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Günter "Hupatz" Seeger (9 September 1918 – 6 September 2013)〔Fliegerblatt Magazine 6/2013, page 98〕 was a German Luftwaffe fighter ace and recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross during World War II. Seeger scored 56 victories in 504 missions. All his victories were recorded over the Western Front and included eight four-engine bombers. ==Military career== He joined the Luftwaffe in 1937 and underwent his fighter pilot training at Werneuchen. Upon graduation, ''Ofw'' Seeger was posted to 3./JG 2 in late February, 1940.〔Luftwaffe Officer Career Summaries website.〕 He participated in the Battle of France and recorded his first victory on 8 June by shooting down a French Morane fighter near Soissons. During the Battle of Britain Seeger claimed a further three victories, including two RAF Spitfire fighters on 7 September. From 27 March to 19 June 1941, Seeger was transferred to ''Ergänzungsstaffel/JG 2'' (JG 2's training squadron) as an instructor. He returned to front line duty in late June, with the ''Stab'', or HQ flight, of JG 2, where he flew as wingman for several famous aces including Wilhelm Balthasar, Walter Oesau, Rudolf Pflanz and Erich Leie.〔Aces of the Luftwaffe website.〕 By November 1941, Seeger had 19 victories to his credit, when he was sent for a second stint as a trainer with ''Ergänzungsstaffel/JG 2''. He returned to 3./JG 2 again in January 1942. During the abortive Allied landings at Dieppe in August, Oberfeldwebel Seeger shot down three Spitfires. However, he was also shot down himself and had to bail out of his Fw 190 A-3 ('Yellow 14' W.Nr 0536)〔Aces of the Luftwaffe website.〕 and fortunately escaped injury. In September, he was recalled to Stab/JG 2 for a short time, before transferring at the beginning of November to the recently established high-altitude intercept squadron, 11./JG 2. Following the Torch landings in North Africa at the same time, the unit was immediately transferred to the Mediterranean theatre to operate from bases in Tunisia. Seeger had 24 victories to his credit at this time and had been promoted to the rank of Leutnant. Seeger recorded nine victories over Tunisia before the unit retreated to Sicily. In February, 11./JG 2 was disbanded and absorbed into II./JG 53.〔Weal 2001, pp.97.〕 Seeger was assigned to 7./JG 53, and operating over Sicily and southern Italy, Seeger added 14 further victories. With the fall of Sicily in July 1943, and surrender of Italy in early September, he was sent back to Germany to recuperate from a bout of malaria. Sadly, in October, during an Allied air raid on Offenbach his mother was killed and his father injured when their house was destroyed by the bombing.〔Aces of the Luftwaffe website.〕 Returning to duty in November he was initially back with 7./JG 53, now re-equipped with Bf109G6s armed with 20 and 30mm cannons and even rockets to intercept American bombers flying over northern Italy and the Alps. At the end of January, III./JG 53 swapped roles with its fellow I./JG 53 taking up ground support missions against the recent Anzio landings, from Orvieto just north of Rome. Leutnant Seeger was awarded the Ritterkreuz on 26 March 1944 (for forty-six victories) and promoted to the rank of Oberleutnant. Seeger finally left Italy once and for all when he transferred for a short stint to gain leadership experience with the ''Stab'' flight of II./JG 53, now based in southern Germany, and led by his former squadron commander at 11./ JG2, Julius Meimberg. Because, in April, Seeger was appointed Staffelkapitän of 4./JG 53. In combat against US fighters on 13 May, he was shot down near Pritzerbe in his Bf109G6 'White 1' and received minor head injuries in the crash-landing. Following the Allied landings in Normandy on 6 June 1944, II./JG 53 was rushed to western France. Seeger claimed four victories (including his 50th on 2 July near Caen) before the decimated ''Gruppe'' was withdrawn back to Germany in mid-July. In August his squadron was renamed 7./JG 53, and continued its futile defence against overwhelming odds and better quality pilots and equipment to the end of the year. On 2 November he was injured in a vehicle accident, and he handed over command of the squadron. Seeger did not participate in Operation Bodenplatte, the attack on Allied airfields in the Netherlands, Belgium and France on New Year's Day 1945 as he had been granted leave to marry.〔Aces of the Luftwaffe website.〕 He stayed with 7./JG 53 for the rest of the war, but chronic fuel shortages limited flight-time and he claimed only two further victories. He managed to avoid capture, making his way home to Offenbach on foot.〔Aces of the Luftwaffe website.〕〔Luftwaffe Officer Career Summaries website.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Günther Seeger」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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