Against the
Red Air Force German aces were able to shoot down large numbers of aircraft.
Erich Rudorffer, a 222 victory ace, and
Otto Kittel, a 267 victory ace, and
Walter Nowotny, a 258 victory ace were the highest scoring Fw 190 aces in the
Luftwaffe. Nowotny claimed most of his successes in the Fw 190. Rudorffer destroyed 138 aircraft flying the Fw 190; 13 in 17 minutes on 11 October 1943. Rudorffer scored 136 of his 222 victories in the Fw 190, while Kittel scored all but 40 of his kills in the type. No more than a few hundred Fw 190s were ever in service on the Eastern Front at any one time.
Fall Blau to Third Battle of Kharkov The first appearance of the Fw 190 on the Eastern Front occurred in September 1942. During this time, the
Battle of Stalingrad was taking place, which would eventually lead to the destruction of the
German Sixth Army. The first German unit to receive the fighter in the east, was
Jagdgeschwader 51 (JG 51). However, its
I. Gruppe was assigned to the north sector, and undertook operations against the Soviets during the
Siege of Leningrad in order to allow the Fw 190 to acclimatise. The unit flew free fighter sweeps (
Freie Jagd). This lasted only days, and I./JG 51 moved southward to
Lake Ilmen to provide air cover for the vulnerable
Demyansk pocket survivors. In October 1942 the unit moved south again, this time the
Rzhev-
Vyazma salient. It was at this location the Fw 190 started to make an impact. On 10 December the first loss was taken, when
Hauptmann (Captain) Horst Riemann was killed in action. Others were also shot down owing to anti-aircraft fire whilst escorting German bomber and transport aircraft dropping in supplies. Pilots that had not obtained relevant results while flying the Bf 109 now increased their scores with the Fw 190.
Günther Schack would score a large percentage of his 174 victories in the Fw 190, including 88
Ilyushin Il-2 Sturmoviks.
Josef Jennewein scored 86 victories. His tally increased markedly only after he converted on to the Fw 190. In December 1942,
Jagdgeschwader 54 (JG 54) also began converting on to the Fw 190. I./JG 54 would produce the fourth and fifth highest scoring aces of the war. Otto Kittel had scored just 39 victories since the start of
Operation Barbarossa, in June 1941. The other was Walter Nowotny. Although he had claimed more than 50 kills on the Bf 109, his success in the Fw 190 would see his score rise to 258. Kittel would also go on to achieve 267 victories, all but 39 in the Fw 190. The Fw 190 would also prove to be a more reliable aircraft, in some respects, than the Bf 109. It handled well on the ground, and its wide undercarriage made it more suited to the often primitive conditions on the Eastern Front. It could also sustain heavier damage than the Bf 109 and survive owing to its radial engine. On one mission in mid-1943, a Fw 190 returned to base with two cylinder heads shot off. During the first phase of the Fw 190's service on the Eastern Front, it served with two other
Geschwader (Wings). ''
Jagdgeschwader 26's
I. Gruppe
was deployed briefly to the front, and Jagdgeschwader'' 5 (JG 5—5th Fighter Wing) served in northern
Norway with the Fw 190. The
Third Battle of Kharkov prevented a collapse of the Germans' southern front. The fighting left a salient in the front line near
Orel-
Belgorod-
Kursk.
Operation Citadel to the Dnieper The
Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW or German High Command) chose to eliminate the bulge of Kursk.
Unternehmen Zitadelle (Operation Citadel), planned for the summer, 1943, would be the Fw 190's first major battle in number. By June 1943 the Fw 190 was to reach peak strength. II./JG 54, the main operator, operated 196 fighters before
Zitadelle. However, some of this total included Bf 109s still on strength. I./JG 54, I., III., and IV.
