km 28 mi northeast of Charleroi and was the target of Jagdgeschwader 4 JG 4 The main strip A 89 was known locally as Beauvechain and an auxiliary field known as Le Culot East Y 10 known to the locals as Burettes was nearby It was known to the Luftwaffe because several of its units had operated there 69 Geschwaderkommodore Major Gerhard Michalski commanded the force Five pilots were shot down by ground fire Another pilot got lost during the flight and ended up near Eindhoven where he was shot down and killed Reduced in number 8 10 fighters of IV JG 4 continued to their target After 10 minutes they located a fairly large airfield and attacked believing it to be Le Culot It was in fact Sint Truiden 70 The mistake was easy to make Le Culot was located nearby Sint Truiden housed the 48th Fighter Group and 404th Fighter Group The 492nd Fighter Squadron was readying to take off at 09 20 JG 4 hit the airfield at 09 15 Several P 47s taxiing out were abandoned by pilots and strafed to destruction 71 The small scale attack by JG 4 had achieved considerable damage Total American losses were 10 destroyed and 31 damaged The Germans lost eight fighters including seven Bf 109s and three damaged 72 No damage was done at Le Culot airfield 73 II Sturm JG 4 took off for Le Culot at 08 08 Getting lost they stumbled upon Asch airfield and claimed one P 47 destroyed and two twin engine aircraft damaged as well as two trains and trucks destroyed The unit claimed an Auster reconnaissance aircraft shot down The machine was probably a Stinson L 1 Vigilant of the 125th Liaison Squadron U S Army However virtually the entire Gruppe of 17 Fw 190s was wiped out 74 I and III JG 4 were to strike Le Culot together Taking off at 08 20 and heading northwest they comprised a force of 35 Bf 109s nine from III JG 4 Two Ju 88G 1s of II NJG 101 lead as pathfinders Some of I JG 4 attacked No 125 Wing RAF Spitfires at Ophoven airfield Spitfire losses are unclear Two P 47s and a B 17 were destroyed I JG 4 reported two Bf 109s missing one damaged and one destroyed Just a hangar one P 47 and several vehicles were claimed and the anti aircraft battery was silenced The attack on the Spitfires at Ophoven and the mentioned B 17 and two P 47s are not included in the total 75 Another source suggests two Spitfires destroyed and 10 damaged at Ophoven 76 According to one source JG 4 s losses were 25 fighters of the 55 that took part With 17 pilots killed or missing and seven captured 77 JG 4 suffered a 42 loss rate 78 A more recent source claims a total of 75 aircraft of JG 4 took part with only 12 attacking ground targets Two Ju 88 pathfinders were lost as well as 26 fighters with six more damaged 79 Asch edit Units Stab I II III JG 11 Aircraft 61 Aircraft lost 28 Damaged unknown Pilots killed or captured 24 nbsp Kurt Tank and Major Gunther Specht left inspecting the rudder of his Bf 109 Specht s loss was a bitter blow for JG 11 The Asch Airfield Designated Y 29 had been constructed in November 1944 and was home to the 352nd Fighter Group 8th Air Force and the 366th Fighter Group Ninth Air Force 80 Jagdgeschwader 11 JG 11 was to destroy the airfield I JG 11 had only 16 Fw 190s on strength and only six fit and operational pilots Only six of I JG 1 s pilots took part and just four of Stab JG 1 s pilots participated III JG 11 had more aircraft than pilots and so other Staffeln made up the numbers 81 Just 41 Fw 190s of JG 11 took part in Bodenplatte four from the Stab six from I Gruppe and 31 of III Gruppe The 20 fighters from II Gruppe were Bf 109s 82 The plan called for a low level strike by I and III JG 11 while II JG 11 flew as top cover against USAAF fighters The pilots were shown maps and photographs of the airfield but were not told the targets identity until the morning of the attack 81 After crossing Allied lines four fighters were lost to AAA fire The course of JG 11 took it directly over Ophoven Large formations of JG 11 attacked in the mistaken belief it was Asch The other half continued to Asch Ophoven housed No 125 Wing RAF just 5 km 3 1 mi north of Asch About half or some 30 Fw 190s and Bf 109s attacked the airfield 83 84 Asch was notable for a chance event The 390th Squadron of the 366th Fighter Group had launched two fighter sweeps that morning which played a crucial role in the failure of JG 11 s attack 85 The leader of the 487th squadron 352nd Fighter Group John Charles Meyer anticipated German activity and had a flight of 12 P 