G-11s, along with the
Antonov A-7 constituted a majority of Soviet transport gliders. They were mainly used from mid-1942 for supplying
Soviet partisans with provisions, weapons, equipment and trained men, towed mainly by
SB or
DB-3 bombers. Most intensive use was from March to November 1943 in
Belarus, in the
Polotsk-Begoml-
Lepel area, on the Kalinin Front. Several hundred Soviet gliders (of all types) were used in night supply flights there. After landing, the gliders were destroyed and pilots were sometimes returned by aircraft. The only known instance of a glider returning from the field occurred in April 1943, when a famous glider and test pilot
Sergei Anokhin evacuated two wounded partisan commanders in a G-11, towed by a
Tupolev SB bomber, piloted by Yuriy Zhelutov, on a short towrope. Gliders were also used to supply partisans in some areas in 1944 and to transport sabotage groups behind enemy lines. G-11 gliders were also used in at least one small-scale airborne operation, the
Dnepr crossing, carrying anti-tank guns and
mortars. A less typical action was an airbridge from
Moscow to the
Stalingrad area in November 1942, to rapidly deliver anti-freeze coolant for tanks, during the
battle of Stalingrad. The G-11 enjoyed relative success as a light transport glider design, having more capacity than the
Antonov A-7, and its transport compartment was a better fit for cargo, although light guns could only be carried in parts due to small hatches. ==Operators==