The Mighty Eighth Air Force
 plane

 2 February 1943

TUESDAY, 2 FEBRUARY 1943

EUROPEAN THEATER OF OPERATIONS (Eighth Air Force)
VIII Bomber Command Mission 32: 61 B-17s and 22 B-24s are dispatched
against the Hamm, Germany marshalling yards. The formation encounters bad
weather over the North Sea and returns to base.
VIII Fighter Command Circus 257 (a Circus was a heavy fighter escort of a
small force of attack or bomber aircraft to entice the Luftwaffe up): 25
Spitfire Mk Vs of the 4th Fighter Group escort 12 Venturas on an
uneventful Circus. Nine other Spitfires of the 4th Fighter Group fly an
uneventful ship patrol.

2 February 1943: Germans surrender at Stalingrad

The Soviet Government has announced the final defeat of the German 6th Army at the port of Stalingrad, in southern Russia.
A statement late this evening said: "Our forces have now completed the liquidation of the German Fascist troops encircled in the area of Stalingrad.
"The last centre of enemy resistance in the Stalingrad area has thus been crushed." The declaration brings to an end five months of heavy fighting for the city. The battle has been described as among the most terrible of the war so far.

Another 45,000 German soldiers have been taken prisoner in the last two days, bringing the total in custody to over 90,000 officers and men.
The prisoners are understood to be in an appalling condition after enduring months of starvation in temperatures down to -30°C. They are the remains of the 330,000-strong German force sent to take Stalingrad. The rest - about a quarter of a million men - have died, as many from illness, starvation and frostbite as from the fighting itself.

The 6th Army has been trapped inside the city, completely surrounded by the Red Army, for almost three months during the harshest part of the Russian winter. They have had to rely totally on air drops by the Luftwaffe for food. Atrocious weather conditions have reduced the amount getting through to just 90 tonnes a day - less than a third of what they needed. The German commander of the 6th Army, Field-Marshal Friedrich Paulus, gave himself up two days ago. He had been in a hopeless position since early December, when a last-ditch rescue attempt was driven back by Soviet troops. He was given one earlier chance to surrender, on 8 January, by Soviet Regional Commander, Marshal Rokossovsky.

But Hitler repeated his order to the 6th Army that surrender would not be contemplated, and two days later the final Soviet offensive began to flush the Germans out of Stalingrad. Paulus lost his last German-controlled airfield ten days later, on 22 January, and with it the last hope of any more regular supplies. By 29 January the desperately weak 6th Army was split into two pockets of men. The surrender of Field-Marshal Paulus brought the ordeal to an end for one of the groups.The defeat of the second remnant today closes at last one of the most horrific chapters of the war so far.