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| Spitfire Vc's of the Yugoslav-manned No 352 (Y) Squadron RAF before first mission on 18 August 1944, from airport Canne, Italy. (Yugoslav Aeronautical Museum) |
The Balkan Air Force (BAF) was an Allied air formation operating in the Balkans during World War II. Composed of units of the Royal Air Force and South African Air Force under the Mediterranean Allied Air Forces command, it was active from 7 June 1944 until 15 July 1945. Air Vice Marshal William Elliot and then George Mills, both RAF officers, were its Air Officer Commanding (AOC).
The BAF operated mainly over Yugoslavia, supporting the Partisans against Germany and its allies, but occasionally supporting the Greek and Albanian resistance movements also.
History
The formation was based at Bari in Italy, and formed on 7 June 1944 from AHQ 'G' Force, to simplify command arrangements for the air support of Special Operations Executive-operations in the Balkans, i.e. across the Adriatic and in the Aegean and Ionian seas. The Desert Air Force had been responsible for those operations, but its prime job was the support of the troops of the Commonwealth Eighth Army which was fighting its way up through Italy, thus making operations over the Balkans a distraction. The Balkan Air Force was a subordinate to Mediterranean Allied Air Forces, the overall allied air formation in the Mediterranean.
The BAF mainly supported the operations of the Partisans, led by Josip Broz Tito, against German forces in Yugoslavia, but also provided support to Greek and Albanian resistance organizations. It transported supplies to the Partisans, evacuated wounded, dropped agents to help them, and provided air support in their operations against German troops.
The Balkan Air Force was a multinational unit, with 15 types of aircraft and men from eight nations: Greece, co-belligerent Italy, Poland, South Africa, Yugoslavia, the UK, USA and USSR (a transport squadron). Between its inception and May 1945 the BAF flew 38,340 sorties, dropped 6,650 tons of bombs, delivered 16,440 tons of supplies and flew 2,500 individuals into Yugoslavia and 19,000 (mostly wounded) out.
Towards the end of its existence, it operated a small number of units from Yugoslav soil to harass the retreating Germans. However, disagreements with Tito (particularly the arrest of members of the Special Boat Squadron on 13 April 1945, although they were quickly released) meant that all British ground forces were withdrawn, although BAF aircraft operating from Zadar continued to support the Partisan offensive. Between 19 March and 3 May they flew 2,727 sorties, attacking the German withdrawal route from Sarajevo to Zagreb and supporting the Fourth Yugoslav Army advancing from Bihać to Rijeka.
The Balkan Air Force was disbanded on 15 July 1945. During its short existence, it was commanded by (British) Royal Air Force Air Vice Marshals William Elliot and George Mills.
Operations
William Deakin, who had met up with the Partisans in May as a representative of Middle East GHQ, was attached as advisor to the newly formed Balkan Air Force, under (then) Air Vice Marshal Elliott, with headquarters at Bari, Italy. This body assumed responsibility for all operations by land, sea, and air into Central and South-Eastern Europe.
Fitzroy Maclean the head of the British military mission to the Partisans said that, as the Balkan Air Force was also responsible for the "planning and co-ordination of all supply dropping" to the Partisans, it "gave me a single authority with whom I could deal direct and was of incalculable advantage in obtaining quick results". This was decisive in enabling the Partisans to withstand the Raid on Drvar (Seventh Offensive).
Much of the planning for Operation Ratweek to impede the German withdrawal from the Balkans was done at BAF Headquarters and Maclean’s own Rear Headquarters at Bari. Ratweek, started on 1 September 1944, also involved the Navy and the Partisans. USAAF Flying Fortresses (50) were called in to bomb Leskovac and impede the German withdrawal, though with many civilian casualties.
The Balkan Air Terminal Service (BATS) was formed by the BAF to improve the supply of materiel to the Partisans. Teams of the BATS parachuted into Yugoslavia to meet up with the Partisans. Together they then set up a number of landing strips which transport aircraft could land at. Through these concealed airstrips, more supplies could be delivered to the Partisans and wounded Partisans could be flown out for treatment, as well as the delivery and removal of British Special Operations Executive (SOE) and American Office of Strategic Services (OSS) teams.
