Saxman I'm surprised. Why write off the Russian pilot's account of the use of the P-63? that's sertainly more than a handful of reports? no? And if this is backed up by German records of plane wreckage, doesn't that complete the picture.
WHAT GERMAN RECORDS? Wikipedia mentions in passing, but there is NO CITATION. What was the source? Where are the action reports? What tail numbers in the wreckage? Wikipedia says NOTHING about what evidence the Germans had to say that "This was a P-63."
And ONE PILOT'S ACCOUNT does NOT overturn maintenance logs, service records, serial numbers, inventories, flight logs, inspections, and the countless other reports and logs that make up the official paper trail in which the Soviet Union said: WE DID NOT USE
ONE P-63 AGAINST GERMANY.
Is it POSSIBLE the pilot account was true? Yes, it can't be ruled out. However this is NOT sufficient evidence to support adding the aircraft. It's service against Japan has more weight, but there's this VERY important little detail:
The USSR didn't begin combat operations against Japan until
August 9th. Japan surrendered a week later.
Does ONE aerial victory in such a short time-frame provide a realistic justification for adding the aircraft of THESE grounds?