Aerial warfare in the Winter War

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The aerial warfare in the Winter War was the aerial aspect of the Winter War between Finland and the Soviet Union from 30 November 1939 to 13 March 1940. While the Soviet air forces greatly outnumbered the Finnish Air Force, the Soviet bombing campaign was largely ineffective, and Finnish pilots and antiaircraft gunners inflicted significant losses on the Soviets.

Soviet Air Force

Soviet Tupolev SB bombers appears on the sky above Helsinki 30 November 1939.

The Soviet Union enjoyed air superiority throughout the war. The Soviet Air Force, supporting the Red Army's invasion with about 2,500 aircraft of the Soviet Air Forces, (the most common of which was the Tupolev SB-2 bomber,[1] was not as effective as the Soviets might have hoped. The material damage by bomber attacks was slight, as Finland did not offer many valuable targets for strategic bombing. Targets were often small village depots of small value. Finland had only a few modern highways, so the railway systems were the main target for bombers. The rail tracks were cut thousands of times but were easily repaired, and the Finns usually had trains running in a matter of hours.[1] The Soviet air force learned from its early mistakes, and by late February they instituted more effective tactics.[2]


Finland's capital city, Helsinki, was bombed on the first day of the war but was the target of raids only a few times thereafter. All in all, Finland lost only 5 percent of its total man-hour production time due to Soviet bombings. Nevertheless, bombings affected thousands of civilians as the Soviets launched 2,075 bombing attacks on 516 localities.[1] Air raids killed 957 Finnish civilians.[3] The city of Viipuri, a major Soviet objective, was almost leveled by nearly 12,000 bombs.[4] No attacks on civilian targets were mentioned in Soviet radio or newspaper reports. In January 1940, the Pravda continued to stress that no civilian targets in Finland had been struck, even by accident.[5]

Soviet aircraft

At the start of hostilities the Soviet Air Force had the following aircraft in service:[6]


Fighters

  • I-15: biplane fighter (Chaika-"seagull")
  • I-15 bis : (improved version of I-15)
  • I-16 monoplane fighter (Ishak-"donkey"; called Silpiorava, "flying squirrel" by the Finns)
  • I-16 bis
  • I-153 biplane fighter (also called the Chaika; a variant of the I-15)

Bombers

  • DB-3 twin engined long-range bomber
  • SB-2 twin engined high-speed bomber (Katyusha- "Catherine")
  • SB-2 bis
  • TB-3 four-engined heavy bomber

Reconnaissance

  • Po-2 multi-purpose biplane (kukuruznik-"crop-duster")

Naval aviation

  • MBR-2 multi-purpose flying boat
  • MBR2 bis

Finnish Air Force

The Finns ordered 18 British Bristol Blenheim light bombers in 1936

At the beginning of the war, Finland had a very small air force, with only 114 combat airplanes fit for duty. Therefore, Finnish air missions were very limited and fighter aircraft were mainly used to repel Soviet bombers. Old-fashioned and few in numbers, Finnish aircraft could not offer support to the Finnish ground troops. In spite of aircraft losses throughout the war, the Finnish Air Force grew by 50 percent by the end of the war. Most new aircraft shipments arrived during January 1940.[7]

Finnish fighter pilots often dove into Soviet formations that outnumbered them ten or even twenty times. Finnish fighters shot down 240 confirmed Soviet aircraft, against the Finnish loss of 26. A Finnish forward air base often consisted of only a frozen lake, a windsock, a telephone set and some tents.[8] Air-raid warnings were given by Finnish women organized by the Lotta Svärd. Finnish antiaircraft gunners shot down between 314 to 444 Soviet aircraft. [1]

Finnish aircraft

At the start of hostilities, the Finnish Air Force had 146 aircraft of all types at its disposal. The primary fighter aircraft were 15 Bristol Bulldog IVs, which had entered service in 1935, and 41 of the more modern Fokker D.XXI. There were also 18 license-built Bristol Blenheim bombers. In 1939, an order had been placed in Italy for 25 Fiat G.50 fighters; two were being assembled in Sweden when the war broke out.

During the war, a number of aircraft were ordered from abroad:[9]

In air combat, Finland used the "finger four" formation (four planes split into two pairs, one flying low and the other high, with each plane fighting independently of the others, yet supporting its wingman in combat), which was superior to the Soviet tactic of three fighters flying in a Vic formation. This formation and the credo of Finnish pilots to always attack, no matter the odds, contributed to the failure of Soviet bombers to inflict substantial damage against Finnish positions and population centres.[9]

See also

References

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Trotter 2002, pages 187–193
  2. Trotter (2002), p. 193
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  4. Trotter (2002), pp. 187–188
  5. Tillotson (1993), p. 157
  6. Hardesty pp250-1
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  8. Engle,Paananen pp56-62
  9. 9.0 9.1 Finnish Air Force in World War II, Heikki Nikunen at century-of-flight.net

Bibliography

  • Engle, Eloise/ Paananen, Lauri (1973) The Winter War Sidgewick&Jackson ISBN 0 283 97949 6
  • Hardesty, Von (1982) Red Phoenix: the rise of Soviet air power 1941-1945 Arms and Armour Press ISBN 0-85368-565-7
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