with the
Tatsinskaya Raid near the bottom The Tatsinskaya Airfield, 260 km west of Stalingrad, became the most important airfield for the supply of the trapped 6th Army in Stalingrad after all land connections were severed after 24 November 1942, when the airlift began. From Tatsinskaya, a
Junkers Ju 52 plane would take approx. 1¼ hour to reach Stalingrad, from where it would return after a 3½ hour turnaround, theoretically making it possible to complete a mission in six hours. Tatsinskaya served as the main base for the Ju 52 transport planes, while Morozovskaya was mainly used by the
Heinkel He 111 bombers, which were converted to transport planes. The airfield was under threat of being taken by the Soviet Red Army but
Hermann Göring forbade its evacuation, despite request from Major General
Fiebig, who was in charge of the air supply for Stalingrad. On 23 December Göring gave permission to evacuate, but it was too late; Tatsinskaya
was overrun a day later, with the German
Luftwaffe losing almost 70 of the 180 Ju 52s stationed there and all ground equipment. The fall of the airfield, along with the one at
Morozovskaya being threatened, brought supplies to the 6th Army to a halt until the 26th. Although briefly retaken by the Germans on the 28th, Tatsinskaya fell back into Soviet hands by 31 December. After the fall of Tatsinskaya, the Ju 52s from there were relocated to
Salsk, while the He 111s went to
Novocherkassk, increasing the distance to travel considerably. The airfield was guarded by
Romanian Air Force's 4th Anti-Aircraft Brigade under the command of the
Air Combat Group (GAL), specifically by
Vickers/Reșița 75 mm anti-aircraft guns. Similarly to German
88 mm flak, these guns also proved effective against Soviet armor. Romanian gunners destroyed five Soviet tanks while defending the airfield. ==Location==