We have a topic about Sov fighters in China. I have considered adding the material below there, but in the end I think it warrants a new topic. So here we go - another interesting article form j-aircraft.com
Soviet Bombers in China
(1937-1946)
by Anatolii Demin and Vladimir Kotel?nikov
Aviatsiia i Kosmonavtika 3.1999
translated by George M. Mellinger, Twin Cities Aero Historians
link to the original article
http://www.j-aircraft.com/research/George_Mellinger/soviet_bombers_in_china.htm{For Russian names I have used a simplified version of the Library of Congress system; for Japanese names, the rendition common in Western literature. Chinese names and places have proven difficult. I have been given by a friend a table for transliterating Pinyan phonetics into Cyrillic, and have tried to work it backwards to obtain Pinyan from the Russian. -GMM}
On July 7, 1937 the Japanese army invaded China. Her soldiers attacked a Chinese post on the Lugouqiao Bridge on the border between China and occupied Manchuria. According to the laughable pretext, the Chinese were guilty of abducting a Japanese soldier who went missing during maneuvers, and thus began the long Sino-Japanese war. The Japanese militarists had planned for this for some time, and had gathered their strength well in advance.
Chinese aviation in those years was regarded as backward. Their own aviation construction industry was just being born; and the national design bureau was only just beginning to find its legs with the help of foreign assistance. In 1934 the Chinese imported 132 American aircraft and 14 aircraft motors for total sum of 3.7 million dollars (including spares). The next year a further 81 aircraft and 80 motors were ordered for a sum of 2.5 million dollars. In those years China was the largest customer for American aviation equipment, amounting to 20% of American aviation exports. Bombardment aviation primarily was armed with American light attack bombers - the Northrop Gamma 2EC (24 aircraft imported from the USA in 1936 and a further 24 assembled from components at the Hanzhou aircraft factory) and the Curtiss A-12 Shrike. Intended for direct battlefield support of the ground forces, they had a short radius of action and carried a small bombload. (the E2C up to 550 kg. and the A-12 a maximum of 200 kg), which allowed bombs of only small size. For the same purpose of carrying light fragmentation bombs, also available were the reconnaissance aircraft Vought V-95 Corsair and Douglas O2MC (82 machines were purchased in 1932-36, and later licensed production was organized at Hanzhou).
According to information of the Guomindang government, at the beginning of the war with Japan there were about 600 combat aircraft, of which 305 were fighters and the remainder light bombers and reconnaissance aircraft. Medium bombers (the Chinese classified them as ?heavy?) were not more than 20 machines. All belonged to the three squadrons of the 8th Air Group (in Chinese- ?Dadui? that is ?Large Detachment?). The 10th Squadron (?Zhongdui? - ?Medium Detachment?) flew the Italian three-motor Savoia S.72. In the summer of 1935 a sample copy, equipped for VIP transport was demonstrated and later presented to Chang Kaishi; the Chinese ordered and themselves assembled 6 such machines. In fact these were military transport aircraft equipped with bomb racks for night activity. By the beginning of the Sino-Japanese war all the S.72s were in shabby condition and were suitable only for transport.
The 19th Squadron was fitted out with Heinkel He-111A-0 twin motor bombers which had been rejected by the Luftwaffe (In 1935 six machines were purchased by the aviation command of Guangdong Province). And finally, the the 30th Squadron had the very best equipment, American Martin 139WCs (9 machines purchased in 1935, with the first 6 machines arriving in Shanghai in February 1937 for assembly and the training of crews).
In mid-August 1937 the 8th Air Group was rounded out by the 13th Squadron, receiving in Nanchang 4 SM.81B Italian bombers assembled in the local aviation factory.
At the beginning of the war the Japanese surpassed the Chinese in numbers and quantity, and also in the training of their flying and technical personnel. In spite of their heroism, the Chinese suffered enormous losses. During the first weeks of the war the Chinese lost almost all of their medium bombers. In August-September five of the six Martins of the 30th Squadron were destroyed, bombed by Japanese forces near Shanghai. The sixth and last was shot down on 22 October. Most of the S.72s were destroyed in 1937 on the ground during air attacks. On 25 August 1937, during an attack on Japanese ships in the area of Shizilin and Yuncaobin 2 He-111As of the 19th Squadron were shot down. Later one Heinkel was transferred to the 13th Squadron for training, and one more was mistakenly shot down over Hankou on October 1 by a Chinese Hawk fighter. In February 1938, during the course of two days, all the SM.81Bs were destroyed on the ground.