51s about to take off on a combat patrol when the attack began They took off under fire 86 Several pilots made Ace status that day No P 51s were lost two were damaged and one was damaged on the ground The 336th Fighter Group lost one P 47 87 The 366th was credited with eight enemy aircraft and AAA claimed seven more However overclaiming is likely Luftwaffe records indicate JG 11 lost 28 fighters Four German pilots two wounded made it back to German held territory while four were captured and the remaining twenty were killed 88 Some 24 of the Bf 109s and Fw 190s lost were lost over enemy lines 89 German pilots Gunther Specht and Horst Gunther von Fassong were among those German pilots killed 90 Little is known about the claims of JG 11 According to one German document 13 fighters two twin engine and one four engine aircraft were claimed destroyed Five fighters were claimed damaged on Glabbeek airfield in reality it was Ophoven Ten aerial victories and one probable were also claimed But U S Fighter Group losses indicate these claims are excessive 91 The Americans claimed 35 German aircraft destroyed 92 Only 14 can be judged with a degree of certainty to have been shot down by USAAF fighters and possibly two more Four are confirmed to have been shot down by AAA fire Total JG 11 losses were 28 93 94 The air battle over Asch had lasted 45 minutes and came to be known as The Legend of Y 29 95 Brussels Evere Grimbergen edit Units Stab I II III JG 26 and III JG 54 Aircraft 127 Aircraft lost 40 Damaged unknown Pilots killed or captured 30 Jagdgeschwader 26 JG 26 and the III Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 54 JG 54 were to strike at Brussels Evere At the end of December II JG 26 had 39 Fw 190D 9s and III JG 26 had 45 Bf 109s 96 Records of available aircraft indicate 110 aircraft of JG 26 flew that day all but 29 were Fw 190s the remainder were Bf 109s 82 17 Fw 190s from III JG 54 took part with JG 26 45 Unknown to the Luftwaffe the Grimbergen Airfield was almost completely abandoned The Evere airfield was located to the south It was one of the most densely populated airfields in Belgium and had plenty of targets The main force consisted of 60 Spitfire XVIs of No 127 Wing RAF Also present were B 17s and B 24s of the Eighth Air Force Overall well over 100 aircraft were on the field 97 At 08 13 the first formations took off In total 64 Fw 190D 9s participated Before the target was reached some 14 Fw 190D 9s were forced to turn back due to AAA damage or mechanical difficulties Three Fw 190s were lost to German AAA fire At 09 10 when the front was reached Allied heavy AAA units began to engage the formation and another five were shot down Most of the fire was from British Naval AAA defences defending the Scheldt Estuary As the formation crossed the Dutch and Belgian border I JG 26 and III JG 54 were intercepted by Spitfires Five of the Fw 190s were shot down I JG 26 destroyed or damaged the few aircraft at the airfield AAA defences claimed five kills and I JG 26 reported two Fw 190s lost to Spitfires Several others were lost over the airfield Other losses occurred against friendly fire again on the return flight 98 The raid was a disaster Just six machines were destroyed at Grimbergen for the loss of 21 Fw 190s and two damaged Another eight sustained minor damage Seventeen pilots were missing including eight captured 99 Only II and III JG 26 hit Evere Between 44 and 52 Fw 190s from these units took off II and III JG 26 knocked out the flak towers and destroyed anything combustible hangars trucks fuel dumps and aircraft 100 127 Wing RCAF lost one Spitfire in the air and 11 on the ground 11 vehicles were damaged and one was destroyed A total of 60 61 Allied aircraft were destroyed at Evere 101 A large number of transports were located there and attracted the attention of German pilots which left many more Spitfires undamaged Given the number of Spitfires on the field the Canadian wing suffered low losses The Canadian wing commander Johnnie Johnson blamed the poor marksmanship of German pilots for failing to achieve further success 102 103 Allied losses are given at Evere as 32 fighters 22 twin engine aircraft and 13 four engine aircraft destroyed plus another nine single six twin and one four engine aircraft damaged In total II JG 26 losses included 13 Fw 190s destroyed and two damaged Nine of its pilots were missing five were killed and four captured III JG 26 lost six Bf 109s and four