Blue Squadron
15. Spanische Staffel | |
---|---|
Active | June 24, 1941 – October 10, 1943 |
Country | Spain |
Allegiance | Germany |
Branch | ‹See Tfd› Luftwaffe |
Role | Fighter Squadron |
Part of | JG 27 JG 51 |
Aircraft flown | |
Bomber | Ju 52 Hs 123 Ju 88 (proposed) |
Fighter | Fw 190 Bf 109 |
The Blue Squadron[1] (Spanish: Escuadrilla Azul, German: 15. Spanische Staffel) was a generic name given to the group of volunteer pilots and ground crews recruited from the Spanish Air Force that fought in the side of Germany on the Eastern Front, during the Second World War. The "Blue Patrol" was a counterpart offered by Franco to Nazi Germany for its help with the Condor Legion during the Spanish Civil War.
Between September 1941 and May 1943 five Spanish squadrons rotated through the Eastern Front, attached to Luftwaffe fighter wings Jagdgeschwader 27 and Jagdgeschwader 51.[2]
Flying Messerschmitt fighters and Focke-Wulf fighter-bombers, the Spaniards were credited with destroying more than 160 Soviet aircraft in nearly two years, while losing 20 pilots killed, missing, or captured.[3][4] The unit remained in central Russia, despite requests by Muñoz Grandes that they be attached to the Blue Division, until their withdrawal in 1943.[5]
References
[edit]Sources
[edit]- Bowen, Wayne H. Spain during World War II. University of Missouri Publishing, (2006). ISBN 0826216587
- Neulen, Hans Werner. "In the Skies of Europe: Air Forces Allied to the Luftwaffe 1939–1945." Crowood Press, UK (2000). ISBN 1861263260.
- Foreign volunteer units of the Luftwaffe
- Air force units and formations of Spain
- Military units and formations of the Soviet–German War
- Military units and formations established in 1941
- Military of Francoist Spain
- Soviet Union–Spain relations
- Military units and formations disestablished in 1943
- Luftwaffe squadrons
- Spanish collaborators with Nazi Germany