Eagle Biography
Konstantin M. Treshchov
Nineteen year old Second Lieutenant Konstantin Michailovich Treshchov was one of the
first Soviet pilots to gain an aerial victory against the Luftwaffe. Born in Tula,
Russia, Treshchov developed an early interest in aviation and built model aircraft as a
boy. At 15, he joined the local aero club, making his first flight in a Polikarpov Po-2
trainer. A year later, he entered the Kachyn military aviation school. In 1940 and 1941,
Treshchov served as a senior pilot posted near the border of Byelorussia and German
occupied Poland. On the night of 21-22 June 1941, when the Germans opened Operation
Barbarossa, he was standing alert.
At 0335 hours an air raid alarm sounded and Treshchov
and his fellow pilots launched in their Polikarpov I-153 Chaikas. Unaware that
war had begun, the Soviets ran head-on into Luftwaffe Junkers 87 dive bombers escorted by
Messerschmitt 109 fighters. Battling over Grodno, Treshchov and his flight commander
shot down a bomber. Outnumbered, he and his comrades fought courageously as the Germans
advanced to the edge of Moscow. In late 1941, his regiment, equipped with the Polikarpov
I-16 Rata, fought in the early days of the 900-day Leningrad siege. They
escorted Soviet transports flying across Lake Ladoga, a route known as the "Road of
Life."
In 1942, Treshchov transitioned to a Yakovlev fighter and became a squadron
commander in the 16th Air Army. The next few months were the most unforgettable and
important in his life and a turning point in World War II. In the Battle for Stalingrad,
Treshchov often flew four to five combat sorties a day, scored nine victories, and earned
two Orders of the Red Banner and a Defense of Stalingrad Medal. In 1943, as the Germans
began Operation Citadel in the Kursk-Orel salient, he continued to add victories as the
greatest tank battle in history unfolded. In 1944, the 22-year old "ace" flew
in Operation Bagration, the liberation of Byelorussia, and in 1945, covered the Red Army's
final assault on Berlin.
He flew 565 total combat sorties, scored 28 aerial victories,
and received the Gold Star and title, "Hero of the Soviet Union." In 1950,
Treshchov graduated from War College and served at Air Force Headquarters. In Korea in
195 1, he studied tactics of USAF squadrons flying the North American F-86 Sabre
and the Republic F-84 Thunderjet, later co-authoring A Survey of War in
the East. From 1957 to 1959, Treshchov was a military advisor to the Chinese. He remained
on flight status until 1964, logging over 3000 hours and flying nearly all the fighters
developed by Polikarpov, Yakovlev, Lavochkin, and Mikoyan-Gurevich. In 1983, Treshchov
medically retired, but remains active in several veteran's organizations.
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1993
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On 22 November 1942, as the Red Army encircled General Paulus' Sixth Army, Captain Treshchov led six Yak-7Bs of the 127th Fighter Aviation Regiment in a ground-attack mission on the edge of Kalacha. After the attack, he turned to a group of German Heinkel 111 bombers and their escorts. Treshchov and others from his squadron not only broke up the German attack but also shot down three He 111s and three Me 109s.
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