pilots Only one of them was captured the remainder were killed The amount of damage the Germans inflicted made up for the losses the Evere strike was a success 102 Brussels Melsbroek edit nbsp Fire crews attempt to save an Avro Lancaster from burning at Melsbroek Belgium This aircraft had landed at Melsbroek with the number 3 starboard inner engine out of action its propeller feathered Units I II III JG 27 and IV JG 54 Aircraft 43 Aircraft lost 21 Damaged 1 Pilots killed or captured 17 Jagdgeschwader 27 and IV Jagdgeschwader 54 JG 27 and JG 54 targeted Melsbroek airfield On 31 December JG 27 could only muster the following operational pilots and aircraft 22 22 from I 19 13 from II 13 15 from III and 16 17 from IV Gruppe 104 105 106 Geschwaderkommadore Wolfgang Spate had rebuilt IV JG 54 It had only 21 pilots and 15 of its 23 Fw 190s were operational Altogether 28 Bf 109s of JG 27 and 15 Fw 190s of JG 54 took off Seven fighters were lost to enemy aircraft and friendly AAA fire before they reached the target 107 The Germans hit Melsbroek hard According to Emil Clade leading III JG 27 the AAA positions were not manned and aircraft were bunched together or in lines which made perfect targets The attack caused considerable damage among the units based there and was a great success The Recce Wings had lost two entire squadrons worth of machines No 69 Squadron RAF lost 11 Vickers Wellingtons and two damaged No 140 Squadron RAF lost four Mosquitoes the losses being made good the same day 108 At least five Spitfires from No 16 Squadron RAF were destroyed No 271 Squadron RAF lost at least seven Harrow transports out of action A further 15 other aircraft were destroyed 139 Wing reported five B 25s destroyed and five damaged Some 15 to 20 USAAF bombers were also destroyed 109 110 Another source states that 13 Wellingtons were destroyed as were five Mosquitoes four Auster and five Avro Ansons from the Tactical Air Forces 2nd Communications Squadron Three Spitfires were also lost and two damaged 111 At least one RAF Transport Command Douglas Dakota was destroyed 112 The pilots of JG 27 and JG 54 claimed 85 victories and 40 damaged German reconnaissance was able to confirm 49 JG 27 suffered unacceptable losses 17 Bf 109s 11 pilots killed one wounded and three captured IV JG 54 lost two killed and one captured Three Fw 190s were lost and one damaged 113 114 Gilze Rijen and Eindhoven edit Units Stab I III IV JG 3 and KG 51 Aircraft 81 Aircraft lost 15 16 Damaged Unknown Pilots killed or captured 15 16 Jagdgeschwader 3 JG 3 and Kampfgeschwader 51 KG 51 were tasked with eliminating the Allied units at the Eindhoven base and Gilze Rijen airfield The field contained three RCAF reconnaissance squadrons operating a mix of Spitfires and Mustangs and eight Typhoon squadrons of the RAF and RCAF 115 Some 22 Bf 109s of I JG 3 took off 116 along with four from Stab JG 3 15 from III JG 3 and 19 Fw 190s from IV JG 3 82 KG 51 contributed some 21 of their 30 Messerschmitt Me 262 jets to the action 117 Some histories mistakenly include Kampfgeschwader 76 KG 76 on the order of battle but KG 76 did not take part in the mission 118 Each Staffel was expected to make at least three firing passes I JG 3 took off and joined the lead Gruppe IV Sturm JG 3 with III JG 3 following in the rear The Bf 109s and Fw 190s of the Geschwader reached the area at about 09 20 Geschwaderkommodore Heinrich Bar led the attack Some pilots made four passes destroying AAA emplacements fuel storage stations and vehicles 115 119 Nearly 300 aircraft were on the field along with huge stores of equipment and fuel The attack caused fires all over the airfield 120 JG 3 claimed 53 single engine and 11 twin engine aircraft destroyed Five fighters and one four engine bomber were also claimed damaged 121 Four Typhoons three Spitfires one Tempest and another unidentified aircraft were claimed shot down 121 All in all JG 3 destroyed 43 aircraft according to British records and damaged a further 60 some seriously The Geschwader believed it had destroyed 116 JG 3 did not come away unscathed I JG 3 lost nine of its aircraft and pilots a 50 loss rate Damage to the returning Gruppe aircraft meant the entire unit was unserviceable 115 RAF AAA were credited with shooting down five 122 JG 3 lost altogether 15 of the 60 fighters sent a 25 loss rate Some 15 pilots were missing nine were killed and five captured and another pilot was posting as missing in action and his