Picture from "Jurnalul lt. Dobran" by Ioan Dobran, MODELISM, 1998
Slt. av. Ioan Dobran
This interview was taken by Victor Nitu and Claudiu Stumer one rainy morning in
September 2002 in Bucharest.
Claudiu Stumer: When you were a child, did you have any experiences with
airplanes. I think you loved aviation since then.
Ioan Dobran: Yes, there isn't a child who does not love airplanes! I
used to build models. The first serious contact with aviation was in 35-36, on a field
near the military high school, where an airplane had landed. I did what I did and
managed to go and see it. I was disappointed. It was only wire and cloth. I don't know
what it was. Something really old. Probably a Potez XIV. I was intrigued though by the
fact that this wreck could actually get airborne. Then I joined ARPA [the Romanian
Association for the Propaganda of Aviation]. I also had subscription to "Cerul nostru"
[Our Sky] magazine. I cultivated my taste for aviation. I had technical skills, but at
school I did not do to well. The parents tried. i was at the "Sf. Sava" high school [one of
the best in Bucharest in that period and even today]. But when I had some spare time, I
generally went to workshop nearby where one repaired bicycles and radios. The grades: 4,5, 6
and 7 [in Romania grades are between 1 and 10]. The parents got worried and hired a tutor.
How was I going to foul this guy? Well, I told him the lesson I studied that day, not the one
I was going to the next day. I had paid attention in class to it and knew it already.
"Mrs. Dobran, I don't understand! He seems to know the lesson with me. I do not know why at
school he forgets it!" So the parents sent me to the military
high school. Discipline, supervision. I said: "Fine! But you will let me join the air force
after that!" "You are young! You will get over it!" But after I graduated from high school I
was admitted in the Air Force Officer School and on 1st September 1939, the first day of war,
I was entering through its gate. We graduated on 10 May 1941 [Romania's national holyday in
that period]. All the new 2nd lieutenants were lined up from Victoria Square to the Aviators
Statue. Slt. Marius Constantinescu, the first of the 1941 class, an infantryman, presented
the honors. The infantry was still the queen of battle. He died later that year during the
siege of Odessa. We were then sent to Ghimbav, near Brasov. There they were going
to split us among the different branches of the air force. We flew together to a point
and then they said: you are going to the fighters, you to the bombers, you to the
reconnaissance, liaison etc, according to one's qualities. At Ghimbav we continued the
fighter training on the IAR-27, a low-wing monoplane well suited for aerobatics and on the
Nardi [FN-305]. This airplane had put the old pilots into offices and was flown only by
young enthusiastic pilots. It was highly maneuverable, a helpless penguin on the ground, but
perfect in the air. After this we received our license on the PZL P.11, a high wing single
engine monoplane, which had two machine-guns. It was a light fighter which fought in the
1941 campaign in Bessarabia and at Odessa, but after that it was withdrawn, because it was
obsolete. In October we were sent to the units. I was assigned to the 1st Fighter Flotilla,
which was the only flotilla with 3 groups. A fighter group had three squadrons, each with
12 aircraft plus three in reserve. Here we started flying on the IAR-80. Initially we loved
this airplane. But before it we also flew a German airplane...
Claudiu Stumer: The He-112B?
Ioan Dobran: Yes, but only for a short while. it was a good plane, but it
could not keep up anymore. In 1942 we entered in state of alert, following the first
American raid: Halpro. They managed to reach Ploesti [on 12 June 1942]. But they did not
come again until 1 August 1943. In 1943 we were sent to Tiraspol to train on the Bf-109. It
was a very interesting experience for me. Our instructor was Helmut Lipfert. We flew first
on the Bf-109F and immediately after that we passed on the "Gheu" [this is how the Romanian
pilots dubbed the Gustav]. I was the first one to fly on it, together with
Bazu Cantacuzino, who soon left for the front for the second time
[the first time was in 1941]. He was a complete sportsman. The war was more a sport for him.
Anyway, I reached the front on 15 August 1943.
Victor Nitu: I would like to ask I question first. Why were you called
"Fakir"?
Ioan Dobran: Lipfert called me this way. We had a contest. He said that he
could fly lower than any other pilot in the Luftwaffe. I told him that I could fly in a
celulă [Romanian for Rotte] lower than him. He said Ok. We will pass over the
airfield and the comrades will tell us who flew lower. The Messerschmitt had a hole in the
fuselage through which a rod could be inserted so that the mechanics could move it more
easily in the field. Very simple. If during the flight one would position himself so that
he could see through the hole, one was a little lower than the lead plane. Lipfert tried to
ditch me, but he couldn't, so we finally came in low over the airfield and then we climbed
away. But my airplane was slower now and lagged behind. What happened? I had hit the ground
with the propeller's end and about 2-3 cm were bent. On the field there were 14 cuts.
