Where was the Luftwaffe defeated? (2 Viewers)

Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules

stona

Major
9,374
3,141
Mar 28, 2009
There was a thread a while ago in which it was posited that the Luftwaffe was defeated on the Eastern front,contrary to the generally accepted Anglo-American view.
I couldn't find the overall statistics at the time to show where the Luftwaffe's losses occured,but stumbled across them looking for something else. They are pretty unequivocal numbers,unless you believe that the Luftwaffe was materially defeated in 1942.

Fighterlosses.gif


The table is published in U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, European War, Volume 2A, Statistical Appendix to Overall Report and is collated from German,OKL documents.

Cheers
Steve
 
Last edited:
Luftwaffe was more than just single engined fighters..

Yes but from 1943 onwards the objective,particularly of the USAAF,was to gain air superiority. To this end it concentrated on the destruction of the Luftwaffe's fighter force. Luftwaffe multi engined bombers were hardly relevant as such on the Western front.German production in 1943/4 was predominantly of single engined fighters.You can only shoot down what the enemy puts up.

Prod.gif


Cheers
Steve
 
Yes but from 1943 onwards the objective,particularly of the USAAF,was to gain air superiority. To this end it concentrated on the destruction of the Luftwaffe's fighter force.

It was the USAAF objective only however.. you want to judge other's performance by applying USAAF goals and tactics to measure their success, but IMO its flawed thought. Soviet did not want to shoot down German fighters. They wanted to escort Shturmoviks, and shoot down Germans fighter and bomber when needed. British did not want to shoot down German fighter either. They wanted to minimize losses of their night bomber so they can keep up operation.

Luftwaffe multi engined bombers were hardly relevant as such on the Western front.

They were however very relevant on the other fronts. Western front was hardly the only relevant thing in the war. German bombers played a vital role in the Eastern Front, supporting German land army, and that is where the war was decided.

German production in 1943/4 was predominantly of single engined fighters.You can only shoot down what the enemy puts up.

Very true. But I still do not get how shooting down many German fighters is the same as shooting down many German fighters, bombers, attack, recon and transport, ie. the Luftwaffe.

If shooting down fighters is a measure how the LW was defeated then we can close the thread since the German still produced a lot more than shot down and the number of their serivce fighters actually increases steady until 1945... that said, the LW was defeated, or at least certain lost ability control air by two factor IMO: sheer output of American factories (simply too many American planes to catch and shoot down) and destruction of their oil capacity by USAAF bombers.
 
http://don-caldwell.we.bs/jg26/thtrlosses.htm

Nice chart on losses East vs West.

4.06 times as many aircraft were lost in combat in the West than were lost in the East, a ratio reasonably close to Groehler's 3.41 for all "losses". The most chilling statistic for the JG 26 pilots appears in the sortie data. An airplane flying a combat mission in the West was 7.66 times more likely to be destroyed than one on a similar mission in the East. It is clear that the burden of sacrifice was borne by the Luftwaffe aircrew on the Western Front and over the Reich, not on the Eastern Front.
 
The British most certainly did want to shoot down German fighters. They had learnt a bitter lesson in 1941/42 trying to do this and were only able to do this effectively much later in the war. Unlike the USAAF the RAF didn't have a fighter capable of doing the job at range.

It is worth noting that a significant percentage of twin engined aircraft produced from late 1942 onwards did go to the nightfighter arm. I will attempt to find the numbers at home over the week end.

The Luftwaffe did of course suffer losses in bomber,transport and "others" on the Eastern front just as it did in the West.Bomber and Transport losses in the Mediterranean make sobering reading. Someone who has more time on their hands can dig for the numbers of multi engined aircraft destroyed by the RAF and USAAF on the ground or at the factories before they were ever accepted into service. This was the effect of the Second Front in the air so often minimised by Eastern Front promoters.
Germany lost the war on the Eastern front,I don't think anyone would deny that,but the Luftwaffe was systematically ground into oblivion and denied vital resources(look at charts of production v requirements of just about anything,fuel,rubber,engines etc from around the end of the first quarter in 1944) on the Western Front,very largely by the USAAF.
You don't destroy an Air Force simply by shooting down its aircraft though that is a good starting point.

