After the end of the war, in March 1946, Ges was transferred to the
176th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment in the
Moscow Military District. He became a flight commander in April 1947 and in August 1950 was promoted to the rank of military pilot 2nd class. In October of the same year he became a military pilot 1st class with the rank of senior lieutenant. He became deputy commander of a squadron for pilots in November 1950. With the 176th Guards Regiment, Ges was sent to fight with the
64th Fighter Aviation Corps in December 1950, participating in the
Korean War. He served as a deputy squadron commander and later squadron commander, being awarded the
Order of Lenin on 2 June 1951. Between April 1951 and February 1952 Ges flew about 120 sorties and was credited with eight aerial victories. Ges became a flying ace on 20 June 1951 when he shot down an
F-51 Mustang from the
35th Fighter Group. As the Mustang disintegrated under his fire, the stabilizer of Ges' MiG-15 was destroyed when the port wing of the Mustang hit his tail. Ges was able to bank the aircraft over and evade a subsequent attack by four
F-86 Sabres that damaged his wingman's aircraft. He was able to land safely at his airfield despite the damage. For his "courage and heroism," he was awarded the title
Hero of the Soviet Union and a second Order of Lenin on 10 October 1951. Some sources claim Ges may have had up to 10 victories, though most sources agree on 8. After the regiment was rotated out of combat and returned to the Soviet Union, Ges was sent to Higher Officers Flying and Tactical Courses in
Taganrog in October 1953. After completing them a month later, he was sent to the 196th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO of the 52nd Fighter Air Defense Army to serve as a deputy squadron commander. In November 1954 he became assistant commander for gunnery and tactical training of the regiment before being transferred to the reserve with the rank of
major in May 1957. During his career, Ges flew the
U-2,
UT-2,
I-16,
Yak-7,
Yak-15,
LaGG-3,
La-5,
La-7,
La-9,
MiG-15, and
MiG-17. As a civilian, he lived in
Elektrostal until his death on 7 January 1968. == Awards and decorations ==