Claudiu Stumer: Didn't you feel anything?
Ioan Dobran: No. A little lower and it would have been a lethal accident.
We landed and I parked my airplane next to Lipfert's. He came to me and said: "Fakir, you
flew lower than me. You are a fakir!" On the back cover of my book there is a cartoon of
me as a fakir [it was made by Vasile Scripcaru, an Hs-129B2 pilot, who died in early 1945
in an accident]. I do not know if you noticed, but the bedpan has nails.
Claudiu Stumer: What else can you tell us about Lipfert?
Ioan Dobran: I met him again at Nikolaev, during our long retreat. It's
mentioned in the book. He called me "Fakir! Fakir!"/ I did not know who was first.
Claudiu Stumer: I know that you met Rudel and Hartmann.
Ioan Dobran: I saw Hartmann in 1944 in Romania. They were at Husi, where
there were two airfields: one for the fighters and one for the Stukas. On the first there
were three squadrons. We had to land there and refuel and then I saw him. He was stripped
to his waist and was riding the engine of his aircraft. He was working on the machine-guns.
But he was wearing the Knight's Cross around his neck! I also saw Rudel as he was being
helped by several soldiers to climb into the cockpit. I had met him earlier in 1943 after
my landing at Mihailovka. They had taken me to his group and I sat with him at the table.
The Germans suffocated me with their courtesy! I was in my flying suit and they were all
dressed up in their uniforms as if they were dining at the Ritz! But I was in my lousy
flying suit.
Victor Nitu: This was in October 1943, when you were hit in the engine?
Ioan Dobran: The Russian hit me in the engine, but did not realize that
he had shot me down. I had to land, because I was losing glycol. I made a nice landing, but
I did not know where I was. I parked the airplane at the edge of a forest and then I saw
car approaching. It had a W on it, from Wehrmacht. I was in friendly lines. The next day I
tried to communicate with my comrades who were searching for me, but I could only hear them
and could not get in touch. Probably my emission was weak. A German Fi-156 came and took me,
but instead of going south, where my group was, it took me north to Rudel's group. I sat
to his right at the table. "Ein Kamerad notgelandet!" A comrade who made a forced landing,
that's what they said. They kept me there for two days, with a driver who opened the door
for me, etc. I just couldn't take it anymore! Finally Serbanescu
came and took me away.
Claudiu Stumer: With what?
Ioan Dobran: With a Bf-108 Taifun. A small limousine with four seats. Very
beautiful. He took me to Uman. I took another aircraft.
Claudiu Stumer: Was the other airplane recovered?
Ioan Dobran: No. The front was retreating and the Germans were not in
the mood for it. They said about the airplanes that if it had shot down three enemy aircraft
it had served its purpose. It was not necessary to go all the way. The life of an engine
was 100 hours. After that it was changed.
Claudiu Stumer: How long did a mission last?
Ioan Dobran: It depended. When we had to stop a Soviet attack, together
with the assault aircraft, we just went in and fired all the ammo and then came back. It
took about 35-40 minutes. I even made five such missions in one day. The long ones lasted up
to one and half hour. These were bomber escorts. With an external fuel tank the range could
be increased.
Claudiu Stumer: Could you drop the tank?
Ioan Dobran: Absolutely! One used the fuel in it until one met the enemy
and then, by pulling a lever, the tank fell off. Where were we?
Claudiu Stumer: I would like to ask another question. I read that you were
complaining in one occasion that you had heavier weapons on your aircraft.
Ioan Dobran: Yes, it was on the G-2, on which two additional 20 mm cannons
could be added. One lost maneuverability, but gained a lot of firepower. It was useful
against bombers.
Victor Nitu: Especially against the Il-2s.
Ioan Dobran: Yes, but also against the US bombers.
The weaponry was perfect. We had ordinary, tracer, incendiary, explosive ammo. In
conditions of poorer visibility, I was under the impression that I was using a hose, because
of the tracers.
Gen. Ioan Dobran at his desk. Note the pictures of him on the bookshelf
and the model of his "22"
Victor Nitu: Tell us something about the Soviet pilots.
