IN
RUSSIAN AIR FORCE
the
Cold War. This secret aerial conflict
claimed the lives of
hundreds
of
"There was no doubt about it," Col. Walker M. Mahurin,
commander of the 4th Fighter-Interceptor Group (FIG), said in his
biography, "we were fighting the Russian air force." Indeed, a
Only during the
1990s has the truth begun to emerge about the deadly aerial duel between
Soviet-piloted MiG-15s and American airmen in the skies over
Though an
American reporter confirmed their presence in 1951 and a general admitted to
it, the Russian role in the Korean War was publicly denied by both
Soviet dictator
Josef Stalin insisted on "plausible deniability." He ordered that, "our air force should not be
employed behind the enemy’s rear so as to guarantee that our aircraft will not
be shot down and our pilots captured."
And he went to
extraordinary lengths to conceal his pilots’ true identities. One pilot committed suicide rather than be
captured; another was strafed in the
That mission originated in
So intense was
aerial combat in the northwest corner of
"The basic air
patrol or fighter sweep involved ‘gaggles’ [strung-out formations] of F-86s in
four-plane cells patrolling MiG Alley to lure the enemy into combat or
intercept MiGs trying to slip through to attack F-80 or F-84 fighter-bombers,"
wrote Bill Yenne in The History of the U.S. Air Force. "Once engaged, the classic maneuver was to
get behind the enemy and attack from the
In any case,
Maj. John
Glenn, a Marine on exchange duty with the Air Force, flew an F-86 he called "MiG
Mad Marine." He recalled: "You were
permitted to go across the Yalu if you were in hot pursuit and what was ‘hot
pursuit’ was liberally interpreted."
Glenn shot down three MiGs in about a week at the war’s end.
Soviet involvement in the Korean War was on a large
scale. During the war, 72,000 Soviet
troops (among them 5,000 pilots) served along the
These forces
were grouped under the 64th Air Defense Corps, consisting of three
fighter air divisions, two anti-aircraft divisions (85mm and 57mm guns) and
several regiments. Mobile AAA units
served in North Korea itself, peaking at 20,000 men. The 64th deployed to
Russian pilots
were mostly WWII veterans. Their skills
were soon evident. The Korean War
produced 51 Soviet fighter aces, according to the book Stalin’s Eagles by
Hans Seidl. One Soviet pilot supposedly
earned the Hero of the Soviet Union (
To meet the
superior MiG-15s, the
B-29s—primarily
from the 19th Bomb Group (based on Guam) and Strategic Air Command’s
98th and 307th Bomb Groups from Okinawa—carried out the
dangerous missions to the Chinese border.
A maximum of 99 Superfortresses were used during the war. Many B-29 crews, typically 12 men per plane,
were Reservists.
A bombing
mission was an unforgettable experience.
"It was like being inside a dark, steel cocoon that shook like a cement
mixer," said Staff Sgt. Darren Sleeper, a B-29 tail-gunner. "We took off from
America’s war with the Soviet Union began inadvertently on
Oct. 8, 1950, when two F-80 jets strafed a Soviet airfield near Sukhaya
Ryechka, 60 miles north of the Korean border, in the Soviet Maritime
Province. Considerable damage was
inflicted on the parked aircraft. The
errant mission was due to navigational error, but the pilots were still
punished. This was the only time Soviet
territory was attacked by the
The air battle
began in earnest in November 1950. On
Nov. 8, the first all-jet dogfight in history occurred during a B-29 attack on
This was
followed by the loss of a B-29 of the 307th over Uiju. Then on Nov. 15, the first bomber
interception battle was fought between eight MiGs and 21 B-29s escorted by
F-80Cs over
It came
Some 47 years
later, Lyle Patterson, a B-29 central fire control gunner with the 30th
Bomb Squadron, was belatedly awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for
shooting down the only MiG that day. His
citation recounted how "the enemy jet fighter fell away in a tail forward
position, then rolled over on a wing and out of control and was sent o hit the
ground."
Large-scale
dogfights over MiG Alley were common by June.
