Well, I did that. The quote appears in Wiki, and in any number of web sites that exactly quote the Wiki quote. I'm just missing the Russian sources that confirmed it.
- oldmanovich
Hey Oldman!
The Wikipedia source is an article published in Flight Journal, June 2013, written by Thomas McKelvey Cleaver. Subsequently, story was published by few other magazines by different authors (Warren Thompson, etc), but basically it remains the same, all stating that Russians confirmed 4 Mig15 pilots being shot down that day by Panthers. And their sole source for that claim was Capt Royce Williams himself.
Williams probably did a lot of research himself, and probably made a mistake, which was easy to make.
Official Russian sources, when released, were mess. It took a long time before all the relevant data was compiled, sorted and cleaned of inaccuracies by historians.
Anyway, Russian pilots shot down by Williams and Middleton flew out of Zolotaya Dolina airbase, about 60 miles east of Vladivostok, where 781st IAP was based at the time.
The pilots killed that day (according to official Russian sources, cross checked by reputable researchers) were Senior Lieutenant Beliakov, Senior Lieutenant Pakhomkin and Senior Lieutenant Vandaev.
This correspond with US Navy claims of 2 confirmed and 1 probable.
So where did claim of 4th kill came from (Tarshinov)?
As said previously, early Russian sources were riddled with mistakes and according to those, Captain Tarshinov flew Mig 15 and was shot down on November 18, 1952 by US Navy Task Force 77 F9F Panther.
Mr. Williams most likely had access to that early data which resulted in conclusion of 4 Migs shot down, and consequent story tweaking is probably result of failing memories and confirmation bias. Which is understandable.
Besides, some other researches did the same mistake.
If we cross check Captain Tarshinov against the corrected and reputable Russian sources, he flew in 139th GIAP (not 781st IAP), stationed in China (Not USSR), shot down on 18th November, 1950 (not 1952) by F9F-2 (not F9F-5) from most likely USS Philippine Sea/CV-47 which was in Yellow Sea at the time (not from USS Oriskany/CVA-34).
So, 3 kills it is.
Now, the question remains, did Williams shot down all 3? One falsely credited to Middleton?
Well, if you believe LCDR Stanley R. Holm, who was Williams commanding officer, he recollects after action reports of Lt. Royce Williams, Lt. (jg) Dave Rowlands, Lt. Claire Elwood and Lt.(jg) John Middleton a little bit differently.
Edited gun cam? I doubt. NSA confirmed 3kills, one of them only probable (and not 3 + 1 probable).
After all is said and done, few inconsistencies in Williams recollection should not detract from the fact that all 3 of them (Elwood had to return to carrier) fought bravely and deserve big
Russian sources confirm it.
Could you name a few? To compare notes...