The first combat experiences of the Royal Hungarian Air Force and Slovak
Air Force, March 1939 – a conflict covered up the Nazi media, so politically
consequential was it.
This story is a short but devastating episode from the turbulent history
of Central Europe in the 20th Century, one that
is hardly known outside the countries concerned. This short conflict was hushed
up even in the German media in 1939, because the Third Reich tried to avoid
clashes between their potential allies, and were especially angry because of the
independent Hungarian military action against Slovakia, with at least one ethnic
German Slovak civilian killed as a result of the fighting.
Sub-Carpathia was a part of the Kingdom of Hungary for a thousand years, but Hungary lost it after World War I, and it became
part of Czechoslovakia until March 1939.
Between 1939 and 1944 it was a part of Hungary again, but the Soviet Red
Army captured it in the late autumn of 1944. After Second World War, in June
1945, a treaty was signed between Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union, ceding
Sub-Carpathia to the Soviet Union.
In 1939, Hungary occupied its former
territory, Sub-Carpathia, supported by its reconnaissance and bomber forces.
When the Hungarian troops entered what Slovakia regarded as its territory, a
short but fierce clash started between the contending air forces. Slovak planes
strafed and bombed Hungarian ground troops on 23rd March 1939, but the heaviest
clashes happened on the very next day, when extensive air-to-air combat
occurred.
The text contains details of the historical background to the conflict, a
full account of the combat, notes on Hungarian aviators decorated for their
performance, short biographies of Hungarian aviators credited with aerial
victories, and a list of Hungarian aerial victories. Besides this, the book
contains over 100 rare and mostly previously-unpublished images, as well as a
selection of superb colour profiles showing camouflage and markings for the
aircraft of both air forces.
Available late 2012