Log in

View Full Version : Night Witches


Iceman
07-25-07, 05:59 PM
Was an intresting bit of fact I came across thought I'd share...

http://pratt.edu/~rsilva/images/witches.jpg

A group of Night Witches from the 588th Night Bomber Regiment returning from a successful raid behind enemy lines. In the center is the 588th's commander, Major Yevdokia Bershanskaya.

The Nachthexen
In 1942 the Soviet Union formed three regiments of women combat pilots who flew night combat missions of harassment bombing. They flew obsolete Polikarpov Po-2 biplanes, that were otherwise used as trainers, and which could only carry 2 bombs that weighted less than a ton altogether. They were so successful and deadly the Germans feared them, calling them "Nachthexen"—night witches. (Some sources state that they were nicknamed "Night Witches" because it was made up entirely of female pilots and they flew their missions in the wooden Po-2's at night.)

The Night Witches were the women of the 588th Night Bomber Regiment. All of the mechanics and bomb loaders of this regiment, as in the 586th IAP and the 587th Bomber Regiment, were also women.

The Soviet women bomber pilots earned in total 23 Hero of the Soviet Union medals and dozens of Orders of the Red Banner. Two women bomber pilots—Katya Ryabova and Nadya Popova—in one night raided the Germans 18 times. The Po-2 pilots flew more than 24,000 sorties and dropped 23,000 tons of bombs. Most of the women bomber pilots who survived the war in 1945 had racked up nearly 1,000 missions each. They had served so exemplarily throughout the whole war that they participated in the final onslauqht on Berlin.

Tactics used by the Night Witches
The 588th, like all night bomber regiments, usually practiced harassment bombing. This consisted of going to the encampments, rear area bases, supply depots, etc., where the enemy was trying to rest from a day of heavy fighting to another, and bombing them. The strategic importance of the targets was seldom high, but the psychological effect of terror and insecurity and constant restlessness in the Germans (and Rumanians, Italians, Finns...) was very effective.

Harassment night bombing was very difficult to do, considering the low performance of the Po-2 biplanes (their top speed was 94 mph/150 kph, less even than most World War I fighters!) and how vulnerable that made them to enemy night fighters. But the Night Witches learned their trade well. The Po-2 was very slow, but it was also very maneuverable. When a German Me-109 tried to intencept it, the Russian plane could turn violently and nimbly at much less than the 109's minimum speed (stall speed), requiring that the German make a wide circle to come in for another pass. Then he was again met with the same evasive tactic, time after time. Many pilots got to nearly earth-level, flying low enough to be hidden behind hedgerows! The German fighter could only try again and again until he got frustrated and just left the Po-2 alone. No wonder, German pilots were promised an Iron Cross for shooting down a Po-2.
Note: Actually, the stall speed of the E, F, and G models of the Me-109 (the ones used in the Soviet Union) was nearing 120 mph/192 kph, so the Messerschmitt could never equal the speed of the Po-2, because even the Russian biplane's top speed was lesser than the German fighter's stall speed. The other fighter (more commonly) used in the Eastern Front, the Focke-Wulf FW-190A, had also a high stall speed, so its predicament was the same.
The Witches would fly to a certain distance of the enemy encapments that were to be the target, and cut their engine. They would then glide silently, silently... When the Fascists started to hear the whistle of the wind against the Po-2's wing bracing wires, they realized in panic that it was too late. The Night Witches would sneak up on them and release their bombs, then restart their engines and fly away home.
The Po-2 would pass often undetected by the night fighters' radar, because of the mildly radar absorbing nature of the canvas surfaces, and the fact that mostly they flew near the ground. German planes equipped with infrared seekers would not see the little heat generated by the small, 110 horsepower engine. Searchlights, however, were another story. The Germans at Stalingrad developed what the Russians called a "flak circus". They would bring out the flak guns that had been hidden during the day, and lay them in concentric circles around probable targets, and the same with the searchlights. Po-2s crossing the perimeter in pairs in the straight line flight path typical of untrained but determined Russian flyers were usually ripped to pieces by the Flak 37 guns. The 588th, however, developed another tactic. They flew in formations of three. Two would go in first, attract the attention of the searchlights, and when all of them pointed to them in the sky, separate suddenly in opposite directions and maneuver wildly to try to shake them off. The German searchlight operators would follow them, while the third bomber who was farther back snuck in through the darkened path made by her 2 comrades and hit the target unopposed. She would then get out, rejoin with the other two, and they would switch places until all three had delivered their payloads. It took nerves of steel to be a decoy and willingly attract enemy fire, but as Nadya Popova said: "It worked."