fate remains unknown 123 Another source says 16 pilots ten killed or missing and six captured 124 The damage done to Eindhoven was significant and can be considered a victory for JG 3 It was also assisted by elements of JG 6 which had misidentified Eindhoven as one their targets The greatest losses were amongst the Recce squadrons of the Canadian 39 Wing which suffered 24 aircraft destroyed or damaged The visiting 124 Wing RAF lost 30 aircraft destroyed or damaged No 143 Wing RCAF lost 29 damaged or destroyed 125 It is likely that I JG 3 was responsible for about 2 3 of the damage 123 Another source gives 47 aircraft destroyed and 43 damaged 126 Possible V 2 missile launch attempts edit At least one V 2 missile on a mobile Meillerwagen launch trailer was observed being elevated to launch position by a USAAF 4th Fighter Group pilot over the northern German attack route near the town of Lochem on 1 January 1945 Possibly on account of the launch crew sighting the American fighter the rocket was quickly lowered from a near launch ready 85 elevation to 30 127 Results of raid editThe results of the raid are difficult to judge given the confusion over loss records It is likely more aircraft were destroyed than listed The Americans failed to keep a proper record of their losses and it appears the U S 8th Air Force losses were not included in loss totals When these estimates and figures are added to the losses listed in the table below it is likely that the correct figures are 232 destroyed 143 single engine 74 twin engine and 15 four engine and 156 damaged 139 single engine 12 twin engine and five four engine Researching individual squadron records confirms the destruction of even more USAAF aircraft This suggests at least a further 16 B 17s 14 B 24s eight P 51s and at least two P 47s were destroyed on top of that total A total of 290 destroyed and 180 damaged seems a more realistic summation than the conservative figures given by the USAAF RAF and RCAF Including the 15 Allied aircraft shot down and 10 damaged in aerial combat 305 destroyed and 190 damaged is the sum total of the attack 128 The results of the attacks are listed 129 little to no damage light damage medium damage heavy damage Target Target Code Allied Luftwaffe unit wing Allied forces Effect on Allied Squadrons according to official figures Antwerp Deurne B 70 JG 77 No 146 Wing RAF No 145 Wing RAF and USAAF Bomb Group also present 130 One aircraft confirmed destroyed around 15 damaged including three possibly destroyed 131 Notes 2 Asch Y 29 JG 11 USAAF 366th Fighter Group 352nd Fighter Group 132 One abandoned B 17 destroyed three damaged 130 Brussels Evere B 56 JG 26 and JG 54 No 127 Wing RCAF Second Tactical Air Force Communication Squadron and visiting units No 147 Squadron RAF and No 271 Squadron RAF USAAF 361st Fighter Group and 358th Fighter Group elements also present 133 34 destroyed 29 damaged 134 Brussels Grimbergen B 60 JG 26 and JG 54 Only six aircraft were present All six aircraft destroyed 29 Brussels Melsbroek B 58 JG 27 JG 54 and JG 4 No 34 Wing RAF No 139 Wing RAF 2nd Tactical Air Force Communication Squadron RAF and No 85 Group Communication Squadron RAF 35 destroyed 9 severely damaged 135 Eindhoven B 78 JG 3 No 124 Wing RAF No 143 Wing RCAF and No 39 Wing RCAF 136 124 and 143 Wings lost 26 Typhoons destroyed plus around 30 damaged 137 39 Wing lost a further 11 reconnaissance Spitfires destroyed one of which was destroyed via a collision with a shot down Fw 190 138 and 5 Mustangs Mk I destroyed Ghent Sint Denijs Westrem B 61 JG 1 No 131 Polish Wing RAF 16 destroyed several damaged 30 Gilze Rijen B 77 JG 3 and KG 51 No 35 Recce Wing RAF 132 One destroyed and one damaged 133 Heesch B 88 JG 6 No 401 Squadron RCAF No 402 Squadron RCAF No 411 Squadron RCAF No 412 Squadron RCAF No 442 Squadron RCAF 139 No losses Le Culot A 89 JG 4 USAAF 36th Fighter Group 373d Fighter Group 363rd TRG 132 No damage Maldegem B 65 JG 1 No 485 Squadron RNZAF and No 349 Belgian Squadron RAF 13 destroyed two damaged beyond repair 135 Metz Frescaty A 90 JG 53 USAAF IX Tactical Air Force 354th Fighter Group 362nd Fighter Group 40th Fighter Group 406th Fighter Group 425th Fighter Group 367th Fighter Group 368th Fighter Group 361st Fighter Group XII Tactical Air Force s 64th Fighter Wing 1 ere Escadre of the French Air Force 50th Fighter Group 358th Fighter Group 22 destroyed 11 damaged all Republic P 47 Thunderbolts 68 Ophoven Y 32 JG 4 No 130 