The "BEAR" takes to the air!
In 1942 under General Aleksandr Novikov, the whole
command-and-control system of the Red Army Air Force was radically centralized.
The air units were withdrawn from direct operational control of the ground
forces command and grouped into 17 air armies. These were attached temporarily
to the fronts as well as to Long-Range Aviation Command and strategic air
reserve.
These innovations enhanced the ground support role of Soviet
military aviation, allowing it to mass airpower rapidly and decisively during
all major operations on the Eastern Front. Additionally, it gave more
flexibility to the air force command to conduct independent air operations.
During the war, the Red Army Air Force performed some 3.125 million sorties and
claimed 57,000 enemy planes shot down. Naval aviation claimed to have sunk 2
million tons of enemy shipping.
The professional skills of Soviet pilots as well as the
combat and technical characteristics of the aircraft improved. Lieutenant
Colonel Ivan Kozhedub had the final score of 62 aerial victories, which
qualified him as the most successful Allied pilot of World War II. The
contribution of Soviet airwomen was unprecedented in history (with three
all-female air regiments). Junior Lieutenant Lydia Litvyak, with 12 confirmed
victories, became the most successful woman fighter pilot in the world.
Despite Soviet air dominance during the last years of the
war, there was nothing resembling the Anglo-American strategic bombing campaign
in Europe. Small-scale strategic raids performed by long-range aviation on
Berlin, Budapest, Constanta, Ploesti, Danzig, Königsberg, and other Axis
targets revealed the lack of experience of Soviet pilots and problems in
navigation.
The strategic and technological realities of the postwar
world (the growing confrontation with the West, the invention of the atomic
bomb, and the introduction of jet engines) shaped the development of the air
force, which was reconstituted in 1946 as a fully independent armed service.
Additionally, the Soviet concerns about the Anglo-American strategic air
preponderance impelled the development of Soviet Air Defense (1954) into an
independent service with a formidable air arm.
The study of German jet engines helped the Soviets develop
their first jet fighters (in 1946, the MiG-9 and Yak-15 were introduced). At
the same time, Soviet designers benefited from the wartime acquisition of
several U.S. B-29 bombers. The strategic bomber force was reorganized in 1946
within the Soviet Air Force, equipped with Tu-4 heavy bombers (based on the
B-29 design) and Il-28 medium bombers.
During the Korean War (1950–1953) the Soviets sent one air
corps with three divisions, one separate night-fighter regiment, and a naval
aviation regiment as well as the air defense and support units to fight the UN
air force in Korea and on the Manchurian border. The Soviets performed 60,894
sorties and lost 335 aircraft and 120 pilots. While the air force and air
defense units effectively forced UN bombers to suspend daytime raids, in pure
air-to-air combat the Soviet MiG-15s were outgunned and outmaneuvered by the
U.S. North American F-86 Sabre fighters.
The Korean experience led the Soviets to emphasize
maneuverability and interception capability in their jet fighters. In 1955, the
first Soviet supersonic fighter, the MiG-19, was introduced. Since 1950, the
first helicopters appeared within the transport aviation. Also in the 1950s,
the Soviet Air Force advanced its bomber development. Since 1956, the Tu-20/95
Bear turboprop bomber became the mainstay of the Soviet strategic bomber force.
The progress of the Cold War since the 1960s, the
development of nuclear, thermonuclear, and missile weaponry, as well as the
development of entirely new technologies, prompted significant changes in the
Soviet Air Force. The political and military leadership needed a world-class
airpower to back up rising global ambitions and be able to participate in any
number of contingencies—nuclear and conventional. At the same time, the greater
emphasis on ICBMs in the development of strategic power allowed the Soviets to
reduce a number of obsolete aircraft without lowering the combat capability of
its air force.
From the 1960 to the 1980s, the Soviets modernized their fleet
of strategic bombers and introduced the supersonic Tu-22 bomber (1963).
Beginning in 1987, the Tu-160 strategic bomber entered service. This bomber
force was an integral (although the smallest) part of the Soviet strategic
triad. Additionally, air-to-surface cruise missiles enhanced the strategic
function of these aircraft. The cruise missiles, as well as the introduction of
the Tu-26 longer-range bomber, in 1974 gave the Soviet Air Force the ability to
carry out deep strikes across Western Europe, the North Atlantic, and North
America.