Gruppe of JG 51 (51st Fighter Wing) mustered 186 Fw 190s (most of the fighter force in this region operated the Fw 190), 88 of them serviceable. The Fw 190 force was assigned to the northern sector near Orel, supporting the
German Ninth Army. In the early morning of 5 July 1943, the opening day of the offensive, the Fw 190s won air superiority over the northern sector. Soviet aviation was held in reserve and its units fed in piecemeal, whereas
1 Fliegerdivision had made an all out effort. The Soviet
16th Air Army (16VA) was permitted to engage only one-third of its fighter force. The German numerical superiority managed to deliver a severe defeat on Soviet aviation on this date. The Fw 190s had the upper hand and shot down scores of Soviet fighter aircraft allowing the German
strike aircraft to attack
Red Army positions at will. Within a space of a few hours, 50 Soviet aircraft had been shot down. For just 29 casualties, 18 of them destroyed and seven Fw 190s shot down in combat,
1st Fliegerdivision filed claims for 165 victories. The division had over claimed, but Soviet losses were around 100. The Fw 190's performance as a low level air superiority fighter was evident and it reflected the German superiority in the air on that date. On 6 July the Fw 190 again proved its worth at low altitude. Soviet fighters providing close escort for slow bombers enabled the Fw 190s of JG 51 and JG 54 to attack Soviet formations at will. Fw 190s claimed a ratio in favour of 60:1 on this date; losing two fighters shot down and two damaged while claiming 121 enemy aircraft destroyed. The situation called for a change in Soviet air tactics. Soviet fighters on airfields were placed on alert should larger German formations appear and fighters were now permitted to conduct fighter sweeps in small formations of four to six aircraft. These changes had limited influence of the air battle and not the significant results claimed by Soviet histories. Soviet aviation would still sustain heavy losses. JG 51 and 54 had inflicted heavy damage, the three regiments of 1 DIAD (1st Guards Fighter Division) could field only 26 fighters between them. The 6th IAK (Air Corps) could muster just 48 fighters. Two main reasons resulted in these loss rates; Soviet pilots were still limited to close escort duty and were not allowed to pursue aircraft into airspace guarded by other Soviet units which restricted their freedom, and when the experience of the German pilots is added, the result was damaging. On 7 July, the 16th Air Army lost 30 aircraft for three Fw 190s destroyed and three crash-landed in German-held territory. On 8 July, the Fw 190 units claimed 74 of the 81 Soviet aircraft claimed destroyed on that date. Actual Soviet losses were 43. With the German armies now exhausted, the Fw 190 units were asked to perform
Jabo, or fighter-bomber missions. JG 54 flew missions in this capacity. Now performing dual purposes, the Fw 190 achieved significant recognition as a rugged aircraft. On 12 July 1943, the 16VA was almost driven from the skies by Fw 190
Geschwader. The air battle had been decisively won by the
1st Fliegerdivision, thanks largely to the Fw 190. However, the ground battle was lost. On 13 July the Soviets launched
Operation Kutuzov. The offensive threatened to cut off the entire German Ninth and
Second Panzer Armies. Luftwaffe resistance was vital to slowing down Soviet advances. On several days, the Luftwaffe achieved numerical superiority (Soviet aviation was concentrated in the south). The
15th Air Army could not prevent the Fw 190 units gaining air superiority which allowed Ju 87 units to help the
Army to restrict the Red Army's break through to the first German defence line on the first day. But the overall situation could not be sustained, as the Soviet ground forces had made several advances further north. Between 1 and 31 July 1943 JG 51 claimed 800 victories against 77 Fw 190s (50 destroyed). JG 54 claimed 450 for the same period for 34 Fw 190s (24 destroyed). Even though it is probable that between 25 and 33 percent of these claims were exaggerations, the statistics confirm the qualitative superiority of tactical air units in combat. More accurate data suggests JG 51's losses were 55 Fw 190s destroyed and 31 damaged. The introduction of the Fw 190 to the front had proven wise. The armament of the Fw 190 was something that was needed by German fighter units. The IL-2
Shturmoviks were becoming available in increasing numbers, and the Fw 190 was an ideal counter to the Soviet aircraft. The increasing numbers of Soviet armour led to a rethink in how to combat the threat. In the summer, 1943, Ju 87 crews had suffered heavy losses. The
Henschel Hs 129 had suffered 495 losses from a total production of 664. It was decided to replace them with the Fw 190. On 18 October,
Sturzkampfgeschwader 1,
Sturzkampfgeschwader 3 and
Sturzkampfgeschwader 5 were renamed
Schlachtgeschwader 1, 3 and 5.