Ioan Dobran: They were not much different from other pilots. They had an
elite, pilots of great value, who were both good at shooting and at aerobatics. Here I would
like to add something. I am going to contradict myself. There are two kind of pilots: one
was Bazu Cantacuzino, the other was Serbanescu. Looking at WWI, we could compare them with
Guynemer and Fonck. Guynemer was the commander of the Stork Squadron, which fought only
in turns. On the other hand, Fonck waited like an eagle, found the favorable position,
dived, fired, shot down and disappeared. This two types of air warriors are found in Bazu
and Serbanescu. Bazu was the acrobat, Serbanescu was the hawk.
But let's get back to the Soviets. The majority were the herd, with few flying hours,
being easy to shoot down on many occasions. What made the difference after Stalingrad were
the numbers. With the appearance of the Yak-3 and of the La-5, technically things got on
the level. The pilots were the deciding factor. If at the beginning we would engage without
problems two against eight, towards the end, two on two or four on four was a fair fight.
The forces were balanced.
Claudiu Stumer: Did you meet Airabobras?
Ioan Dobran: Yes. There had nothing special regarding its performance. The
37 mm gun made gave it a distinct silhouette and made it easier to recognize. I once had
the impression that I met P-47s. This was a nig airplane, which could reach a very high
speed in a dive. We could only reach 850 km/h. The aerodynamic construction did not allow
more. The wings broke off. This is how Milu got away after they shot
him down and he entered a dive. He could not jump, one hand was dislocated and was hanging
outside. After a wing broke off, the airplane had a strange evolution and threw him out. The
parachute opened and he fainted. He and adj. Encioiu were the group's safety celulă
and were flying higher at 9000 m. They were both shot down. The only thing that he managed
to say was: "Attention 9th Fighter Group! The Mustangs are behind you!". Milu fainted again
on the ground. He woke up when the wind blew into his parachute and dragged him for a couple
of meters. A doctor from a liaison squadron found him and his wingman, who had fallen 500 m
from him. Enciouiu was hit in the leg. He then had problems with the leg for the rest of his
life. They were taken away in a glider, towed by an IAR-39.
Claudiu Stumer: Were you ever wounded?
Ioan Dobran: Wounded no. But I was hit and really shaken up. A forced
landing is very tough. The Bf-109 stalled at 135 km/h. In a dive one can still control it.
However, if it is in a level flight, it would fall down like a rock. When one makes a forced
landing one has more than 135 km/h. About 170. The contact with the ground is very
unpleasant. I had been shot down by Lightnings and I was looking for a field and I finally
found one. I "bit" a little from the ground with the propeller and made an 80 m jump, in
order to loose speed. I then made contact with the ground. In the moment of the landing,
everything moves forward. First the head (the shoulders and waist are immobilized), the
eyes, the face. If the belt doesn't brake and one does not hit the gun sight with the head,
it's OK. I had 3 such landings (one in Russia and two in Romania). Once I made a regular
landing on the landing gear, because I loved the airplane. You know, like the cavalryman
loves his horse. I got to the point where I "felt" the airplane so well that it obeyed
me perfectly.
Claudiu Stumer: Were there differences between airplanes of the same type?
Ioan Dobran: Yes, there were. There are differences of adjustment of the
rudder's and elevators' compensation. One does not feel the same way if one passes from the
airplane in which one flew until then in another airplane of the same type. I got used
to hearing the engine a specific number of hours. A different airplane would have a
different engine with a different number of hours and sound. And I am not even mentioning
structure modifications. For example one could have the surprise of not finding a lever in
the place one was used to, because the other pilot thought it would be easier to move it in
another position.
Victor Nitu: Did each pilot have his personal airplane?
Ioan Dobran: In some manner yes. Because of technical malfunctions we could
not use the same aircraft all the time. Generally we tried to keep them, especially because
in the first campaign some were painted, like Dicezare with "Hai Fetito" or Vinca with
"Nella". After that it was forbidden to. Only victories if one wanted.
Claudiu Stumer: Were there any differences between the Bf-109s made by IAR
and the German ones?
Ioan Dobran: None. Actually at Brasov the airplanes were only assembled. Only
some of the parts were built there, like the wings.
The majority of the airplanes came from the German Werfts, which were very well equipped
front workshops. They were situated 15-20 km behind friendly lines. An airplane could have
been reconditioned with pieces from other aircraft.
I haven't told you anything about the wings. If you could have only seen. This aircraft
was really beauty. Let me take my 22!
