Vamos allá, copio de la wiki:
At 16:00 on 8 May 1945 fighters of the JG 7 fought the last aerial battle of World War II in Europe. At about 15:20 Oberleutnant Fritz Stehle and his wingman took off to intercept Soviet Yak-9 fighters and came upon the surprised enemy over Freiberg. Stehle's victory may very well be the last aerial victory by a German fighter pilot in World War II
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jagdgeschwader_7#May_1945
La unidad es, por tanto, la Jagdgeschwader 7, los aviones, cazas Yak-9 y el piloto aquí es Fritz Stehle.
Sin embargo, ese mismo día, 8 de mayo del 45, Erich Hartmann (como no), hizo la siguiente gracia:
Hartmann's last kill occurred over Brno, Czechoslovakia, on 8 May, the last day of the war in Europe. Early that morning, he was ordered to fly a reconnaissance mission and report the position of Soviet forces. Hartmann took off with his wingman at 08:30 and spotted the first Soviet units just 40 kilometres (25 miles) away. Passing over the area, Hartmann saw two Yak-9s performing aerobatics for the Soviet columns. Determined to "spoil the party", Hartmann dove upon the fighters from his vantage point at 12,000 ft (3,700 m) and shot one down from a range of 200 ft (61 m). As he lined up the second fighter, Hartmann noticed a flicker of shiny dots above him coming from the West; they were P-51s. Rather than make a stand and be caught between the Soviets and the Americans, Hartmann and his wingman fled at low level into the pall of smoke that covered Brno.[39] When he landed, Hartmann learned that the Soviet forces were within artillery range of the airfield, so JG 52 destroyed Karaya One, 24 other Bf 109s, and large quantities of ammunition. Hartmann later recalled his final violent action of the war
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_Hartmann
En este caso, se trataría, naturalmente, de la JG-52
Saludos.