Sturzkampfgeschwader 2 and
Sturzkampfgeschwader 77 were reformed as mixed fighter and dive bomber units. Two
Geschwader,
Schlachtgeschwader 9 and
Schlachtgeschwader 10 were formed to deal with the threat. It was not until March 1944 that the
Geschwaders were able to exchange their Ju 87s for the Fw 190. Some units, such as the one commanded by
Hans-Ulrich Rudel, continued to fly the Ju 87 (and Fw 190) until the end of the war. In the meantime, the Fw 190 units fought an increasing number of defensive battles. The
Lower Dnieper Offensive and
Second Battle of Kiev witnessed large scale air battles. During these actions, Walter Nowotny claimed his 256th and final victory on the front, and was nearly shot down himself on 11 November 1943. JG 54, operating the Focke-Wulf, claimed 71 victories in December 1943, for the loss of 14 Fw 190s. This represented a decreasing victory-to-loss ratio. However, the Soviets were gaining in number and quality. The Red Army was pushing back both
Army Group South, and soon
Army Group North. Only
Army Group Centre remained in strong defensive positions. By the spring, 1944, the German fighter units victory to loss ratio had shrunk from 4:1 at the
Battle of Kursk to 1.5:1. Soviet fighter aircraft were now equal to the ''Luftwaffe's
best. Schlachtgeschwader'' losses amounted to 175, which included a number of Fw 190s.
Operation Bagration to Budapest By the summer, 1944 the Germans had lost the
Crimean campaign and the Soviets were able to pursue operations that would break into Eastern Europe. German fighter units continued to take a heavy toll of Soviet aviation. However, the entry of types, such as
Lavochkin La-7 and
Yak-3, presented a problem for German fighters. With wings only 9.8 metres long, the La-7 was one of the lightest and smallest fighters of the war. The Yak-3 was faster and more manoeuvrable than the Bf 109 and the Fw 190. According to Soviet tests with captured German fighters, the
Yak-9U also out performed the Fw 190. Further, the liberation of the
Donbas region improved metal supplies. The Il-2's weakness was its wing and tail structure, which was now made from metals. This contributed to a reduction in losses. The Luftwaffe had a small number of Fw 190s on the Eastern Front by this time. SG 3 and SG 5 was equipped with Fw 190s in June 1944. II./SG 2 was fully equipped with Fw 190s, while III./SG 2 was a mixed unit of Ju 87s and Fw 190s. By June 1944, the German fighter order of battle contained mostly the Bf 109.
1. Fliegerdivision,
Luftflotte 6, contained SG 1 and 10 totalling 76 Fw 190s. JG 54, attached to
Jagdabschnittfuhrer Ostland (Fighter Area East) of
Luftflotte 1 had on strength 32 Fw 190s.
3 Fliegerdivision contained mixed units, including the Fw 190, which were 64 aircraft strong, although the number of Fw 190s is unknown.
Luftflotte 4,
I. Fliegerkorps contained units from SG 2, 10 and 77 numbering 27, 29 and 33 respectively. On 22 June 1944, the Red Army launched
Operation Bagration. The
Schlachtgeschwader were a vital part of German defences. The fluid situation on the ground meant units retreated rapidly westward. Fw 190 units that employed the aircraft as
jabo, became the first line of defence as German ground defences broke down. The Fw 190
Gruppen sent a few aircraft out over pre-assigned areas each morning. They were able to identify any movements made by the enemy. The Fw 190s were sent out after enemy armour spearheads that were roaming in the German rear. Usually 250 or 500 kg (550 and 1,100 lb) bombs were used along with SD-2, 4 and 10 bombs and 13 and 20 mm armaments for soft targets. If the Soviet tanks were operating without resistance, then the targets were the soft skin supporting vehicles. Eliminating them would deny fuel and ammunition to the armour, cutting short the Soviets' advance. If the tanks were engaged with German armour, the tanks themselves would be the target to support the defence. The usual approach was made at 1,600 m (6,000 ft), above the reach of light enemy anti-aircraft fire. The Fw 190s would then drop to 4 to 10 m, dropping their loads just as the target disappeared under the nose of the fighter. The delay charge gave the German pilots about one second to get clear. At 485 km/h (300 mph) this was usually enough. In the battles that followed, it was not uncommon for German
Schlachtgeschwader pilots to fly seven or eight sorties a day. Towards the end of August fuel shortages kept the German fighters units on the ground. To save fuel, animals, such as
oxen were used to carry fighters from dispersal to the take off point. Pilots were ordered to shut down the engine immediately on landing. The OKL managed to scrape fuel together while the battles lasted, allowing some units to fly five sorties per day. The