[gen. Dobran got up, left the room and came back with a model of a Bf-109G he flew,
no.22]
We thought it was the best airplane in the world. Well, it was a rather subjective
opinion. First the cockpit. It was extremely solid and well thought. There were cases when,
during a takeoff under attack from a concrete runaway, a bomb exploded, the airplane being
at an altitude of 8-10 m. The blast flipped the fighter upside down. It fell back of the
runaway and started sliding, cutting with its right wing the undercarriage of other parked
airplanes, until it finally stopped. The pilot opened the window and got out like a snake. He
was fine.
Claudiu Stumer: Why didn't you have armor protection on side?
Ioan Dobran: Because the possibility of being hit from that angle was very
small. Practically it was not necessary. Another time I saw the airplane flip over three
times and then the pilot got out without problems.
Everything was in the right place. It was like putting on a glove, which fit perfectly.
One wanted to jump out? Very simple. one just had to pull a red ring to one's left and the
cockpit window was thrown away. Only the windscreen remained. Then one pushed the stick with
one's feet and one was thrown out like a cork.
The fuel tank was under the pilot's seat and behind him. It was made by several layers of
synthetic rubber and one layer of natural rubber. If the hole was not too large, the natural
rubber dissolved and the plucked in the hole. It was self-sealing. There was also the armor
in the back of the seat, the one that I felt during the dogfight on 6 June [1944].
Claudiu Stumer: Tell us more about that.
Ioan Dobran: There is not much to tell. The bullet came from below, passed
through the fuel tank and stopped in the armor behind me. I felt something sharp when I
leaned back. But I was fine.
The landing gear was more difficult and was made for good pilots. because the wing was
very thin... But we started from the wing. This I really wanted to tell you. It was
removable. It had here [and he points to the model airplane] a metal plate which could be
removed. Then you really got scared. The whole wing was kept in
place by two screws: one vertical and one horizontal! It took only 15-20 minutes to replace
a wing, because of these two screws.
The radio was of two types FuG-7 and FuG-16, which had a 150 km range. What else can I
say? It was excellent. The button which fired the gun was protected by a flap. Anyway, to
be able to fire, one had first to make switch some contacts. Then with the thumb one fired
the guns and with the forefinger the machineguns. The little finger was used to communicate
through radio. It was all on the stick.
The landing gear. This is where the pilot's skill was shown. The power of the engine
was large and it tended to create a torque while taxing on the ground. After the tail was
lifted from the ground, the gyro effect could not be anymore controlled with the brake,
because it was practically airborne, thanks to the torque. This led to the Bf-109's "steal"
to the left, which caused a lot of accidents.
Claudiu Stumer: Did it ever happen to you?
Ioan Dobran: No, thanks to my high school mechanics professor.
The maximum ceiling was 10000-10500 m. But up there we flew "hanging" in the propeller.
And 2000 m above us were the Mustangs.
Claudiu Stumer: But the Messerschmitt also had a compressor?
Ioan Dobran: Yes, but it had only one stage, which reestablished at 5400 m
the horsepower it had the ground. And that was it. The Mustang had a two stage compressor
and a larger propeller with four blades.
The fact that one sat on the fuel tank was a life savior. Some said: "What? You put the
pilots on the fuel tank?" In the few cases when the plane caught fire in flight the gas
leaked behind us. Read about the battle of Britain and you will notice the large number of
burns, because they had the fuel tank in front of the cockpit.
Victor Nitu: Like the IAR-80.
Ioan Dobran: Yes. What else interests you?
Victor Nitu: The Americans.
Ioan Dobran: We could not wait to meet the Americans. On 5 April [1944]
we left Odessa and landed at Tecuci. It was the first landing in Romania after one year of
front. The Soviet offensive had stopped on the Targu-Frumos-Iasi-Dniester line. We were
detached on the front in Moldavia. That is when the Americans started to come, with Swiss
clock precision. Generally the bombers arrived at Ploesti at about 10:00. They took off
from Foggia and were immediately picked up by the Germans on the radar. At Turnu Severin
there was a crossroad. If they turned to the left, meant that they were going to Budapest
and we got away easily that day. If not they will surely hit Ploesti. The alarm was given,
the pilots climbed in the cockpits and waited for the red flare, the one I wrote in my
book as the red hand of destiny that reaches out after one or the other. The bombers flew
on the line of the Carpathians and then turned south towards Ploesti and flew along the
Prahova Valley. The defense of Ploesti was vey well organized by gen. Gerstenberg, who
speculated the fact that they generally came from the same direction and at the same hour
and used AAA mounted on rail to meet them on the way. Anyway the bombers came at about
8000 m and there only the 88 mm gun could actually do something. Well there were also
a few 105 mm guns. Still they managed to shoot down a lot of bombers.