Night Witches'
Polikarpov Po-2/U-2 Aircraft


http://pratt.edu/~rsilva/images/po-2.jpg

This is a Polikarpov Po-2 biplane similar to those used by the 588th Night Bomber Regiment. Most were unarmed except for their ordnance, but some carried a 7.62mm machine gun on a swivel-mount in the observer's position in the rear.


http://pratt.edu/~rsilva/images/po-2fly.jpg

This is a photograph of the same Po-2 in flight near Moscow in 1942. This particular example was used for reconnaissance.

http://pratt.edu/~rsilva/witches.htm

These ladies remind me of AL...I say that with the uttmost fearful respect too. http://www.cyberallies.com/support/nfphpbb/images/smiles/icon_smurfin.gif

Iron Budokan
07-25-07, 06:42 PM
I had heard about these women before but I can't remember where. I think it was a book I read recently. Anyway, good find and thanks for sharing...pretty awesome about how they would glide in, the wind whistling through the wire rigging. Just like the shriek of a witch on her broom.

Rockstar
07-25-07, 06:47 PM
So what makes you think they're witches?

BEDEMIR: Tell me, what do you do with witches?
VILLAGER #2: Burn!
CROWD: Burn, burn them up!
BEDEMIR: And what do you burn apart from witches?
VILLAGER #1: More witches!
VILLAGER #2: Wood!
BEDEMIR: So, why do witches burn?
[pause]
VILLAGER #3: B--... 'cause they're made of wood...?
BEDEMIR: Good!
CROWD: Oh yeah, yeah...
BEDEMIR: So, how do we tell whether she is made of wood?
VILLAGER #1: Build a bridge out of her.

:p

mbthegreat
07-25-07, 06:52 PM
ahhh classic.

You see how the soviet union is very socially advanced, letting woman fight in the 40s no less.

Chock
07-25-07, 07:48 PM
This squadron, and one of its women pilots, features in the alternative history science fiction novel, World War, by Harry Turtledove, in which aliens attack the planet Earth at the height of WW2 in 1942, forcing the various warring nations to form an uneasy alliance in order to repel the invaders.
The author makes some interesting use of the tactics these pilots used, in the novel (which despite the somewhat pulpy premise, is actually a very entertaining read).
Recommended, if you like sci-fi mixed with real history.

:D Chock

Safe-Keeper
07-25-07, 09:01 PM
But they can't draft women! They make babies! Waaa-- oh, they already did?

You see how the soviet union is very socially advanced, letting woman fight in the 40s no less.Not that they had much of a choice.

Heibges
07-26-07, 12:38 AM
I had heard about these women before but I can't remember where. I think it was a book I read recently. Anyway, good find and thanks for sharing...pretty awesome about how they would glide in, the wind whistling through the wire rigging. Just like the shriek of a witch on her broom.

There is a short passage from a diary of a Night Witch, I believe, in the Il-2 Sturmovik manual.

