Alexander Ivanovich Koldunov | |
---|---|
Born | 20 September 1923 |
Died | 7 June 1992 | (aged 68)
Buried at | Novodevichy Cemetery, Moscow |
Allegiance | USSR |
Service/branch |
Soviet Air Force Soviet Air Defence Force |
Rank | Chief Marshal of Aviation |
Commands held | Commander-in-Chief of Soviet Air Defence Forces |
Battles/wars | World War II |
Awards |
Chief Marshal of Aviation Alexander Ivanovich Koldunov (20 September 1923 – 7 June 1992) was a Soviet World War II fighter ace. He was the eighth highest ranking Soviet fighter ace of the 1941-45 period.
Biography[]
Koldunov joined the Soviet Army in February 1941. He graduated from the Kacha Military Aviation School in 1943 and joined the 866th Fighter Aviation Regiment (866 IAP), flying the Yak fighter on the Southern area of the eastern front in May 1943. On 7 November 1944 he was held responsible for the shooting down of three USAAF P-38 Lightnings of the 82nd Fighter Group, 15th Air Force in a 'friendly fire' incident near Belgrade.
He was awarded Hero of the Soviet Union in August 1944. By the end of the war Captain Koldunov had flown 412 operations, fought 96 air combats and claimed 46 air victories (and 1 shared). He received a second award of Hero of the Soviet Union in 1948.
Remaining in military service after the War he transferred from the Soviet Air Force to the Soviet Air Defence Force in the early 1960s. Koldunov was appointed as the Commander of the Moscow Air Defence District in November 1970. After a promotion to Colonel-General in 1972, in December 1975 Koldunov became the First Deputy Chief of Defence Forces. In 1977 he was promoted to Marshal of Aviation and the following year Koldunov was appointed to command the entire Air Defence Force. In 1984 he was promoted to Chief Marshal of Aviation, one of only a handful of officers to hold this very senior rank.
Koldunov was dismissed in May 1987 after Mathias Rust, a civilian German pilot flew from Finland to Moscow and landed in Red Square. Koldunov died on 7 June 1992 and was buried at Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.
References[]
- The Great Soviet Encyclopedia - Aleksandr Ivanovich Koldunov
- ww2awards.com - KOLDUNOV, Aleksandr Ivanovich
- On Air Power - Koldunov, Aleksandr Ivanovich
The original article can be found at Alexander Koldunov and the edit history here.