Schlacht Fw 190s were hard hit. Among those operating the Fw 190 were SG 10, which lost 59 Fw 190s in July 1944. The fighter units fared better. IV./JG 54 claimed 80 aerial kills for 31 losses, 21 to enemy action. However, it seems from loss records that even experienced German units had lost more aircraft than they actually shot down in this period. The
jabos maintained intense activity and succeeded in inflicting heavy damage to Soviet forces. On 11 July 1944 200 Soviet vehicles were claimed by Fw 190 units. In
Estonia, SG 3 and 4 claimed 400 Soviet vehicles destroyed on 28 July. The German air units helped slow down the advance into the Baltic states. In
Poland the
Lvov–Sandomierz Offensive had captured bridgeheads over the
Vistula river. The German air units tried to eliminate the foothold. On 28 August the Fw 190s of the
Schlachtgeschwader along with Ju 87s claimed to have sunk 28 bridging ferries. The assaults failed to prevent the Soviets from continuing westward. Still, the Fw 190s SG 2 and 77 took advantage of brief moments of air superiority to inflict heavy losses of Soviet infantry, as at times the Red Army's advance was so fast that they outran their air support, allowing the Germans a free hand. In
East Prussia the
Luftwaffe sent an 800-strong force under
4. Fliegerdivision. JG 54, operating the Fw 190 fighter versions along with SG 4 supported the
German Fourth Army and enabled them to halt the Soviet attempt to crush the
Courland pocket. On one day, 27 October, the Fw 190 fighter unit JG 54 claimed 57 aircraft shot down. SG 4 lost 17 Fw 190F ground attack machines. On 28 October, Erich Rudorffer claimed 11 victories, reaching a total of 209. Fw 190s of JG 54 claimed 600 victories between 14 September and 24 November, while the Soviet units reported a total loss of 779 aircraft. The crisis on the Eastern Front now required all available units to return to the theatre. The
Battle of the Bulge in the Western theatre was still ongoing, but with the
Siege of Budapest and the Soviet winter offensive about to strike across the Polish plain,
Luftflotte 6 was rushed from the Ardennes sector to Poland to meet the Soviet threat. It brought with it some 100 Fw 190s.
Hungarian Fw 190 operations (November 1944–1945) On 8 November 1944, Germany delivered sixteen Fw 190 F-8 fighters (
G5+01 and
G5+02) to the
Hungarian Royal Air Force for training. They were initially based in
Börgönd, near
Lake Balaton, under the command of
Lfl. Kdo 4, Fliegerführer 102 Hungarn/
VIII Fliegerkorps (HQ in
Debrecen). A number of recruits from the
Önálló Zuhanóbombazó Osztály (independent dive bomber wing) based at same airfield were sent to Flugzeugführerschule B2 in
Neuruppin for ground attack and air combat training in the Fw 190. At the same time, Hungary established the
101. Csatarepülő Osztály as a specialized Fw 190 operational training unit. The Hungarian 190s were originally intended for use on the Eastern front in offensive actions against Soviet armored units along with other Hungarian dive bomber and anti-tank units. In the end, they were used only over Hungarian soil in defensive operations against USAAF and Soviet Air force units. In addition, a small numbers of Fw 190 G fighter-bombers were used in air-to-ground operations, additionally, the Luftwaffe transfer Fw 190 F-8 and F-9s of I., II., VI. and Stab of S.G.2 to Hungary for operated along with Hungarian units in that period. Originally, these aircraft served with the
102. Vadászbombázó. This unit entered combat on 16 November 1944 under the command of Captain Lévay Győző. It would successfully operate Fw 190s until the final days of the war. The fighters were also intended to collaborate with
Luftflotte 4 under the designation
Ung.JSt.102/1 and
/2 along with Hungarian Me 210 Cs and Fw 190 Gs operating from airfields in Poland during June 1944, but the course of operations changed the plans to defensive actions. Fw 190s were flown by Section Leader Horváth Sándor (aircraft ID
W-521) and Sergeant F. Timler, (aircraft IDs
W-510 and
W-520), who were awarded the Iron Cross 2nd Class with Oak Leaves for downing an
A-20 Boston over the
Esztergom on 26 January 1945. Another Fw 190,
W-524, was based in Siedmiogrod, during the winter of 1944. On 7 March 1945, an order from
Fliegerkorps IV directed that Hungarian aircraft be painted with a 50 cm wide yellow band on the nose and fuselage and a yellow rudder to aid in identification by other Axis units. In 1945, during the final months of the war, Fw 190s of the
102. Csatarepülő Osztály together with the
102/1.Zuhanóbombázó század, 102/2 Zuhanóbombázó Osztály "Coconut" (dive-bomber units equipped with
Junkers Ju 87Ds),
102.Gyorsbombázó, 102/2.Szazad "Tigris" (a dive bomber and anti tank unit operating
Messerschmitt Me 210Ca-1s and Henschel Hs 129Bs), and
101/1 század "Puma" (fighter squadron flying Bf 109 Gs) defended Hungary against fleets of Soviet and American heavy bombers and fighters.
