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Kampfgeschwader 4

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Kampfgeschwader 4
File:KG 4 General Wever Badge.JPG
Active1939-1945
CountryGermany
AllegianceNazi Germany Nazi Germany
BranchLuftwaffe
TypeBomber Squadron
RoleTactical and Direct Ground Support.
SizeAir Force Wing
Nickname(s)General Wever

Kampfgeschwader 4 "General Wever" (KG 4) (Battle Wing 4) was a Luftwaffe bomber unit during World War II. The unit was formed in May 1939. The unit operated the Dornier Do 17, Junkers Ju 88 and Heinkel He 111 medium bombers. The wing was named after General Walther Wever, who was killed in an aircraft accident in 1936.

History

Stab/KG 4 and I./KG were formed on 1 May 1939 at Erfurt and was initially equipped with the He 111 Ps, borrowed from KG 253. The unit spent most of the summer training and recruiting personnel from the flight schools.

War Time Service

On 25 August the unit was transferred to Langenau under the Command of Luftflotte 4. It began the Polish Campaign attacking airfields and railway yards. Stab/KG 4 was withdrawn on 20 September. I.KG 4 attacked airfields at Dęblin and Krakow on 1 September and again on 2 September. From 3-6 September rail targets in Eastern Poland were attacked, and between 6-9 September bridges along the Vistula River and in Warsaw itself were bombed. From 6-14 September rail targets were again bombed. Troop concentrations became the main targets after this until the Polish surrender[1]. II. KG 4 also supported 10.Armee over Kutno in mid September. After the campaign the unit behan training in night flying and began to lay mines of the Norewgian coast in January 1940, in preparation for the Norwegian Campaign. III./KG 4 participated in the Battle of the Bzura in which the Polish Army was surrounded and destroyed (largely by the Luftwaffe)[2].

On 1 February 1940 KG 4 transferred to Quakenbrück in northern Germany. II./KG 4 were part of the bomber fleet that flew a "demonstration of strength" raid over Copenhagen on 9 April 1940.[3] The unit attacked rail and airfield targets as well as anti-shipping strikes. A Staffel of Ju 88s of III./KG 4 desrtoyed the airfield at Stavanger-Sola, sank the Norwegian destroyer Aeger near Stavanger on 9 April[4].

KG 4 helped neutralise Dutch air power on 10 May 1940 by striking at airfields and Dutch AA positions and airlifted supplies to the Fallschirmjäger units in the Netherlands. After the quick surrender of the Dutch KG 4 shifted its attention to Belgium. KG 4 helped paralysis Allied rail networks over Belgium. KG 4 also flew sorties over Dunkirk. The II Gruppe also took part in the bombing of Rotterdam. After the Belgian capitualation KG 4 took part in operation Paula stiking at airfields in and around Paris. By the 5 June French aerial resistance, while never effective and sporadic, ceased. After the French surrender on 25 June 1940 the unit was ordered to Soesterberg, the Netherlands in July 1940, to begin operations over Great Britain.

Before the French campaign was over, KG 4 struck at British ports and targets in Wales. on the night of 18/19 June KG 4 lost six Do 17s, including Major Dietrich Von Massenbach, Kommandeur of II./KG 4, who was shot down over Newcastle-upon-tyne.[5] The Battle of Britain was a costly failure. KG 4 had operated a minelaying unit along the British coast,and participated in the Blitz and the raids on Coventry on the night of the 14/15 November. Bombing missions continued into 1941. On 4 September II./KG 4 had 37 He 111s (30 serviceable). II./KG suffered light losses during this period, due to flying at night.[6] III./KG 4 had 25 Ju 88s on strength with 23 serviceable on 13 August 1940. By 4 September that had shrunk to 14 combat ready out of a total of 30 machines, due to losses.[7]

On 29 March 1941 the unit relocated to Wien-Aspern in Austria to begin operations over Yugoslavia and Greece for the coming Balkans Campaign. During the Yugoslavian invasion, II./KG 4 participated in the bombing of Belgrade, with 25 He 111s (out of 28 serviceable) on 6 April 1941. II. Gruppe mined the waters off Alexandria and the Suez Canal. A detachment, 4.staffel, under the command of Hauptmann Schwanhauser, was sent to Iraq to support the uprising against the British during the Anglo-Iraqi War.[8]

Stab. KG 4 supported Army Group North during its advance to Leningrad. In January 1942 the unit relocated to Pskov. On 22 January 1942 it helped drop supplies to the Kholm pocket, and in February-March it flew supply missions over the Demyansk Pocket suffering heavy losses and extensive aircrew exhaustion. I. Gruppe was committed to supporting Army Group Centre II. Grupe began its aerial offensive over the city on 1 October. During the winter the unit also flew bombing raids over Moscow[9]. II. Gruppe supported Army Group South and its offensive into the Ukraine. II. Gruppe flew its 10,000th sortie on 9 March 1943. A notable success occurred on 14 March when the Gruppe attacked a Soviet airfield around Kursk destroying 40 enemy machines and damaging 23 others.[10]. II Gruppe also flew strategic bombing missions, against the Tank factory at Gorki and missions against the rubber factories near Yaroslavl. III. Gruppe was committed to the Southern wing of the front and managed to hit targets over Astrakhan. In October 1943 the unit was partially equipped with the Heinkel He 177. In the period 1943-45 the Kampfgeschwader covered the continuous retreat of the Wehrmacht until the end of the war, in the tactical and supply role. Based at Schleswig-Holstein on 8 May 1945 the unit surrendered to British forces.

Unit Emblem

Caption

Organisation

Stab. Gruppe

Formed 1 May 1939.Disbanded 8 May 1945.

I. Gruppe

Formed 1 May 1939.

II. Gruppe

Formed 1 May 1939

III. Gruppe

Formed on 1 May 1939

IV(Erg). Gruppe

Formed on 18 June 1940. Dissolved on 15 August 1944

14. Gruppe

Formed mid-October 1942. Disbanded in January 1943.

Commanding officers

Geschwaderkommodore

References

  1. ^ de Zeng et al 2007, p. 50
  2. ^ de Zeng et al 2007, p. 56.
  3. ^ de Zeng et al Vol 1 2007, p. 50.
  4. ^ de Zeng et al 2007, p. 56
  5. ^ Hooton 2007, p. 91.
  6. ^ de Zeng et al 2007, p. 49.
  7. ^ de Zeng et al 2007, p. 57.
  8. ^ de Zeng et al 2007, p. 54.
  9. ^ de Zeng et al 2007, p. 51.
  10. ^ de Zeng et al 2007, p. 55.

Bibliography

  • Bergstrom, Christer (2007). Barbarossa - The Air Battle: July-December 1941. London: Chervron/Ian Allen. ISBN 978-1-85780-270-2.
  • de Zeng, H.L; Stanket, D.G; Creek, E.J. Bomber Units of the Luftwaffe 1933-1945; A Reference Source, Volume 1. Ian Allen Publishing, 2007. ISBN 978-1-85780-279-5