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The Deutsche Luftwaffe or ( Air Force . The history of the German military aviation forces began in 1910 with the founding of the Imperial German Army Air Service, yet it has not been continuous because Germany lost both World Wars (1914-1918 and 1939-1945). As a result, Germany had no military air force between 1918 and 1935 and again between 1945 and 1955. In 1939-1940, the ''Luftwaffe'' helped the German army to astonishingly rapid success in both Eastern and Western Europe, but failed to win control of the skies over Britain. Later on, despite its best efforts, it could not prevent the defeat of Germany either by day, or by night, owing to constant Allied bombing of Germany's factories and cities by a numerically overwhelming force of bombers based in England. This was coupled with the advances of the Soviet armies from the East, as numbers of available German aircraft dwindled in the face of ever-growing numbers of Soviet aircraft. The ''Luftwaffe'' was, however, notable in putting the world's first jet fighter and the world's only rocket-powered fighter into action during the war. Between 1955 and 1990, there were two German air forces as a result of the splitting of the defeated Germany in 1945 into two, but the air force of the GDR was dissolved and its structure taken over by the Luftwaffe in 1990 upon the German reunification. Only in Bosnia in 1999 has the ''Luftwaffe'' ever seen war action since the end of World War II . History World War I The forerunner of the ''Luftwaffe'', the Imperial German Army Air Service, was founded in 1910 before the outbreak of World War I (1914–1918) with the emergence of Military Aircraft , although they were intended to be used primarily for reconnaissance in support of armies on the ground, just as balloons had been used in the same fashion during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871 and even as far back as the Napoleonic Wars . It was not the world's first Air Force , however, because France's embryonic army air service, which eventually became the Armée De L'Air , had also been founded in 1910, and Britain's Royal Flying Corps (which merged in 1918 with the Royal Naval Air Service to form the Royal Air Force ), was founded in 1912. During the war, the Imperial Army Air Service utilised a wide variety of aircraft, ranging from fighters (such as those manufactured by Albatros-Flugzeugwerke and Fokker ), reconnaissance aircraft (Aviatik and DFW) and heavy bombers ( Gothaer Waggonfabrik , better known simply as Gotha, and Zeppelin-Staaken). , the "Red Baron", who brought down 80 Allied aircraft before being shot down and killed on April 21 1918 . The ''Pour le Mérite'' medal is clearly in view here.]] However, the fighters received the most attention in the annals of military aviation, since it produced "aces" such as Manfred Von Richthofen , popularly known in English as "The Red Baron" (in Germany, he was known as "der rote Baron"), Ernst Udet , Hermann Göring , Oswald Boelcke (considered the first master tactician of "dogfighting"), Max Immelmann (the first airman to win the '' Pour Le Mérite '', Imperial Germany's highest decoration for gallantry, as a result of which the decoration became popularly known as the "Blue Max"), and Werner Voss . As well as the German Navy, the German Army also used Zeppelin s as Airship s for bombing military and civilian targets in occupied France and Belgium as well as the United Kingdom. All German and Austro-Hungarian military aircraft in service used the Iron Cross insignia until early 1918. Afterwards, the ''Balkenkreuz'', a black Greek Cross on white, was introduced. After the war ended in German defeat, the service was dissolved completely under the conditions of the Treaty Of Versailles , which demanded that its aeroplanes be completely destroyed. As a result of this disbanding, the present-day Luftwaffe (which dates from 1956) is not the oldest independent air force in the world, since the Royal Air Force of the United Kingdom is older, having been founded on 1 April 1918 . Inter-war period Since Germany had been banned by the Treaty Of Versailles from having an air force, there existed the need to train its pilots for a future war in secret. Initially, civil aviation schools within Germany were used, yet only light training planes could be used in order to maintain the facade that the trainees were going to fly with civil airlines such as Lufthansa . In order to train its pilots on the latest combat aircraft, Germany ironically solicited the help of its future enemy, the USSR . A secret training airfield was established at Lipetsk in 1924 and operated for approximately nine years using mostly Dutch and Russian, but also some German, training aircraft before being closed in 1933. On February 26 , 