Cheers

Steve
 
When one of the Germans' top echelon was interviewed, by the Russians, post-war, he was asked what he considered to be their most telling defeat, thinking he would say Stalingrad. They were somewhat shattered, when he said that they never recovered from the damage inflicted in the Battle of Britain.
 
When one of the Germans' top echelon was interviewed, by the Russians, post-war, he was asked what he considered to be their most telling defeat, thinking he would say Stalingrad. They were somewhat shattered, when he said that they never recovered from the damage inflicted in the Battle of Britain.

According to Stephen Bungay - it was Field-Marshall Gerd von Runstedt.
 
It was the USAAF objective only however.. you want to judge other's performance by applying USAAF goals and tactics to measure their success, but IMO its flawed thought. Soviet did not want to shoot down German fighters. They wanted to escort Shturmoviks, and shoot down Germans fighter and bomber when needed. British did not want to shoot down German fighter either. They wanted to minimize losses of their night bomber so they can keep up operation.

The USAAF objectives were threefold: First was to crush German Industry and restrict supply of war materials critical to The German prosecution of the war. Second was to enable air superiority over Allied land forces. Third was to provide Tactical interdiction of men and material to the front.

Destruction of Luftwaffe over Germany was a complimentary objective. The Soviets were more focused on 2.) and 3.) and not at all on 1.)


They were however very relevant on the other fronts. Western front was hardly the only relevant thing in the war. German bombers played a vital role in the Eastern Front, supporting German land army, and that is where the war was decided.

The war was decided when a.) The Wermacht was prevented from holding Soviet Oil production, b.) the Wermacht was prevented from capturing the Suez Canal, c.) when the German submarine force failed to prevent the flow of material, supplies an men from the US to USSR and Britain, d.) when the Soviet army defeated the German army in the East, e.) when the Allied armies defeated the Wermacht in the West, f.) when the USAAF and RAF destroyed German industrial capability, specifically oil and chemicals, g.) when the Luftwaffe was destroyed - enabling f.) and e.)

Very true. But I still do not get how shooting down many German fighters is the same as shooting down many German fighters, bombers, attack, recon and transport, ie. the Luftwaffe.

The key is killing German fighter pilots, thereby stripping German bombers, attack, recon and transport operations of effective capability against Allied fighters. In addition, daylight strategic bombing was effectively stopped (RAF in 1941, USAAF in fall 1943) by the Luftwaffe. It is possible the Oil campaign could have achieved stoppage but we will never know for sure to what degree.

If shooting down fighters is a measure how the LW was defeated then we can close the thread since the German still produced a lot more than shot down and the number of their serivce fighters actually increases steady until 1945... that said, the LW was defeated, or at least certain lost ability control air by two factor IMO: sheer output of American factories (simply too many American planes to catch and shoot down) and destruction of their oil capacity by USAAF bombers.

German technology in re-generating skilled fighter pilots never matched their ability to produce machines. While the manufacturing capability of the US was unmatched, it was the ability to plan and deliver an endless supply of trained crews that got the the USAAF through the August through October, 1943 period - then the delivery and utilization of a high performance fighter with very long range to carve out the Luftwaffe fighter pilot cadre from December through May, 1944.

 
Germany lost the war on the Eastern front,I don't think anyone would deny that

I wouldn't "deny" this, but it depends of the way you see the things. I have serious doubts that if the war started like historically, the Russians, alone, would be able to set a foot in Germany. Thus, Germany lost the war in the East or West? It's not incorrect even to say it was in both.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
If shooting down fighters is a measure how the LW was defeated then we can close the thread since the German still produced a lot more than shot down and the number of their serivce fighters actually increases steady until 1945...

No it did not.

In January 1942 there were 1,324 fighters available.

The number peaked in July 1943 with a total of 1,849

By July 1944 this had FALLEN to 1,523. There is a slight recovery to a September 1944 peak of 1,610 (still less than mid 1943 and less than its strength in May 1940 of 1,758 fighters) before which the graph continues inexorably downwards.

The faster the Luftwaffe produced aircraft the quicker the USAAF/RAF shot them and their barely trained pilots down.

