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A face on the tail

Text: Jan Zdiarský

Illustration: Antonis Karydys

Cat. No. 7044


Decorating military aircraft with symbols or markings related to significant anniversaries is quite common in modern times, especially in NATO units. A nice anniversary marking on an aircraft is usually of interest to modellers. In the case of the L-39 Albatros, we have seen two such honours in recent years and both of them have appeared in Eduard kits for obvious reasons.

The first one was L-39ZA, no. 232433 from Náměšt' nad Oslavou, with the depiction of the main designer of this aircraft, Jan Vlček. The second one is L-39CM, No. 915254 of the 2 Fighter Squadron, 31 Fighter Wing, of the Slovak Air Force from 2022, commemorating the 100th anniversary of the birth of the Czechoslovak fighter ace, S/Ldr. Otto Smik (current ProfiPACK No. 7044).

Otto Smik was born on 20 January 1922 in Borjomi in the Caucasus. His father, a Slovak soldier who fell into Russian captivityin this area during the First World War, got married there, and although he wanted to return to his homeland, he couldn't do so before many years. He did eventually return in 1934 with his Russian Wife and their three sons, of whom Otto was the middle one. After some peripeties, the family settled in Bratislava. Otto, who had been interested in aviation since he was a child, built models and learned to fly gliders. However, he could not reconcile himself tothe Slovak state's establishment and its leaning towards nazi Germany. At the tender age of 18, in March 1940, he fled Slovakia to join the Czechoslovak foreign resistance. Via Hungary, Yugoslavia, Greece and Iran, he reached France, where he joined the Czechoslovak Air Group in the French Air Force in June 1940. However, France fell before he started his training. The direction of further escape was, as for many others, Great Britain.

Here he was accepted into the RAF, where he underwent flight training. After that, the British Royal Air Force promoted him to the rank of Pilot Officer, but in the structures of the Czechoslovak Foreign Army he had the rank of Corporal. This discrepancy was not well borne by some Czechoslovak career officers, and Smik was put to considerable hardship during his first tour of duty with the No. 312 and No. 310 Czechoslovak Squadrons. After only a few days, Smik therefore transferred to the British 131 Squadron at his own request, and later to the 122 Squadron of the RAF.

On 13 March 1943 he achieved his first victory, a probable shoot down of a Bf 109. In May 1943 he transferred to 222 Squadron, where he increased his score to 7 and 1/2 aircraft shot down for sure, 2 probably and 3 damaged. With this score, after taking a break from operational flying, he started his second operational tour as one of the most successful Czechoslovak fighters. In March 1944 he returned to the Czechoslovak unit, this time with the No. 310, later 312, Squadron.

 While Flight commander he was  shot down over the Netherlands on September 3, 1944. After an emergency landing he managed to get behind Allied lines and after less than two months he was back in England. On 13 November 1944 he took leadership of the No. 127 squadron of the RAF, with which he undertook mainly bomber escorts and attacks on ground targets in support of the allied invasion troops. After fifteen days, however, Otto Smik was again shot down. This time his attack on the railway station at Zwole in the Netherlands was fatal. His Spitfire was hit several times by flak and the aircraft crashed at the Blooksteeg farm near Zwole. Otto Smik died in the wreckage. At the same time, one of his wingmen, Belgian Henri L. J. Taymans, was also shot down and his plane crashed into a muddy ditch by the railway line. A series of misidentifications, started by the Germans when one of the two pilots was buried, and continued by the Belgian and then the British War Graves Commission, created a mistake and a mystery that was not unravelled until 1965.

Since 1994 the famous pilot has been buried in the Slavic Valley in Bratislava. Otto Smik received many military decorations for his successful combat activities: five Czechoslovak War Crosses 1939-45, the Czechoslovak Medal for Valour, the Order of the M.R.S. 3rd Class, the French Croix de Guerre with palms  and the British Defence Medal and Air Crew Europe Star. During the war he flew 263 operational sorties, 215 of which were over enemy territory. He certainly shot down 11 enemy aircraft, 1 probably and 3 damaged, in addition to these, he destroyed three V-1 missiles in flight and a number of ground targets. Smik's commemoration on the tail surfaces of Albatross No. 915254 is one of the significant tributes the Slovak Air Force has paid to his legacy.

For more information about Otto Smik and his aircraft, we recommend the book by Zdenek Hurt "Naší se vraceji“ (Boys are back / Eduard, 2013), and the website of the aviation society Classic Trainers.

02/2024
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