Borovykh was deployed to the warfront of the Second World War in December 1941, initially as a pilot and flight commander in the 728th Fighter Aviation Regiment. In September 1942 he transferred to the 157th Fighter Aviation Regiment, where eventually rose through the ranks and was promoted to the position to squadron commander. On 9 May 1943 he was promoted to the rank of junior lieutenant, and after several promotions he reached the rank of Major in January 1945. When he was assigned to the position of squadron commander, the 157th Fighter Aviation Regiment was part of the 273rd Fighter Division of the 6th Fighter Aviation Corps within the
16th Air Army. In the first two years of the war he completed 341 successful sorties and participated in 55 aerial battles, and was credited with shooting down 12 enemy planes. In his next 49 aerial battles he was credited with shooting down 19 enemy planes, a feat that resulted in him being awarded a second Gold Star medal on 23 February 1945. He saw combat over much of Eastern and Central Europe, including
Orel,
Kursk,
Gomel, Brest,
Lviv,
Warsaw, and Berlin. His missions involved intercepting enemy aircraft, providing cover for bombers, and conducting aerial reconnaissance. Throughout the war he completed a total of 475 sorties and fought in 113 aerial engagements, flying the
I-16,
I-185,
Hawker Hurricane,
Yak-1,
Yak-3,
Yak-7, and
Yak-9 fighters.
Final tally Borovykh's final tally is slightly disputed. In recent estimates based on analysis of official documents, Mikhail Bykov credits him with 27 solo and 17 shared victories, while Andrey Simonov and Nikolai Bodrikhin say he had either 32 solo and 14 shared or 29 solo and 16 shared shootdowns. Earlier estimates made by Western authors tend to be higher, although the source for their claims and the accuracy of them is unclear; such estimates often credit him with up to 32 solo and 16 shared victories. == Later life ==