As for Soviet tactical aviation, an increasing number of attack
aircraft (MiG-21/-23s; Sukhoi Su-7/-9/-11s, and others) were introduced,
strengthening the traditional interceptor/ fighter-bomber priorities. During
the 1970s, the Soviets put in service multipurpose aircraft (MiG-27s,
Su-17/-24/- 25s) with enhanced ground support and strike capabilities to fight
in Europe and the Far East. One major innovation was the 1973 introduction of
the Mi-24 attack helicopter— flying tanks—which became an increasingly
important component of tactical aviation.
Transport aviation expanded its airborne and long-range
airlift capabilities with the new Antonov An-22, An-24, and An-26 and the
Il-76. In the late 1980s, the heavy-lift An-124 entered service. The
development of the Soviet blue-water navy, including the first aircraft
carriers, led to the introduction of the V/STOL MiG-21, the Yak-36, as well as
Kamov Ka-25 helicopters with antisubmarine warfare capabilities. Additionally,
the air force expanded its contributions to the Soviet space program.
In 1980, a major reorganization of the air force’s two main
combat components—Long-Range Aviation and Frontal Aviation—took place. Five
Strategic Air Armies comprising long-range, longer-range, and medium-range
bombers were created, deployed in the European Soviet Union (three armies),
Poland (one), and Siberia (one). The Strategic Air Armies, subordinated to the
Soviet Supreme High Command, were to provide nuclear and conventional support
for theater strategic operations. Additionally, the Moscow Air Army had the
broader responsibility of oceanic and intercontinental operations.
The Frontal Aviation forces and the combat helicopter force
(Army Aviation) organized into divisions, and independent units were assigned
to the military districts in the Soviet Union and Soviet forces in Eastern
Europe, Mongolia, and Afghanistan. The number of foreign interventions grew as
well: Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962), Egypt (1970–1972), and
large-scale employment in Afghanistan (1979–1988). Additionally, Soviet pilots
and instructors contributed to local air defense and participated in combat
during wars in Vietnam (1965–1972), Angola (1975–1990), and Ethiopia
(1977–1979). Although such interventions demonstrated the global projection
capabilities of the Soviet Air Force and gained it ground support experience,
they also revealed inadequacies in equipment, logistics, and organization,
particularly in dealing with insurgencies.
By the mid-1980s, the air force had achieved its pinnacle of
power. The strategic bomber force had about 670 aircraft. The tactical aviation
had 6,000 ground attack, air combat, and reconnaissance aircraft and some 3,500
helicopters. The transport aviation had 650 aircraft. Additionally, there were
some 1,300 interceptors in the air defense air arm. Soviet naval aviation added
1,100 aircraft and helicopters.
The development of the Soviet Air Force, particularly its
enormous modernization during the 1960–1980s period, could not change the
weakness and fundamental disadvantage of the underlying Soviet system. Generally,
Soviet military philosophy envisaged a heavy reliance on numbers rather than on
training, technology, flexibility, and innovation. The emphasis on a highly
centralized command-and-control structure was sometimes effective, but it also
limited pilot initiative, especially as to air warfare, one of the most
individualized arts in the military.
Despite modernization efforts, most of the Soviet Air Force
lagged behind NATO airpower in electronics, navigation systems, precision
munitions, maneuvering, fighter-escort abilities, and other key aspects of air
warfare. By 1985, some 35 percent of Soviet combat aircraft were obsolete.
Moreover, long-standing weaknesses in logistics, maintenance, and repair meant
that Soviet aircraft became obsolete faster than did their Western
counterparts. Additionally, the failure to fulfill the potential of aerial
refueling for the Long- Range Aviation forces weakened maneuverability and
strategic strike capability. Maneuverability of airpower was also hampered by
slow development of the Soviet aircraft carrier.
Although the Soviet Air Force has traditionally been strong
in the ground support and interception abilities, its overreliance on ground
command and control inevitably limited the combat flexibility of air units, as
well as initiative among pilots.
Moscow’s Cold War strategy forced the Soviet Air Force to
enter a hopeless competition with the strongest, ablest, and the most dynamic
airpower the world had ever known. As the Soviet Union fell into the dustbin of
history during 1991–1992, so too did the Soviet Air Force.
References Boyd, Alexander.
The Soviet Air Force Since 1918. New York: Stein and Day, 1977. Kilmarx,
Robert. A History of Soviet Air Power. New York: Praeger, 1962. Murphy, Paul
J., ed. The Soviet Air Forces. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 1984. Whiting,
Kenneth. Soviet Air Power. Boulder: Westview, 1986.
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