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Dogfight over Rennes


Text: Jan Bobek

Illustration: Piotr Forkasiewicz

 

On the morning of June 6, 1944, when the Allies landed in Normandy, the Luftwaffe was prepared for the situation. A plan was in place to reinforce the six Jagdgruppen (day fighter groups) operating in France under Luftflotte 3. Defensive preparations were conducted under the codename Dr. Gustav West (Drohende Gefahr West – Threat Approaching from the West). By the evening of June 6, two reconnaissance Gruppen, five bomber Gruppen, two ground Schlachtgruppen, and one Geschwaderstab were to be relocated from Germany to France, along with eight night fighter Gruppen, two Geschwaderstabs, two day fighter Jagdstaffeln, and nineteen Jagdgruppen with five Geschwaderstabs. Of these nineteen, eight were assigned to II. Fliegerkorps as fighter-bombers, while the remaining units were placed under II. Jagdkorps. Meanwhile, Luftflotte Reich retained only four fighter Gruppen and "Wilde Sau" units alongside second-line formations.

Luftwaffe command first needed to confirm that the landings in Normandy were a full-scale invasion and not a probing attack similar to the 1942 Dieppe Raid. Consequently, orders for redeployment to France were only issued around noon on June 6. Not all Jagdgruppen were transferred as planned, and by the evening of June 7, only seventeen Jagdgruppen had reached the combat area, equating to a nominal strength of about 1,100 aircraft. However, the actual number of operational fighters was just a quarter of that, 278 aircraft. Many units had only half or even les of their aircraft, and not all of these were airworthy due to the hasty deployment, lack of proper ground support, and general chaos at most French airfields.

Luftwaffe in France faced superiority from the Allies, their airfields were regularly targeted by low-level strafing attacks and strategic bombing raids. The Luftwaffe was unable to regain control of the skies. German pilots, whether fresh recruits or veterans who had spent months or years fighting against Allied heavy bomber formations, struggled to conduct effective ground-attack missions using bombs. As a result, the eight units were relieved of fighter-bomber duties by June 12 and reassigned to 5. Jagddivision under Oberst Hentschel, which reported to II. Jagdkorps. The II. Fliegerkorps, which had been responsible for ground attack strikes, was disbanded on June 28, and in the following weeks, fighter pilots relied solely on onboard weapons or 210mm BR 21 rockets for ground attacks.

With around twenty Jagdgruppen under its command, 5. Jagddivision lacked the capability to micromanage their operations. As a result, most combat orders in June 1944 consisted of free hunting, intercepting low-flying strafers, and engaging artillery spotter aircraft. Only rarely were German fighters directed against Allied bomber formations, as 5. Jagddivision lacked the necessary numbers for such operations. The priority remained defending German ground forces from strafing attacks. Fighter missions conducted in formations smaller than 20 aircraft were highly risky. On average, each operational fighter flew two sorties daily, with operations running from 6 AM to 11 PM. In each sortie, Luftwaffe units typically lost about 30% of their aircraft. For every Allied aircraft shot down, the Germans lost two to three of their own. When German units managed to execute missions successfully with minimal losses, it was usually due to bad weather.

 

This period is depicted in the box art by Piotr Forkasiewicz, which portrays Major George E. Preddy’s aircraft from the 487th FS, 352nd FG, during a dogfight on June 12, 1944. Preddy’s unit was escorting American bombers targeting the railway junction in Rennes, Brittany. At the time, a funeral was taking place in the city for victims of a previous bombing raid carried out by RAF bombers on June 9.

The German adversaries were Bf 109 pilots from II./JG 53. After the engagement, they reported five victories over Liberators, one confirmed kill and four aircraft forced to abandon formation. However, the Germans lost three of their own aircraft, and two pilots were wounded. One pilot, while engaged with a P-51, was even hit by his own flak. These losses closely matched the confirmed victories recorded by the Americans: 1st Lt. Glennon T. Moran was credited with one kill, while 1st Lt. Lawrence E. McCarthy and 1st Lt. John Francis Thornell Jr. shared another. Major Preddy claimed the third Bf 109.

Four American bombers sustained damage, additionally one bomber was lost each by 448th BG and 446th BG. Six American aircrew members were killed, one was captured, but the remaining survivors were rescued by the French. The two bombing raids caused massive destruction to the city’s infrastructure and resulted in the deaths of 122 civilians. Rennes was eventually liberated in early August 1944.

03/2025
Info EDUARD 03/2025

INFO Eduard is a monthly scale model-historical magazine published in Czech and English by Eduard Model Accessories since 2010. The magazine is available for free on the Triobo platform and can be downloaded in PDF format. Eduard is a manufacturer of plastic models and accessories with over 30 years of tradition. Throughout its history in the plastic modeling industry, Eduard has become one of the world's leaders. Further details about the company and its product range can be found at www.eduard.com. You can subscribe to the INFO magazine and receive product information for free at: https://www.eduard.com/cs/info-eduard/

 

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