词条 | Nikolay Sutyagin |
释义 |
| name = Nikolay Sutyagin | birth_date = {{birth date|1923|05|05}} | death_date = {{death date and age|1986|11|12|1923|05|05}} | birth_place = Smagino, Buturlinsky District, Nizhny Novgorod, Russian SFSR, USSR | death_place = Kiev, Ukraine SSR, Soviet Union | image = N.V._Sutyagin.jpg | caption = | nickname = | allegiance = {{flag|Soviet Union}} | branch = Soviet Air Force | serviceyears = 1941–1978 | rank = Major General | commands = | unit = 17th Fighter Aviation Regiment | battles = World War II Korean War | awards = Hero of the Soviet Union Honoured Military Pilot of the USSR Order of Lenin Orders of the Red Banner (3) Order of the Patriotic War First Class medals (16) | relations = | laterwork = }} Captain Nikolay Sutyagin (5 May 1923 – 12 November 1986) was a Soviet fighter pilot in the Second World War and the Korean War. He was the top ace of the Korean War scoring 21 victories. BiographyNikolay Vasil'yevich Sutyagin was born in 1923 near Nizhniy Novgorod, then known as Gorkiy. His parents were actors, and eventually moved to the city when Nikolay was 11. Joining the Komsomol in 1939, Nikolay was then able to get into the DOSAAF program where he was exposed to flying in the Polikarpov Po-2 biplane. In March 1941 he was conscripted into the Red Army, but was then posted to the Soviet Air Force. He then went to pilot school, graduating in 1942, and was sent to the 5th Fighter Aviation Regiment in the Far East. He remained in the Far East until the end of the war, acquiring some combat experience in the war with Japan after the Soviets declared war on the Japanese Empire. After the war, Sutyagin learned to fly the American P-63 Kingcobra, also flying as an instructor in the Soviet-converted UTI P-63 two-seater. In April 1947 Sutyagin joined the 17th Fighter Aviation Regiment, part of the 190th Fighter Aviation Division (IAD) in the Far East Military District. In 1950 the 17th was moved to the new 303rd IAD, which included the 523rd Fighter Aviation Regiment and 18th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment, and the entire division was equipped with the new MiG-15 jet fighter. Sutyagin completed 54 flights in the MiG-15 before the division was ordered on a "secret tour" and reassigned to the 64th Fighter Aviation Corps at Mukden in Manchuria, with its regiments forward deployed to Myaogao and Antung airfields on the Korean border, in order to counter UN airpower over Korea. Sutyagin began combat operations in April 1951. When he left Korea in February 1952, Captain Sutyagin had been credited with shooting down 21 UN aircraft.{{dubious|date=September 2012}} He was the biggest ace in the Korean war, outscoring the top U.S ace Captain Joseph C. McConnell by 5 kills. Sutyagin was awarded the Gold Star and the title Hero of the Soviet Union, and was soon promoted to Major. By 1970 he was a chief instructor and Major-General of Aviation (the equivalent of US rank of Brigadier general). Sutyagin served a further combat tour as chief instructor for flight training to the Vietnamese People's Air Force and taught combat tactics in 1970-1971, flying the MiG-21PF and MiG-17. Suffering ill health he returned to the USSR in May 1972 and was sent to GSFG in East Germany to recuperate. Due to his failing vision Sutyagin was removed from flight status and relegated to either trainers or transports. Sutyagin retired in May 1978 at the age of 55, and spent the last years of his life with his family, dying in November 1986 at the age of 63. Over the course of his career he flew 20 types of aircraft and logged over 3,300 flight hours. Sutyagin was the top Soviet fighter ace in the Korean War. He claimed 15 F-86 Sabres, two F-84 Thunderjets, two P-80 Shooting Stars and two Gloster Meteors shot down. Sutyagin's Korean War record was 149 combat missions, 66 aerial engagements[1] and 21 enemy aircraft shot down.[2] Sutyagin was awarded the Order of Lenin, three Orders of the Red Banner, Order of the Patriotic War First Class and a Hero of the Soviet Union in 1952. Victory claimsSutyagin's record is generally held to be 21 victories, with another two shared.[3] However at least one source suggests that only five victories are verifiable.[4]
See also
References1. ^http://www.acepilots.com/russian/rus_aces.html 2. ^http://www.acepilots.com/russian/rus_aces.html 3. ^Soviet aces of the Korean War, Allan Magnus 4. ^http://stephenesherman.com/discussions/sutyagin.html
10 : 1923 births|1996 deaths|Heroes of the Soviet Union|Soviet Korean War flying aces|Soviet Air Force generals|Soviet major generals|Soviet military personnel of the Korean War|Recipients of the Order of Lenin|People from Buturlinsky District|Recipients of the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st class |
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