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AUTHOR: Bernad/Roba/Karlenko
FORMAT: Pb96pp 150 Bw/col 303x226 Pb
Written by acknowledged experts on this important, but often overlooked
theatre of operations, the two-volumes of From Barbarossa to Odessa: The
Luftwaffe Strikes South East, represent a major contribution to the available
literature on the subject. The books will be essential reading for historians of
the air war in the east and of the Luftwaffe and its allied air forces and
aviation modellers. New, and often unexpected and controversial information
continues to emerge on the massive air campaign fought over the Russian Front
during Second World War. This book is the second of two volumes, the result of
lengthy and meticulous study, on the air combat that took place on the southern
flank of the Eastern Front following Operation Barbarossa. The period covered in
these volumes saw the occupation of Bessarabia and southwest Ukraine and
concluded when the area’s regional capital, Odessa, was captured by the Germans
on 16 October 1941. This was one of the most bitter and intensive air campaigns
fought in the east due to the fact that local Soviet commanders dispersed most
of their air assets in time, preventing their destruction on the ground. Thus,
in this little-studied campaign, the Soviet Air Force was able to respond
effectively to the Axis onslaught and achieved some of its greatest successes of
1941. The often overlooked involvement of aircraft from Axis states other than
Germany, such as the Romanians who claimed a total of over 600 air victories,
the Hungarians, the Slovaks and even the Bulgarians, is covered in the book.
Their involvement makes this campaign of great interest because of the large
variety of aircraft types employed by both sides. Aided by a large number of
previously unpublished photographs, the book tells the story of the campaign
from both sides and provides detailed eyewitness accounts from individual pilots
who were involved in the fighting. Besides day-to-day operations, appendices
contain comprehensive victory and loss lists.
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