Initially the defense of the territory was insured by the IAR-80s and by the 7th Fighter
Group, which had a few Bf-109s. From June, however, the battle moved higher and only the
Messerschmitts remained. The numerical difference was huge. For example we engaged 15 to
100 and something. The immediate protection was secured by the Lightnings and the Mustangs
flew higher, as a strategic reserve, which could interviene where it was necessary. They
also strafed roads and railways to attract enemy fighters. This is how that colonel, the
commander of a fighter group from Foggia, fell at Buzau. They were attacking the railway
and got over the airfield, where he entered the barrage of the AAA and was hit. He managed
to make a forced landing and stopped in a house nearby. The first question was: "Romanians
or Germans?" "Romanians" "Good!"
Claudiu Stumer: Would the Germans have shot him?
Ioan Dobran: No, but would have treated him much harsher. But when you
fell in the first line, you had small chances of surviving, because the soldiers can be
really furious.
The American pilots only had to fly a number of missions, after which they could go
home. I remember that I met an American pilot at Focsani or Ramnic. He was sitting on his
parachute and was smoking. "Where have I fallen: to the Germans or to the Romanians?"
"Romanians" He became more settled down. We asked him how many missions he had. He was
towards the end of his tour of duty. We talked and talked and he asked us how many missions
we had. We told him that we fly from the beginning until the end of the war. He pitied us.
"You are practically condemned to death, because it is very possible that one day your time
will come". He was right.
Practically it was very hard to reach the bombers. But still one could have gotten there.
They came in formations of 9-11 aircraft, which each had 10-11 machine-guns. It was like
a hedgehog of fire. We tried several methods of attack: from the front, from the side, on
the vertical etc. From behind it was certain death. With the bombers we actually fought in
the first part and anyway we had only a little time with them before the escorts intercepted
us. And slowly, on 18 August, there were only 13 pilots left in the group. We were only
13! On 26 July we had lost 7 airplanes: 3 dead, 3 wounded and I who was shot down, but
I was fine. It was an uneven battle and I will keep saying until I die that it was not the
quality that beat us, but the quantity. It was an extraordinary aircraft and it could keep
up until the last day of the war. What else interests you?
Claudiu Stumer: Bazu.
Ioan Dobran: Bazu Cantacuzino was a sportsman. Everything he did he
excelled: motorcycle, tennis, ice hockey and, of course, flying. He struggled to reach
the front, while others tried to get out. Some active officers did like him very much:
"Why is this reservist coming here? What does he want to prove?" He came out of patriotism.
He was an excellent air warrior. Once I was with him in formation and spotted Soviet
fighters higher to our right. I told him and he replied that they can't see us, because of
their wings. Soon after that the Soviets were shot down.
He also loved women. He was married 4-5 times. The last one was
Nadia Herescu, an actress. When the Communists confiscated all his lands and the protection
of Ana Pauker, whose personal pilot he was, proved ineffective he decided to flee. He made
regular flights to Switzerland, carrying gold. He got to Milan and told the copilot that
he will not come back. He was careful to send Nadia before to Italy, with a film or
something. However they split up and she left to England where she remarried with an
Englishman, Gray. The they moved to Hollywood and had a daughter, Linda Gray, who also
became an actress and starred in the show "Dallas".
Bazu then left to France where he met Max Manoilescu, another great Romanian pilot.
He flew at air shows, because as I said he was an excellent pilot. I remember what he did
with his Bu-133 Jungmeister. He came in for landing and aimed the aircraft on the direction
of the German sentinel on the runaway. The soldier was a little fat and had a large belt with
flares. The German moved a little to the left. Bazu went after him. The German moved to
the right. Bazu after him. And so on. When he got close he made a fast roll, stopped the
engine and landed right next to the sweaty German.
The aerobatics did not work well in France and he moved to Spain. There started the
health problems, an ulcer or something.
Claudiu Stumer: He didn't die in an airplane crash?
Ioan Dobran: No. He died because of his illness. He ate well, drank well and had
lots of women. From countess to cook! He was a man to admire in some respect.
[Unfortunately, gen. Dobran was not feeling very well that morning and we did not
want to disturb him further]
[comments are mine - Victor Nitu] |