1935 , Adolf Hitler ordered Hermann Göring to reinstate the ''Luftwaffe'', breaking the Treaty of Versailles signed in 1919. Germany broke it without sanction from Britain and France or the League Of Nations , yet neither the two nations nor the League did anything to oppose either this or any other action which broke the provisions of the Treaty. Although the new air force was to be run totally separately from the army, it retained the tradition of according army ranks to its officers and airmen, a tradition retained today by the ''Bundesluftwaffe'' of the unified Germany and by many air forces throughout the world. However, it is worth noting that, before the official promulgation of the Luftwaffe, what was a paramilitary air force was known as the ''Deutscher Luftverband'' ("German Air Union"; DLV for short), with Ernst Udet as its head, and the DLV uniform insignia became those of the new ''Luftwaffe'', although the DLV "ranks" were actually given special names that made them sound more civilian than military. Dr. Fritz Todt , the engineer who founded the forced labour '' Organisation Todt '', was appointed to the rank of ''Generalmajor'' in the ''Luftwaffe''. He was not, strictly speaking, an airman, although he had served in an observation squadron during World War I, winning the Iron Cross . He died in an air crash in February 1942. The Luftwaffe had the ideal opportunity to test its pilots, aircraft and tactics in the Stuka dive-bomber and the Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter plane. However, as aircraft seconded to Franco's Nationalist air force, Luftwaffe markings were replaced so as not to make the world believe that Germany was actively supporting the revolt. Instead of the Nazi Party's Swastika on the tailplane, the German planes used the Nationalist air force aircraft markings (a Saint Andrew's cross over a white background, painted on the rudder of the aircraft and a black dic on fuselage and wings). All aircraft in the Legion were affiliated to units given a designation ending in the number 88. For example, bombers were in ''Kampfgruppe'' ("Combat Group") 88, abbreviated to K/88, and fighters in ''Jagdgruppe'' ("Pursuit Group") 88, J/88. A grim foretaste of the systematic bombing of cities during World War II came in April 1937 when a combined force of German and Italian bombers under National Spanish command destroyed most of the Basque city of Guernica in north-east Spain. This bombing received worldwide condemnation, and the collective memory of the horror of the bombing of civilians has ever since become most acute via the famous Painting , named after the town, by the Cubist artist, Pablo Picasso . Many feared that this would be the way that future air wars would be conducted, since the Italian strategist, General Giulio Douhet (who had died in 1930), had formulated theories regarding what would be dubbed "strategic bombing", the idea that wars would be won by striking from the air at the heart of the industrial muscle of a warring nation, and thus demoralising the civilian population to the point where the government of that nation would be driven to sue for peace—a portent of things to come, certainly, and not just during the war which would break out in Europe only months after the end of the civil war in Spain. World War II See Also: History of the Luftwaffe during World War II The German Luftwaffe was one of the most powerful, doctrinally advanced, and battle-experienced air forces in the world when World War II started in Europe in September 1939. Following the loss of the Battle of Britain it went into terminal decline, until it virtually disappeared from the skies of Europe in 1944, leaving the rest of the Wehrmacht to fight without air support. Cold War in 1959. (Model by Peter Mojzisek {Link without Title} )]] Following the war, German aviation in general was severely curtailed, and military aviation was completely forbidden when the ''Luftwaffe'' was officially disbanded in August 1946 by the Allied Control Commission. This changed when West Germany joined NATO in 1955, as the Western Allies believed that Germany was needed in view of the increasing threat militarily from the USSR and its Warsaw Pact allies. Throughout the following decades, the West German ''Luftwaffe'' was equipped mostly with U.S. -designed aircraft manufactured locally under licence. All aircraft sported—and continue to sport—the Iron Cross on the fuselage, harking back to the days of World War I, while the national flag of West Germany could be seen on the tailplanes. Many well-known fighter pilots, who had fought with the ''Luftwaffe'' in World War II, joined the new post-war air force and underwent refresher training in the U.S. before returning to West Germany to upgrade on the latest U.S.