Units of the Air Force
13th Light Bomber Squadron RHAF
No. 25 Squadron SAAF
No. 37 Squadron RAF
No. 39 Squadron RAF
No. 351 Squadron RAF
No. 352 Squadron RAF
No. 1435 Squadron RAF
No. 281 Wing RAF
No. 6 Squadron RAF – Hawker Hurricane for ground attack
No. 283 Wing RAF
No. 213 Squadron RAF
No. 334 Wing RAF
No. 267 Squadron RAF, as well as operations in the Balkans 267 Squadron could reach Poland and flew operations to deliver and collect agents.
60th Troop Carrier Group – Dakota
From June 1944, a Soviet unit of 12 Dakotas and 12 Yakovlev fighters to support the USSR military mission to the Partisans and drop supplies came under the BAF.
At the same time, the BAF coordinated operations in the Adriatic area by Land Forces, Adriatic and the naval forces under the command of the Flag Officer, Taranto.
Bibliography
Deakin, F.W.D. (1971). The Embattled Mountain. Oxford University Press, London.
Lazarević, Božo (1972). VAZDUHOPLOVSTVO U NOR-u 1941-1945. Beograd: Vojnoizdavački zavod.
Maclean, Fitzroy (1949). Eastern Approaches. Jonathan Cape, London.
Pejčić, Predrag (1991). PRVA I DRUGA ESKADRILA NOVJ. Beograd: Vojnoizdavački i novinski centar.
Kovačević, Miloš, ed. (1965). Vazduhoplovstvo u narodnooslobodilačkom ratu Jugoslavije (PDF). Zemun: Komanda Ratnog vazduhoplovstva.
I.C.B. Dear & M.R.D. Foot, ed. (2005). The Oxford Companion to World War II. Oxford University Press.
Milanović, Đorđe (1978). Naši piloti u borbi [Our Pilots in Combat]. Belgrade: Četvrti jul.
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| A loose formation of Douglas Dakota Mark IIIs of No. 267 Squadron RAF based at Bari, Italy, flying along the Balkan coast. (Imperial War Museum photo CNA 3336) |
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| The RAF evacuating wounded partisans from Yugoslavia. A wounded female partisan being carried from one of the transport aircraft on arrival in Italy, 1944. (Imperial War Museum photo CNA 3095) |
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| Air Vice-Marshals W Elliot and G H Mills at BAF Headquarters, Bari 1945. (Imperial War Museum photo CNA 3470) |
| BAF Hurricane Attack, Adriatic Sea. |
| BAF Ammunition Transports to (NOVJ) troops. |
| A B-24 over Kraljevo during the city's bombing in 1944. |
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| Transport and equipment of the Balkan Air Force coming ashore from tank landing craft at Zara, Italy, for the journey to the airfield at Prkos. (Imperial War Museum photo CL 3479) |
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| A Supermarine Spitfire LF Mark VIII of No. 253 Squadron RAF being stripped down by flight mechanics at Prkos, Yugoslavia. 1945. (Imperial War Museum photo CL 3481) |
| Supermarine Spitfire Mark IXs of No. 281 Wing RAF are prepared for a sortie at Prkos, Yugoslavia, as the pilots confer before take off. (Imperial War Museum photo CNA 3509) |
| Hurricane Mark IV, KZ188 C, of No. 6 Squadron RAF being refueled, amid other aircraft of the Squadron, on a dispersal at Prkos, Yugoslavia. (Imperial War Museum photo CL 3480) |
| A line of Supermarine Spitfire Mark IXs of No. 73 Squadron RAF, undergo servicing and refueling at Prkos, Yugoslavia. (Imperial War Museum photo CNA 3527) |
| Supermarine Spitfire Mark IXs of No. 73 Squadron RAF, undergo maintenance at Prkos, Yugoslavia. (Imperial War Museum photo CNA 3528) |
| Men of the armored detachment of No. 2771 Field Squadron, RAF Regiment, service their Otter light reconnaissance car and weapons at Prkos airfield, Yugoslavia. (Imperial War Museum photo CL 3485) |
| SAAF Beaufighters of the Balkan Air Force rocketing German-occupied buildings in Zuzemberk, Yugoslavia in Spring 1945. |
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