The Night Witches: The 588th Night Bomber Aviation Regiment
This definitive account chronicles the extraordinary story of the Soviet Union’s 46th Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment, the legendary "Night Witches" who flew over 23,000 combat missions during World War Two. Drawing from declassified archives, veteran testimonies, and extensive historical research, this book examines how young Soviet women transformed obsolete Polikarpov Po-2 biplanes into instruments of psychological warfare against the technologically superior German Wehrmacht. The narrative traces the regiment’s journey from its formation under aviation pioneer Marina Raskova through brutal defensive battles in the Caucasus to the final assault on Berlin, exploring not only their tactical innovations and combat effectiveness but also the profound human costs of sustained night operations in flammable canvas aircraft. The book delves into the harsh realities of their service, including the political persecution that missing personnel faced under Stalin’s Order Number 270, the physical and psychological trauma that combat inflicted, and the difficult transition to civilian life in a society that celebrated their wartime heroism while expecting them to resume traditional gender roles. This comprehensive military and social history reveals how these women achieved the impossible through courage, tactical creativity, and the refusal to accept conventional limitations on what women could accomplish in combat.