View Single Post
  #1  
Old 28th August 2006, 22:21
Håkan Håkan is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 361
Håkan is on a distinguished road
II/KG 26 on 17 January 1941

On 17 January 1941, II/KG 26 flew their first mission over North Africa; a raid over the Suez Canal to attack a British convoy signalled by the intelligence. However they couldn’t perform this operation without information on the whereabouts of the target so one of the unit’s Heinkels were unloaded and took off at 10:45 to search for the British convoy (according to other sources, the Heinkels flying the reconnaissance sortie were four aircraft flying along the Canal, two with a north-south course and two with a south-north route). Between 17:00 and 18:00, the discovery signal finally arrived at Benina and in short intervals between 18:00 and 18:30, the remaining eight Heinkels took off under the command of Oberstleutnant Martin Harlinghausen, Chief-of-Staff of X Fliegerkorps, that was aboard the Heinkel of Hauptmann Robert Kowalewsky. While the reconnaissance aircraft landed back at 21:15, the night mission was carried out at extreme range, in general bad weather conditions (high winds and sand storms in Marmarica), with crews without any experience of flight in desert conditions. The convoy wasn’t located and only one bomber (Leutnant Werner Kaupisch) was able to return and land in Benghazi. Of the remaining crews obliged to force land in the desert, only two (including Harlinghausen’s) were subsequently found by the Italian troops or by their German comrades and saved. The others were MIA or taken prisoners by the British.

I have some different info on loses depending on sources but it seems that three or four crews became POWs including IH+JP and IH+GM of Leutnant Hans Folter carrying Major Wilhelm Bertram.

Is there anyone with more info on the losses, crews, WNrs etc?

Best wishes/Håkan Gustavsson
__________________
WWII Biplane Fighter Aces
http://surfcity.kund.dalnet.se/

WWII Biplane Fighter Aces Blog
http://ww2biplanefighteraces.blogspot.com/
Reply With Quote