Only during one month of the entire war (July 1943) did the Luftwaffe have more fighters available than it did in May 1940,immiediately prior to the Battle of France.

Compare those numbers with the enormous build up of air power by the Western Allies in the same month,September 1944.

USAAF 5,490 Fighters 7,007 Bombers
RAF 7,651 Fighters 6,044 Bombers.

These numbers were mostly higher for both Air Forces by the end of the war. Only the number of RAF bombers was reduced.

Cheers
Steve
 
the LW was defeated, or at least certain lost ability control air by two factor IMO: sheer output of American factories (simply too many American planes to catch and shoot down) and destruction of their oil capacity by USAAF bombers.

Germany disappeared under a hail of high explosive ordnance,particularly in the last months of the war.

tonnage.gif


Only 9.5% of this was aimed at POL (and rubber).

Bombing.gif


It had this effect.

Gas.gif


What is often overlooked is that similar charts can be drawn for just about every aspect of German production,transport etc.

Cheers

Steve
 
Last edited:
My opinion is that whilst the combat losses in the air were heavily weighted to the west for the LW, the overall loss rates including non-operational losses, captures and the like tipped this balance back in favour of the eastern front. More than half the LW losses in the east had nothing to do with the VVS. Bad weather, poor airfields and the advanacing Red Army took their toll on the LW.

Somewhere ( I will try and find it) I read that during the Bagration operation, LW losses to non combat causes were seven times those of the losses due to enemy air activity.

The Eastern front was just as much of a meat grinder for the LW as it was for the Heer.
 
Aircraft losses are certainly important but even more important are PILOT losses. As pilots are killed they are replaced but as the war progresses the replacements are of lower and lower quality which in turn accelerates the loss of aircraft and lowers kill ratios. Germany could never hope to equal the US ability to manufacture aircraft or field quality pilots. The Germans on the western front were indeed overwhelmed by sheer numers of aircraft and pilots
 
Compare those numbers with the enormous build up of air power by the Western Allies in the same month,September 1944.

USAAF 5,490 Fighters 7,007 Bombers
RAF 7,651 Fighters 6,044 Bombers.

These numbers were mostly higher for both Air Forces by the end of the war. Only the number of RAF bombers was reduced.

Cheers
Steve

Steve - that is a curious number for USAAF strength in Sept 1944? are you stating ETO+MTO?

By quick calc the 8th and 9th AF FC had about 2200 fighters operational. The MTO-USAAF of 12th and 15th AF had about 1/2 that in context of operational strength actually assigned to all the Fighter Groups.

Short question - number seems 2x for fighters, The bomber number when you include all the light and mediums with the heavies seems closer to correct.
 
When one of the Germans' top echelon was interviewed, by the Russians, post-war, he was asked what he considered to be their most telling defeat, thinking he would say Stalingrad. They were somewhat shattered, when he said that they never recovered from the damage inflicted in the Battle of Britain.

According to Stephen Bungay - it was Field-Marshall Gerd von Runstedt.

I'm sure you're right.....and there is some merit in this opinion, no doubt, it was a serious set of losses (as in fact were all the losses from Poland and on to France) that would later reveal themselves as very costly.
But it also has to be bourne in mind on any discussion of the German view of the eastern front that despite the obvious results some Germans were loath to admit they had actually suffered defeat on the EF at all.
It was always due to losses demands elsewhere and not really down to any significant defeat at the hands of the Russian forces.
Nazi ideology at work I think.
 
The figures for the USAAF come from the "USAAF Office of Statistical Supply,HQ USAAF" and represent the total number of combat planes,by type,in both the ETO and MTO.

The RAF numbers come from the Central Statistical Office and likewise represent totals in both theatres.

Both certainly represent the total numbers in theatre,not just those operational.

Don't forget the Luftwaffe numbers,from OKL documents,which I posted represent total strength in all theatres,including the Eastern Front,also including those non operational.

Cheers
Steve
 
Last edited:
Gentlemen ~ I have a copy of the written order in April 1943 to move LW gruppen from the Ost to the West which slowly accumulated into Reichsverteidigung
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back