Holtzauge
Airman 1st Class
I've always wondered what's so difficult about this. The Horvaths used VVS internal reports, they tell a different story than the official history or propaganda of the USSR. The SU was a very bureaucratic state and produced an immense amount of documents. There are gaps in the wartime documentary collections, but mostly from the summer of 1941 to autumn and the summer of 1942.
The VVS, like all military organizations, kept records of their assets, such as airplanes and their engines, and new ones could not be gotten simply by asking that the higher authority would send X new planes, you also had to tell what had happened to the previous ones. And you couldn't put a lot of combat losses to the account of accidents, because then it was easy to be accused of sabotage, which could have fatal consequences, or of assigning pilots to tasks that were too demanding compared to their training or experience. Indeed, the unit commander had to give this kind of assurance when informing losses to higher level at least since 1943, probably earlier.
Of course there is a "grey zone" and we cannot reconstruct all cases anymore.
I don't understand either what's so difficult about all this. But I will make one last attempt to reiterate the point I made earlier: Someone has written a book which boldly says that many of the victories Hartmann is credited with are "overclaims". And this is based on ONE source only: A Soviet era archive that many now seem to have high opinions of but even so how do we know it's complete? For example, if I consult Russian archives and don't find the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact referenced there does that mean there never was such a thing signed?
In addition, no Meta-analysis trying to weight together different sources like witness accounts etc. was done by the authors either: Just a check in a Soviet era archive (that may or may not be complete) has been used as the sole litmus test and to determine if a person's reliability has been found wanting or not. And this is the main problem for the authors in my opinion: I find their use of absolutes, never even contemplating if Hartmann actually did get a kill but that he misidentified the plane (I even posted an example of this earlier where a Tempest pilot claimed a Bf-109E destroyed when he actually shot down a Ta-152H), or if he may have misremembered the date, and that the type of aircraft he claimed is marked as lost either the day after, or the day before. And words matter: Seriously researched history and papers will more than often contain caveats like probable or possible and statements of why the authors came to the conclusions they did. This in combination with the authors usage of bold font and capital letters to drive home "OVERCLAIM" do not instill confidence in me. Rather the opposite.
But as always, opinions may vary, and if someone else is willing to go along with the "Hartmann overclaimed and had maybe 190, not 352 victories" then fine, do so, knock yourself out. Just don't expect me to go along for the ride. And this is of course not directed at you Juha3: I found your post quite informative. It's just that at some point you have to stop answering the same questions and leave the train, and this post looks very much like the end of the line for me.