The unit carried out a wide variety of missions:
Long-range reconnaissance Before the beginning of the war, aerial reconnaissance was usually carried out by civilian
Lufthansa planes equipped with cameras. This practice was continued throughout the war as long as civilian airlines remained operational; later on, reconnaissance missions were most often carried out by
Junkers Ju 86s flying at very high altitudes or by
flying boats. Due to the lack of German aircraft with sufficient range, some recon missions used captured American
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress or
Consolidated B-24 Liberator heavy bombers and Soviet
Tupolev Tu-2s. For the most part, these machines were used for re-supply roles (dropping in supplies to German forces operating behind enemy lines), or transporting important personnel.
The Mistel programme Beginning in 1942, to compensate for its lack of heavy bombers, the
Luftwaffe started to experiment with packing some of its war-weary
Junkers Ju 88 bombers with enormous
shaped-charge warheads and guiding them to their targets with a fighter airplane mounted on the back of the unmanned bomber. Although not as effective as the Luftwaffe planners had hoped, the
Mistel programme continued to be developed through 1944. However, few effective operations were flown. The unit was originally intended to attack naval installations at
Gibraltar,
Leningrad or
Scapa Flow in Scotland, but the Allied
Operation Overlord diverted efforts to Normandy. On the night of 24 June 1944, Mistels of
Kampfgeschwader 101 were dispatched to bomb targets in the English Channel. Although one of the Ju 88s had to be jettisoned prematurely, the remaining four pilots had successful launches and sank several
blockships. Interest in the Scapa Flow attack was maintained, and in August 1944
Mistel forces were concentrated at
Grove in Schleswig-Holstein. On 11 November, 1944 RAF
Avro Lancasters attacked the
German battleship Tirpitz and caused her to capsize. With
Tirpitz out of commission there was no requirement for capital ships to be held in the Atlantic theatre, and soon those with the
Home Fleet at Scapa Flow were on their way to the Pacific war, leaving the Mistels no worthwhile targets in Scapa Flow. All Mistels were placed under the command of KG 200 and
Oberst (colonel)
Joachim Helbig. By late 1944, emphasis was placed on an
all-out attack on Soviet armaments and power plants but by March 1945 the bases had been overrun by the Soviet advance. was ordered to concentrate
Mistel operations against the bridges over the
Oder and
Neisse rivers. On 27 April, 7 Mistel aircraft under
Leutnant Dittmann of II./KG 200, escorted by Fw 190s, were launched against crossings at
Küstrin, but only two Mistels got to the target to launch, results were inconclusive and the bridges remained intact. By April, all available
Mistel composite airframes had been expended and aircrew dispersed to nearby fighter units. On 12 April 1945,
Henschel Hs 293 standoff missiles were also used against bridges on the
Oder by
Dornier Do 217 bombers of KG 200.
Suicide and near-suicide missions In the last months of the war, a small number of high-ranking German officers pressed for a suicide fighter programme as a last-ditch effort to stop Allied bombing runs over the Reich. This programme, known as
Selbstopfer ("self sacrifice"), was intended to use the
Fieseler Fi 103R Reichenberg, a manned version of the
V-1 flying bomb, to attack enemy bombers and ground targets. Several test flights were carried out by
Leonidas Squadron KG 200, and mass production of the conversions had begun, but the programme was stopped due to intervention from Baumbach who felt that these missions would be a waste of valuable pilots. As part of the
Aktion 24 operations,
Dornier Do 24 flying boats were modified and loaded with explosives, with the intention that they would be landed on the
Vistula River and exploded against river bridges used by Soviet forces. Experienced pilots were to be used to fly the aircraft to a point upstream where it would be left to a "suicide pilot" to ensure a collision with the bridge and ignite the explosives. The assumption that Soviet forces would not react and the unlikelihood of the aircrew managing to return to German-held territory after delivery made the concept highly dubious. The modified aircraft were destroyed on the ground during air raids.
Special missions Flying Fortress bomber operated by German forces, in
KG 200 markings. It crash-landed near
Melun, France, on December 12, 1942, and repaired by Luftwaffe ground staff. It gained a USAAF nickname, "Wulfe Hound" On 1 December 1943, a lone B-24 joined a bomber formation from the 44th Bomb Group. It was reported to have been a machine carrying the markings of a
392nd Bomb Group aircraft. However this unit did not become operational until 9 December. On 27 June 1944, a B-17 of KG 200, with Luftwaffe
Geschwaderkennung code A3+FB, landed in
Manises airport (Valencia) and was interned by the Spanish government.
Parachute troops In July 1944 para-trained commandos of II./KG 200 carried out a
parachute assault in July 1944 against French partisan forces on the
Vercors Massif plateau in the French Alps where hundreds of partisans had created a stronghold from which they were mounting operations against the German occupiers. These para-trained commandos of II./KG 200 remain a little-known arm of Germany's World War II
parachute forces and were listed on II./KG 200's ORBAT (Order of Battle) as the 3rd Staffel. It is possible the paratroopers were actually Waffen SS paratroopers from the
500th SS Parachute Battalion assigned to Kampfgeschwader 200 for this particular mission.
KG 200 in the Middle East In July 1942, and again in the winter of 1943-44, the short-lived Operations Dora and Bunny-Hop took place in the
Gulf of Sirte,
Libya, with secret bases inland at Al Mukaram and Wadi Tamet, as well as at Shott al Jerid behind the
Mareth Line. The aim was to establish weather stations to provide local and meteorological intelligence, and to ferry agents via
French West Africa to Cairo,
Freetown and
Durban. These used a (long range)
Messerschmitt Bf 108, two Heinkel He 111s, and a captured B-17 - given the fictional designation "Dornier Do 288" (as a "confusive reuse" of the
8-288 RLM airframe number for the
Junkers Ju 288, a Bomber B design competitor) - which despite being badly damaged during a raid on Al Mukaram by a
Sudan Defence Force detachment, managed to return to
Athens for repair. On the night of 27 November 1944, KG 200 pilots Braun and Pohl flew a
Junkers Ju 290 transport from Vienna to a position just south of
Mosul, Iraq, where they successfully air-dropped five Iraqi parachutists in bright moonlight. The Luftwaffe crew flew back to the island of Rhodes, still under German occupation. After dealing with engineering problems, they evacuated some thirty casualties from
Rhodes, reaching Vienna two nights later. ==See also==