Squadron RAF No 350 Belgian Squadron RAF One destroyed about six damaged 140 Sint Truiden A 92 JG 2 JG 4 and SG 4 USAAF 48th Fighter Group and 404th Fighter Group 10 destroyed 31 damaged 140 Volkel B 80 JG 6 No 56 Squadron RAF No 486 Squadron RNZAF One aircraft destroyed 140 Woensdrecht B 79 JG 77 No 132 Wing RAF No effect Ursel B 67 JG 1 USAAF 486th Bomb Group and No 61 Squadron RAF Three aircraft destroyed 140 Aftermath and casualties editMain article German and Allied aircraft losses during Operation Bodenplatte The operation achieved tactical surprise 141 but it was undone by poor execution due to low pilot skill resulting from poor training 141 The operation failed to achieve its aim 2 and that failure was very costly to German air power 142 Some of the units of the RAF RCAF and USAAF on the receiving end of Bodenplatte had been badly hit others not so badly but most had sustained some losses The Germans however launched Bodenplatte under a set of conditions such as poor planning and low pilot skill which clearly indicated any advantage gained would be outweighed by possible losses 3 Bodenplatte weakened the Jagdwaffe past any hope of rebuilding 6 7 General of the Luftwaffe Adolf Galland said We sacrificed our last substance 143 The Luftwaffe lost 143 pilots killed and missing while 70 were captured and 21 wounded including three Geschwaderkommodore five Gruppenkommandeure and 14 Staffelkapitane the largest single day loss for the Luftwaffe 144 Many of the formation leaders lost were experienced veterans which placed even more pressure on those who were left 144 Thus Bodenplatte was a very short term success but a long term failure Allied losses were soon made up while lost Luftwaffe aircraft and especially pilots were irreplaceable German historian Gerhard Weinberg wrote that it left the Germans weaker than ever and incapable of mounting any major attack again 145 In the remaining 17 weeks of war the Jagdwaffe struggled to recover sufficiently from the 1 January operation to remain an effective force In strategic terms German historian Werner Girbig wrote Operation Bodenplatte amounted to a total defeat 146 The exhausted German units were no longer able to mount an effective defence of German air space during Operation Plunder and Operation Varsity the Allied crossing of the Rhine River or the overall Western Allied invasion of Germany Subsequent operations were insignificant as a whole and could not challenge Allied air supremacy The only service in the Luftwaffe capable of profitable sorties was the night fighter force 147 In the last six weeks of the war the Luftwaffe was to lose another 200 pilots killed 148 Girbig wrote it was not until the autumn of 1944 that the German fighter forces set foot down the sacrificial path and it was the controversial Operation Bodenplatte that dealt this force a mortal blow and sealed its fate What happened from then on was no more than a dying flicker 7 Notes edit Agreement 4 of the 11 June 1940 between the United Kingdom and Poland recognised the Polish Navy and Army as sovereign but that of the Air Force was refused Agreement 7 reversed this decision in June 1944 and the Polish Air Force was returned to full Polish jurisdiction with the exception of combat assignments although the Poles retained the right to veto 1 Other sources say as many as 10 were destroyed along with another five possibles Another nine confirmed damaged plus another few damaged 130 References editCitations edit a b Peszke 1980 p 134 a b c d e Girbig 1975 p 73 a b Franks 1994 pp 163 165 Zaloga 2004 p 61 Girbig 1975 p 114 a b c d Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 262 a b c Girbig 1975 p 12 Girbig 1975 p 74 a b Caldwell 1991 pp 311 312 Franks 1994 no page inside cover Franks 1994 p 10 Franks 1994 pp 10 11 Price 2001 p 113 a b Franks 1994 p 11 a b c Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 10 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 7 a b c d e f Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 8 a b c Franks 1994 p 13 Girbig 1975 p 75 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 205 Uziel 2011 p 52 Johnson 2000 pp 294 295 Parker 1998 p 375 Girbig 1975 p 77 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 125 Girbig 1975 p 76 given in footnote Franks 1994 p 188 Parker 1998 pp 377 381 a b c d Franks 1994 p 198 a b Franks 1994 p 197 Johnson 2000 p 291 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 257 258 