-supplied hardware. These included Erich Hartmann , the highest-ever scoring ace (352 enemy aircraft destroyed), Gerhard Barkhorn (301), Günther Rall (275) and Johannes Steinhoff (176). Steinhoff, who suffered a crash in a Messerschmitt Me 262 shortly before the end of the war which resulted in lifelong scarring of his face and other parts of his body, would eventually become commander-in-chief of the Luftwaffe, with Rall as his immediate successor. Hartmann retired as an ''Oberst'' (colonel) in 1970 aged 48. The aforementioned Josef Kammhuber also served with the post-war Luftwaffe, retiring in 1962 as ''Inspekteur der Bundesluftwaffe''. During the 1960s, the ", the Canadair CL-13, enjoyed a long career with ''Luftwaffe'' fighter squadrons, since seventy-five of them entered service in and after 1957. The United States provides Nuclear Weapon s for use by Germany under a NATO Nuclear Sharing agreement. As of 2005, 60 tactical B61 Nuclear Bomb s are provided, stored at Büchel and Ramstein Air Bases, which in time of war would be delivered by Luftwaffe Panavia Tornado s {Link without Title} . Many countries believe this violates Articles I and II of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty . Reunification The GDR 's air force, the ''Luftstreitkräfte der NVA '', was supplied exclusively with Eastern Bloc -produced aircraft, such as the Sukhoi Su-7 "Fitter" and the more famous Mikoyan-Gurevich (MiG) family of aircraft, such as the MiG-21 , MiG-23 and MiG-29 fighters, and served primarily as an extension of Red Air Force units in Eastern Germany. The East German air force was unique among Warsaw Pact countries in that it was often equipped with Soviet-standard combat aircraft, instead of downgraded export models. As an extension of Soviet air power, the "Luftstreitkräfte" enjoyed less autonomy than other Eastern Bloc air forces. Unlike the West German ''Luftwaffe'', the markings sported on the aircraft reflected the identity of the country as belonging to the Communist bloc. These markings consisted of a diamond-shaped design, in which could be seen the vertically oriented three stripes in black, red and gold surmounted by the stylised hammer, compass and wreath-like ears-of-grain design, which was also seen on the Flag Of East Germany , although the stripes were a 90-degree orientation from those to be seen on either national flag of the two German nations between 1959 and 1990. After the GDR and West Germany were reunified in October 1990, the aircraft of the '' NVA '' were taken over by the unified Federal Republic Of Germany , and their GDR markings were replaced by the Iron Cross, thus creating the situation of Soviet-built aircraft serving in a NATO air force. However, most of these would eventually be taken out of service altogether, in many cases being sold to the new Eastern European allies now part of NATO , such as Poland and the Baltic states. The exception to this was the 73rd Steinhoff Fighter Wing in Laage, Germany. The pilots of this squadron flew MiG-29s acquired during the reunification and were some of the most experienced MiG-29 pilots in the world. One of their primary duties was to serve as aggressor pilots, training other pilots in dissimilar combat tactics. The United States sent a group of fighter pilots to Germany during the Red October exercice in order to practice real tactics against the aircraft they were most likely to meet in real combat. In 2004, however, the MiG-29s were sold to Poland for 1€/plane. Since then, the 73rd Steinhoff Fighter Wing uses the Eurofighter Typhoon . Since the 1970s, the ''Luftwaffe'' of West Germany and later the reunited Germany (as well as many other European air forces) has actively pursued the construction of European combat aircraft such as the Panavia Tornado and more recently the Eurofighter Typhoon to gain more independence from the United States . s at CFB Goose Bay , Labrador ]] In March 1999, for the first time since 1945, the ''Luftwaffe'' engaged in combat operations as part of the ) sorties. No ''Luftwaffe'' aircraft were lost during the campaign, but the force's role proved to be controversial in Germany because of the strong pacifist sentiment still present in the population that is opposed to the use of force by Germany in international affairs. Moreover, there were constitutional concerns, because Germany was not and, indeed, still is not allowed to participate in "wars of aggression" owing to its 1949 '' Grundgesetz '' ("Basic Law" - constitution). Because of something like a paradigm shift, Germany can use its ''Luftwaffe'' for crisis reaction and conflict prevention. See also
External links
Select bibliography There have been literally hundreds of books, magazines and articles written about the ''Luftwaffe''. It is only possible to list a select few here.
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