AntEater
07-26-07, 08:10 AM
Pioneering role aside, most of the pilots of the soviet night attack units were male.
The 588th (later Guards) night bomber regiment was just one of many such units.
A typical soviet invention, born out of having nothing else.
A motley collection of every trainer and obsolete bomber/recon biplane, later standartized to the U-2/Po-2 utility aircraft flies at night, flying low from pastures and meadows close to the frontline, dropping small bombs (2 to 10 kg, 50 kg at most) on every visible target.
Not that much was hit by that, aside from a few lucky hits, it mostly robbed the sleep of the common Landser. But that effect was not to be underestimated.
"Nachthexen" is AFAIK an invention of the german speaking soviet field propaganda. German terms for those planes were "Rollbahnkrähen" (road crows) or "Nähmaschinen (sewing machines).
Fighting those planes was of course difficult. Nightfighters were hard to come by on the east front anyway. The few "real" nightfighting units like Prince Wittgenstein's I./NJG 5 with its radar equipped Ju 88s and train mounted radar sites were used at focal points like Leningrad or Kursk and even there concentrated on conventional soviet bombers like Il-4s, B-25 Mitchells or the rare four engined Pe-8s.
Pure east front nightfighting units were often establish ad hoc by existing units. Like KG 55, where individual crews went nightfighting in very irregularly modified "gun nose" He 111s. Even the established east fron nightfighting units NJG 100 and 200
were drastically understrenght and had to make do with whatever aircraft they had on hand. Airborne radar was generally not available and the german Lichtenstein Radar was useless at low altitude anyway. Ground sites were rare as well, so mostly it was searchlights and eyeballs.
The best plane for shooting down these harassment biplanes was the Fw 189 recon plane, but only a few of those were available. Nethertheless, there were nightfighters who managed to shoot down large numbers of biplanes, sometimes 4 or 5 in a night.

The tactic was so effective the Luftwaffe copied it. From late 1942 on, ad hoc Störkampfstaffeln were raised at local HQs. These flew a vast collection of every biplane type available, not only german trainer types like Go 145 or Fw 44, but also captured planes like Letovs or Fokkers and even Po-2s turned around and used for the same purpose against the Soviets.
The pilots were something as well: an almost hollywood cliche' bunch of outcasts, misfits, medical cases and ex civilian pilots. Later, many foreign pilots flew night harassment missions in special squadrons, mostly Latvians, Estonians and Ukrainians but also quite a few "real" Russians which were later incorporated into Vlassovs ROA.
From late 1943 on, these units, now authonomous Nachtschlachtgruppen, converted to the Ju 87 Stuka, as the old Stuka units converted to the Fw 190 fighter-bomber.
The Stuka was of course a wholly different story than a biplane: ten times the bombload, 20mm cannons and fully instrumented.
Stuka equipped NSGs were used against the western allies over France and Italy in 1944/45 but took heavy losses from british and US nightfighters, even though the slow and maneuvrable Ju 87 was hard to shoot down. Eventually the NSG 20 converted to Fw 190s.
In the last months of the war, most german nightfighters were used in that role, as jamming and sheer numbers made it almost impossible to intercept RAF bombers.
The Ju 88G nightfighter was easily converted into a heavy fighter-bomber by adding the standard Ju 88 bomb racks under the wings and its heavy firepower made it an excellent strafer.

The Israelis also used light planes for bombing in the 1947 war of independence, but they flew mostly daylight missions.
The North Koreans used the same tactics as the soviets in the korean war, with the same results. US nightfighters found it very difficult to shoot down a Po-2 without colliding with it. It was of course a disadvantage that the 1950s USAF nightfighters were all jets. USMC prop driven Corsair nightfighters had more success.
Recently, the Tamil rebels on Sri Lanka resorted to the same tactic. The "Tamil air tigers" flew night bombing raids in converted light aircraft.

Smaragdadler
07-26-07, 08:46 AM
Dion Fortune claims to have participated in the "Magical Battle of Britain", which was an attempt by British occultists to magically aid the war effort and which aimed to forestall the impending German invasion during the darkest days of World War II. Her efforts in regard to this are recorded in a series of letters she wrote at the time. The effort involved in this endeavour is said to have contributed to her death shortly after the war ended...
-> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dion_Fortune

...During the Second World War she organised her own contribution to the war effort on a magical level - this project is now published as The Magical Battle of Britain. The Society of the Inner Light continued to operate its lodge at 3 Queensborough Terrace in the midst of the Blitz, and even when the house was damaged by bombs the disruption was minimal.

http://www.servantsofthelight.org/aboutSOL/bio-dion-fortune.html


-> http://www.amazon.com/Magical-Battle-Britain-Dion-Fortune/dp/192875421X
:)