This book covers the last chapter, the decline and fall of the air
defense of Germany. It is a diary of losses and a chronicle in which the
fighter pilot plays the lead. It tells of the young men who joined their
squadrons full of optimism and derring-do, only to give their lives to
no purpose in a last desperate endeavour. Its focal point is the
controversial Operation "Bodenplatte" on the morning of New Year's Day
1945, an operation in which the German fighter force received its final
mortal wound - losing some 230 aircrew in less than 4 hours, the fighter
units suffered their most severe defeat. Only now, after years of
evaluation of all available sources, can the true figures of fighter
losses on January 1, 1945 be reported. But this picture of the sacrifice
of fighter formations does not mean that fighter pilots were unable to
score successes. The figures for enemy aircraft shot down and the
contact reports show clearly that the German pilots could still both
parry and deal out hard punches. Few people have any real idea of the
actual scale of the German fighter force's sacrifice. The imagination
boggles at the tragic events that took place in the skies over Europe as
the war neared its end, even in the perspective of history the full
extent of the debacle can scarcely be depicted. In Six Months to
Oblivion Werner Girbig explains these last months of the Luftwaffe and
the fall of a once mighty air force.