After
Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union began in June 1941, Savitsky remained in the
Soviet Far East for almost a year, serving as commander of the
25th Army during March and April while it provided air support to the garrisons guarding the Soviet border in
Primorye. During this period, he underwent combat flight training in the new
Lavochkin-Gorbunov-Gudkov LaGG-3 fighter near
Moscow with the 172nd Fighter Aviation Regiment from late 1941 to early 1942 before flying the LaGG-3 with the VVS 25th Army. He was then transferred to command the 205th Fighter Aviation Division on the
Voronezh Front on 5 May 1942, leading it during the
Battle of Voronezh as part of the
2nd Air Army. From July to October, his division provided
air cover for troops of the Voronezh Front, flying 373 combat sorties. During this time Savitsky flew the LaGG-3 and
Lavochkin La-5. Between 28 and 31 October, the 2nd Air Army flew missions against Axis rail transport between
Ostrogozhsk and Alexeyevka and Yevdakovo and Saguny. In November, Savitsky, now a
colonel, became the commander of an aviation group of the
17th Air Army in the
Southwestern Front, fighting in the
Battle of Stalingrad. This assignment proved to be brief, and on 10 December Savitsky took command of the 3rd Fighter Aviation Corps, which he led for the rest of the war, flying the
Yakovlev Yak-1,
Yak-9,
Yak-3, and
Lavochkin La-7. Until June 1943, the corps fought as part of the
North Caucasian Front in the North Caucasus Strategic Offensive, before being withdrawn to the
Reserve of the Supreme High Command (RVGK). After receiving replacement pilots and aircraft, the corps joined the
8th Air Army of the
Southern Front (the
4th Ukrainian Front from 20 October) in late August, participating in the
Donbass Strategic Offensive, the
Melitopol Offensive, and the fighting for
Left-bank Ukraine against German forces in the
Nikopol region. During early 1944, the corps provided air cover for the reconcentration of the Russian troops to
Sivash and
Perekop in preparation for the
Crimean Offensive, which began in April. After the capture of
Sevastopol and the
German evacuation of Crimea, Savitsky was a made a
Hero of the Soviet Union on 11 May for his performance as commander of the 3rd Fighter Aviation Corps and for flying 107 combat sorties with fifteen victories. The 3rd Fighter Aviation Corps was withdrawn to the RVGK in mid-May and in June were transferred to the
1st Air Army of the
3rd Belorussian Front. During the summer of 1944 it fought in
Operation Bagration and the subsidiary
Vitebsk–Orsha,
Minsk,
Vilnius and
Kaunas Offensives. Transferred to the
16th Air Army of the
3rd Belorussian Front in January 1945, the corps provided air cover for the troops of the front during the
Warsaw–Poznan,
East Pomeranian and
Berlin Offensives. Following the end of the war, Savitsky received his second Hero of the Soviet Union award on 2 June in Berlin. Yevgeny Savitsky was credited with flying 216 sorties with 22 individual and 2 shared victories. == Postwar ==