Ultimately the Chinese were forced to withdraw all their remaining bombers to the rear, beyond the radius of action of the Japanese fighters which completely dominated the Chinese sky. Already by the autumn of 1937 the command staff of the Japanese air forces considered the enemy?s aviation completely destroyed.
Military assistance of the Soviet Union changed the situation. On 21 August 1937 China and the USSR concluded an agreement of non-aggression and mutual assistance. In March of the following year China was granted a credit of 50 million dollars for the purchase of weapons and military equipment. In July 1938 and in June 1939 agreements were signed for new credits consisting of 50 million and 150 million dollars.
We note as comparison, that soon after the beginning of the war the Guomindang resumed purchasing aircraft in a number of countries. Thus in 1938 the USA provided the Chinese with 143 aircraft and 84 motors for a sum of 6.4 million dollars.
But already by September 1937 the Soviet leadership began to implement ?Operation Zet (Z)?, the dispatch to China of the newest combat aircraft. In the middle of September in various units of the Soviet VVS there arrived secret circulars about the selection of the best prepared crews for fulfilling ?special government assignments?. Amongst the selected were crews of SB and TB-3 bombers.
First they began to prepare the southern route. They planned to send the aircraft in crates to Alma-Ata, assemble them there, and ferry them the rest of the way to China by air. The itinerary, beginning in Alma-Ata, passed through Kuldzhu (Yingying), Shihe, Urumchi, Gucheng (Qitai), Hami, Anxi, Suzhou (Jiuquan), Liangzhou (Wuwei), and concluded in Lanzhou on the Huanghe River.
The first commander of the ferry route was the already well-known NII-VVS test pilot Kombrig A. Zalevskii. The base at Alma-Ata was commanded by Kombrig Alekseev. At the series of Chinese aerodromes along the route there were also organized airbases with Soviet ground personnel, including meteorologists, radio operators, and maintenance technicians. At Urumchi the chief of the base was Moiseev, and then A. V. Platonov, at Gucheng - A. V. Politiken, at Suzhou - Glazyrin, at Liangzhou - G. I. Baz?, and at Lanzhou - V. M. Akimov.
The first bombers, ten SBs, were shipped from Moscow on 17 September. They were followed by another 16 machines on the 24th, and on the 27th five more. In all, 31 aircraft, which according to our shtat, at that time composed the full complement of a bomber squadron.[1]
Airmen were selected mainly from units of the 1st Army of Special Designation. From there arrived 22 SB crews, five for the TB-3 and seven for the DB-3. The last aircraft type, having just appeared as the ?super-new? aircraft in Soviet bomber aviation, had not been gathered to hand over to the Chinese. At first they were to be used as fast transports for servicing the ferry route itself. Each DB-3 could carry 11 passengers or equivalent cargo. Also alongside them on the route appeared transport TB-3s and the old civil ANT-9 used at the beginning to transport specialists and cargo.
At the beginning of October two DB-3s arrived at Moscow from the 11th Air Brigade based at Voronezh, and two from the 23rd Air Brigade at Monino. At Factory No39 their bombing gear was removed and replaced by supplementary fuel tanks. In the second half of the month the whole group flew off on the route Moscow-Engels-Tashkent-Alma-Ata. As they approached Tashkent, there was sufficient fuel remaining in the tanks, and they decided to fly directly on to Alma-Ata. But on the approach to that city, due to the suddenly arriving darkness, they lost orientation and all four DB-3s landed at different airfields. Kaduk, the commander of the group landed at one field, the crews of Lomakin and Ul?yanov at another, and the pilot Dorofeev, while landing in the foothills, 70 km from Alma-Ata, broke his undercarriage - this was the weak point of the DB-3 in all the early series.