Silesia to Berlin 3C; this combination was used to train Fw 190 pilots to fly Mistels and used an Fw 190 F-8 (note lack of wing armament) on top of a
Junkers Ju 88G-10 nightfighter.
United States Army personnel are examining the aircraft. In January 1945 the Soviets began a series of offensives in its drive to
Berlin. The
Lower Silesian Offensive and
Upper Silesian Offensives and the vital
Vistula-Oder Offensive was designed to bring the Red Army to the eastern border of Germany. The Soviets began their offensive early, to take the pressure off the
Western Allies in the Ardennes. For the Fw 190s units, the initial stages were to prove tactically successful. The Soviets were forced to start offensive action under severe weather conditions. Airfields were reduced to mud-baths owing to heavy rains, and open country became impassable owing after use by large numbers of vehicles. The Red Air Force suffered more losses to accidents than combat. The Soviet armour was forced to use the few hard-surface roads to continue their advance. These routes were easily detected by German
Schlachtgeschwader. The Germans, by contrast, had hard surface runways in German territory and large hangars for aircraft. On 26 January 800 vehicles, 14 tanks and 40 artillery pieces were claimed among the crammed highways. After two weeks, the offensive slowed. Fw 190 units in particular exacted a heavy toll of Soviet infantry; attacking in waves of seven to nine, unchallenged. Overall, the Germans claimed 2,000 vehicles and 51 tanks in the first three days of February. However, this came at a cost of 107 aircraft in nearly 3,000 attacks. The largest concentration of German air forces since 1940 was amassed against the Soviets, which saw the Germans gain air supremacy briefly, contributing to saving Berlin from capture sooner. The rapid construction of concrete runways allowed the Soviets to win back "aerial superiority". On 14 or 16 February 1945 Otto Kittel became the most successful Luftwaffe ace to be killed in action; Kittel had achieved 267 victories on the Eastern Front, all but 39 in the Fw 190. By March and April the situation had become desperate for German forces. The Soviets had reached the
Oder and were encroaching upon Berlin. Fw 190s were now used in unusual ways to destroy the Soviet bridgeheads across the Oder. Focke-Wulfs were attached the upper fuselage of a Junkers Ju 88 "host" by struts which also contained control cables to allow the Fw 190 pilot to fly the combination using his flight controls. The operational versions of the
Mistel replaced the cockpit section of the Ju 88 with a shaped,
hollow charge warhead weighing, in total, 3,500 kg – the weight of the explosives was 1,700 kg. The Fw 190 pilot would approach to within a few kilometers of the target, aim the Ju 88 at the bridges, then release his Fw 190 and escape while the Ju 88 flew into the target. These weapons, which, in some versions, used a Bf 109 F-4 instead of an Fw 190, were used against the vital
Küstrin bridgeheads. Küstrin was due east of Berlin, and if it could be held, a Soviet advance on Berlin could be prevented. Several Fw 190 strike units from
Kampfgeschwader 200 struck at the bridges throughout April; the maximum effort on 16 April succeeded in inflicting damage to the captured bridges, but none were destroyed. One Mistel was shot down by a patrol of Spitfires of the Canadian
411(RCAF) Squadron. One Mistel did force a partial collapse of the Steinau railway bridge earlier, on 31 March 1945. On 26 April 1945, one last Mistel attack was carried out; of the seven sent to hit the Oder bridges, just two Fw 190s returned. On 1 May 1945, IV.
Jagdgeschwader 3 flew its last combat, losing three out of four Fw 190s over Berlin. On this date the Soviet 16th Air Army claimed seven Fw 190s, its last victories of the war. ==North Africa and the Mediterranean==