"American pilots recognized the dramatic increase in the enemy pilots’
skill level by using the term ‘honcho’ or boss to describe them," wrote Walter
J. Boyne in Beyond the Wild Blue. "American
pilots assumed the newcomers to be veteran aces and instructor pilots from the
Soviet Union, this view being validated over time by reports of blonde pilots
ejecting from damaged MiGs."
Aerial combat
increased in intensity throughout the fall of 1951, peaking in the biggest air
battle of the Korean War on Oct. 23.
"Black Tuesday," as it became known, was the turning point in the air
war. The
Eight
B-29s of the 307th Bomb Group escorted by 55 F-84Es of the 49th
and 136th Fighter-Bomber Groups plus 34 F-86Es from the 4th
FIG flew into a hornet’s nest. About 100
MiG-15s engaged the escort while 50 others hit the bombers. Futrell labeled the 20-minute engagement "one
of the most savage and bloody air battles of the Korean War."
When the
shooting was over, three bombers were lost, four crash-landed in
B-29 crew
casualties for the week, most sustained over Namsi, totaled 67—55 KIA/MIA and
12 WIA. Among the dead was Capt. Thomas
L. Shields who sacrificed his life in keeping his crippled bomber flying until
his fellow crew members had time to bail out.
Jim Ammons was a flight engineer aboard a B-29 of the 307th
Bomb Group that Oct. 23. He
remembers the action vividly, especially the casualties. He quoted Time: Namsi taught the "sort of lessons which still
make WWII airmen shutter at the name of
Even nighttime
raids proved deadly. On
Verne W.
Gordon, Jr., was with the 28th Bomb Squadron aboard the Apache that
night. "We were engulfed in
searchlights," he said, and "were hit by 20mm cannon shells. The aircraft immediately lost altitude. Although the plane was badly damaged, we were
fortunate to make it back to K-16, a base near
Night fighters
continued to take a toll on the bombers.
Five more B-29s were lost to the enemy planes between November 1952 and
January 1953.
Meanwhile, Navy aviators were waging their own air war
from the sea, which included some unusual incidents. On
The aviators
were attacked by seven or eight MiG-15s over Hoeryong. They had taken off from
"I commenced
firing from 15 degrees off his tail," remembered Lt. Elmer R. Williams. "My first burst sent him into an uncontrolled
spiral. Dave Rowlands followed this
crippled MiG down to 8,000 feet, where he left it smoking in a deep graveyard
spiral. Later, gun camera film confirmed
the kill of this MiG."
But the pilots
experienced some hair-raising ordeals.
"The most unbelievable part of the incident," said Lt. (j.g.) John D
Middleton, "was the sight of Rowlands [Lt. (j.g.) David M.] sitting
so close on a MiG’s tail with the MiG firing away like mad at Williams."
Five of the
Soviet-piloted planes were destroyed or damaged, according to Daniel E. Keough,
a radarman assigned to the Oriskany’s
For their role
in what was officially described as an "uncoordinated melee," three
Tallying a final death toll in the clandestine
Soviet-American air war is difficult.
The Russian public was told that deaths were due to "strange
diseases." Concealment was paramount, as
burial in a remote
In Alien
Wars, authors Gen. Oleg Sarin and Col. Lev Dvoretsky cite 110 planes lost
and 319 pilots killed. Other sources say
345 aircraft were downed with 200 pilots dead.
Still other accounts claim total Soviet casualties of 299, including non-pilots
(AAA gunners were killed in raids). B-29
gunners claim credit for 16 MiG-15s shot down while F-86s destroyed 792
MiGs. How many had Soviet pilots in the
cockpit is anyone’s guess.
On the American
side, the count is even more controversial. During the Korean War, the
Historian Jon
Halliday, who has conducted extensive research into this matter, asserts that
virtually all the American airmen perished as a result of Soviet action.
Whatever the
case, no one can any longer deny the identity of the adversary. Lt. Gen. Otto P. Weyland, head of FEAF after
June 1951, boasted that he was the only
Indeed,
President Harry Truman wrote in an April 1954 memo: "In
In this war,
A postscript to
this hidden conflict further confirms the deadly aerial duels in MiG
Alley. In September 1998, the
U.S.-Russia Joint Commission on POW/MIA Affairs brought together five American
pilots and six Russian representatives to help locate the remains of 45 Soviet
pilots lost over
Meeting in
Virginia, one of the
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