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 16 18 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 18 22 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 22 28 Franks 1994 p 75 Girbig 1975 p 83 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 28 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 34 a b Girbig 1975 p 85 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 39 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 278 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 290 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 51 52 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 277 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 54 59 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 62 Girbig 1975 p 88 Parker 1998 p 416 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 63 64 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 123 124 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 125 135 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 137 Parker 1998 p 396 Weal 1996 p 83 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 137 138 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 251 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 253 254 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 254 256 Girbig 1975 p 108 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 259 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 221 Franks 1994 p 139 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 224 225 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 228 235 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 233 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 245 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 294 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 94 95 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 96 97 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 98 99 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 104 Girbig 1975 p 93 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 107 111 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 111 114 Franks 2000 p 135 Girbig 1975 p 95 Franks 1994 p 128 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 117 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 140 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 143 a b c Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 276 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 146 Parker 1998 p 388 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 147 Scutts 1994 p 78 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 148 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 281 284 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 162 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 149 269 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 164 165 Franks 1994 p 136 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 281 Parker 1998 pp 385 391 Parker 1998 p 391 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 169 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 173 174 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 174 179 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 180 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 187 190 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 193 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 195 Parker 1998 p 440 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 200 Weal 2003 p 116 Franks 1994 p 109 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 201 205 206 140 Squadron RAF May 1941 May 1945 PDF J F Seward J Shaw Retrieved 8 September 2014 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 217 Weal 2003 p 117 Franks 2000 p 134 CL 2934 Imperial War Museum Retrieved 3 June 2012 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 219 Franks 1994 p 117 a b c Prien amp Stemmer 2002 pp 348 349 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 75 de Zeng Stankey amp Creek 2007 p 147 de Zeng Stankey amp Creek 2008 p 243 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 76 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 77 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 85 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 80 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 91 Girbig 1975 p 92 Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 86 88 Franks 2000 pp 132 134 Ordway amp Sharpe 1979 p 256 