On 18 October one of the DB-3s completed the first flight to China. The pilot was ordered to supply to the Suzhou detachment equipment and a barrel of ethyl liquid. But the airplane did not fly all the way to the designated location. During an intermediate landing at Hami the strut of the left landing gear leg was broken. The next day a second DB-3 was sent out in pursuit. It delivered to the intermediate field, mechanics, radio operators, various equipment, instruments and spare parts. On 23 October, the second DB-3, due to loss of orientation, made a forced landing in a more or less suitable landing field about 70 km northeast of Angxingzhou. The result was, they broke the landing gear, bent the propeller blades, and crumpled the motor cowlings.
Without awaiting the completion of the supply route, bombers were dispatched along it. this was urgently demanded by the Ya. I. Alksnis, Chief of the Administration the VVS -RKKA (In modern terms - Commander of the VVS). Almost every day he bombarded Alma-Ata with enciphered telegrams. 13 October: ?In order not to waste time immediately send the first echelon of SBs in a quantity of 10 examples as specified....? 14 October: ?The delay of the flight of the first echelon is incomprehensible and intolerable.? And so on until the departure was accomplished.
The first group of SBs (at first their commander was N. G. Kidalinskii, and then M. G. Machin), flew off to China in mid-October 1937. The whole group was divided into the sections of I. Kozlov and P. Murav?yov, and a separate flight of N. Litvinov. In all. 21 aircraft set out, awhile the remainder served as leaders for ferrying flights of fighters. In place of the gunners, the aircraft carried mechanics, a full load of ammunition, and a bombload of 600 kg, though with the detonators carried separately.
On 20 October the first seven SBs landed safely in Urumchi, except for one which blew a tire on landing. It had to be left behind. On take-off from Urumchi, Zakharov?s aircraft was damaged, and the remaining five reached Suzhou. On 24 October the first SBs arrived at Lanzhou, and by the 26th there were already nine machines. There were daily reports to Moscow about the movement of aircraft along the route. Operation ?Zet? was given very great significance.
The presence of Soviet military units in China was not paraded, and when possible was concealed. In spite of the periodic border conflicts the USSR maintained normal diplomatic relations with Japan. And the above-mentioned groups actually appeared as elite military units of the VVS-RKKS, the members of which underwent a careful selection and supplementary training. Not forgotten were the political workers, for whom a fictional assignments were devised. to camouflage their actual duties. Thus the air group commissar, A. G. Rytov became the ?Head Navigator?. Party meetings were held secretly from the Chinese, and upon the approach of any outsider they transformed into ?technical discussions?. All personnel had disguised assignments, even in Moscow, and there were orders not to discuss what happened with the people and the aircraft. About the pilot who allowed himself at a banquet, hosted by the Chinese governor, to propose a toast to Soviet-Chinese friendship, a denunciation was quickly sent to Moscow. All these over legends were shields of gauze - You simply cannot pass off some peasant boy from Tambov or Voronezh as a Chinaman, and Japanese intelligence operated efficiently on Chinese territory. The SB, I-15,and I-16 aircraft were well known to them, both from the military parades in Moscow and from the international air expositions in Milan and Paris. None the less, they flew along the ferry route without any national markings.
According to the status report of 30 October eight SBs still remained in Alma-Ata, two were in Urumchi (one of them damaged), nine in Lanzhou, two in Suzhou, two in Angxingzhou (one was a leader for I-16 fighters), and eight had only just flown off from Urumchi. The total - all 31.
On 22 October at Alma-Ata, six TB-3RN heavy bombers took off. These machines had been used in the VVS-RKKA about a year. Four of them came from the previously mentioned 23rd Air Brigade, and two flew over from Rostov. The Otryad was commanded by Captain Dontsov. In distinction from the SBs, a significant share of which were to fight with Soviet crews, the TB-3s were intended t be handed over to the Chinese. the Soviet aviators participated only as ferrying crews and instructors.
From Alma-Ata the aircraft took off with extra cargo, each ten FAB-100[2] bombs internally, and two FAB-500 or four FAB-250 beneath the wings. Additionally, each carried two complements of ammunition for its guns. As with the SBs, the bombs and detonators were transported separately. On 27 October the TB-3s landed in Urumchi, and then flew without incident along the route as far as Lanzhou, where they arrived on 31 October.