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 272 Girbig 1975 p 78 a b c Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 291 Franks 1994 p 193 a b c Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 289 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 293 Franks 1994 p 195 a b Franks 1994 p 196 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 71 Franks 1994 p 204 Parker 1998 p 402 Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 288 a b c d Manrho amp Putz 2004 p 295 a b Johnson 2000 p 292 Prien amp Stemmer 2002 p 349 Parker 1998 p 486 a b Manrho amp Putz 2004 pp 272 273 Weinberg 2005 p 769 Girbig 1975 p 112 Girbig 1975 p 123 Girbig 1975 p 137 Bibliography edit Caldwell Donald L 1991 JG 26 Top Guns of the Luftwaffe New York Ivy Books ISBN 978 0 8041 1050 1 Caldwell Donald Muller Richard 2007 The Luftwaffe Over Germany Defense of the Reich MBI Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 85367 712 0 de Zeng H L Stankey D G Creek E J 2007 Bomber Units of the Luftwaffe 1933 1945 A Reference Source Vol 1 Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 1 85780 279 5 de Zeng Henry Stankey Douglas Creek Eddie 2008 Bomber Units of the Luftwaffe 1933 1945 A Reference Source Vol 2 Surrey Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 1 903223 87 1 Franks Norman 1994 The Battle of the Airfields 1 January 1945 London Grub St ISBN 978 1 898697 15 2 Franks Norman 2000 Fighter Command Losses of the Second World War Operational Losses Aircraft and Crews 1944 1945 Incorporating Air Defence Great Britain and 2nd TAF Vol 3 Midland London ISBN 978 1 85780 093 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Girbig Werner 1975 Six Months to Oblivion The Eclipse of the Luftwaffe Fighter Force Over the Western Front 1944 45 Schiffer Publishing ISBN 978 0 88740 348 4 Johnson J E 2000 1956 Wing Leader Fighter Pilots London Goodall Publications Ltd ISBN 978 0 907579 87 8 Manrho John Putz Ron 2004 Bodenplatte The Luftwaffe s Last Hope The Attack on Allied Airfields New Year s Day 1945 Crowborough UK Hikoki Publications ISBN 978 1 902109 40 4 Ordway Frederick I III Sharpe Mitchell R 1979 The Rocket Team Apogee Books Space Series 36 New York Thomas Y Crowell ISBN 978 1 894959 00 1 Peszke Michael Alfred October 1980 A Synopsis of Polish Allied Military Agreements During World War Two The Journal of Military History 44 3 128 134 ISSN 0899 3718 Parker Danny S 1998 1994 To Win The Winter Sky The Air War Over the Ardennes 1944 1945 Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 938289 35 7 permanent dead link Price Alfred 2001 The Last Year of the Luftwaffe May 1944 May 1945 London Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1 85367 440 2 Prien Jochen Stemmer Gerhard 2002 Jagdgeschwader 3 Udet in WWII Stab and I JG 3 in Action with the Messerschmitt Bf 109 Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Military History ISBN 978 0 7643 1681 4 Scutts Jerry 1994 Mustang aces of the Eighth Air Force Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 447 3 Uziel Daniel 2011 Arming the Luftwaffe The German Aviation Industry in World War II McFarland Incorporated Publishers ISBN 978 0 7864 6521 7 Weal John 1996 Focke Wulf Fw 190 Aces of the Western Front Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 595 1 Weal John 2003 Jagdgeschwader 27 Afrika London UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 538 9 Weinberg Gerhard 2005 A World At Arms 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 61826 7 Zaloga Steven 2004 Battle of the Bulge 1944 London UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 810 6 Further reading edit Forsythe Robert JV 44 The Galland Circus Burgess Hill West Sussex UK Classic Publications 1996 ISBN 0 9526867 0 8 Forsythe Robert amp Laurier Jagdverband 44 Squadron of Experten Osprey Oxford 2008 ISBN 978 1 84603 294 3 Girbig Werner Start im Morgengrauen Germany Pietsch Verlag Paul Pietsch Verlage GmbH Co 1997 ISBN 3 613 01292 8 Weal John Bf 109 Defence of the Reich Aces Osprey Oxford 2006 ISBN 1 84176 879 0External links edit439 Squadron Log 1 January 1945 Operation Strength of JG 1 at the time of Unternehmen Bodenplatte To win the Winter Sky by Danny S Parker Portal nbsp United KingdomOperation Bodenplatte at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Operation Bodenplatte amp oldid 1223098255, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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