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History of the Royal Air Force

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thehistory of the Royal Air Force, theair force of theUnited Kingdom, spans a century of British military aviation.

The RAF was founded on 1 April 1918, towards the end of theFirst World War by merging theRoyal Flying Corps and theRoyal Naval Air Service. After the war, the RAF was greatly reduced in size and during the inter-war years was used for policing operations in theBritish Empire. The RAF underwent rapid expansion prior to and during theSecond World War. During the war it was responsible for the aerial defence of Great Britain, the strategic bombing campaign against Germany and tactical support to the British Army around the world.

During theCold War, the main role of the RAF was the defence of the continent of Europe against potential attack by the Soviet Union, including holding theBritish nuclear deterrent for a number of years. After the end of the Cold War, the RAF took part in several large scale operations, including theGulf War, theKosovo War, theWar in Afghanistan, and theIraq War.

Formation and the inter-war years

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Formation

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Airco DH.9A
R 27 airship 1918

While the British were not the first to make use of heavier-than-air military aircraft, the RAF is the world's oldest independent air force: the first air force to become independent of army or navy control.[1] The RAF was founded on 1 April 1918 by the amalgamation of theRoyal Flying Corps and theRoyal Naval Air Service and was controlled by the British GovernmentAir Ministry which had been established three months earlier. The Royal Flying Corps had been born out of theAir Battalion of theRoyal Engineers and was under the control of theBritish Army. The Royal Naval Air Service was its naval equivalent and was controlled by theAdmiralty. The decision to merge the two services and create an independent air force was a response to the events ofWorld War I, the first war in which air power made a significant impact. The creation of the new force was based on the Smuts Report prepared by Field MarshalJan Smuts for theImperial War Cabinet on which he served.[2]

To emphasise the merger of both military and naval aviation in the new service, many of the titles of officers were deliberately chosen to be of a naval character, such asflight lieutenant,wing commander,group captain, andair commodore.[3]

The newly created RAF was the most powerful air force in the world on its creation, with over 20,000 aircraft and over 300,000 personnel (including theWomen's Royal Air Force). The squadrons of the RFC kept their numerals while those of the RNAS were renumbered from 201 onwards. At the time of the merger, the Navy's air service had 55,066 officers and men, 2,949 aircraft,[4] 103airships and 126 coastal stations. The remaining personnel and aircraft came from the RFC. Amemorial to the RAF was commissioned after the war in central London.[5] The RAF's last known surviving founder member was theWorld War I veteranHenry Allingham who died in 2009 aged 113.[6]

The contact patrols flown by RAF fighter aircraft were key to stopping theImperial Germany Army'sspring offensive in 1918. Smuts andHugh Trenchard believed that aircraft could achieve a breakthrough on theWestern Front by attainingair supremacy over the front lines, but this strategy was never fully implemented.[7]

Following the end ofWorld War I and the accompanying British defence cuts, the newly independent (and still temporary) RAF waited nine months to see if it would be retained by the Cabinet. 6,500 officers, all holding temporary commissions or seconded from the Army and Navy, applied for permanent commissions. The Cabinet sanctioned a maximum of 1,500 and the Air Ministry offered 1,065 to the applicants, publishing the first list on 1 August 1919, 75% of them short-term (two to five years). The service as a whole had been reduced in strength to 35,500.[8]

Policing the Empire

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An RAF aircraft in Somaliland

The RAF took up the task of policing theBritish Empire from the air. It was argued that the use of air power would prove to be a more cost-effective way of controlling large areas than by using conventional land forces. SirHugh Trenchard, theChief of the Air Staff, had formulated ideas about the use of aircraft in colonial policing and these were first put into practice in 1920 when the RAF and imperial ground unitsdefeated rebel Somaliland dervishes. The following year, in 1921, the RAF was given responsibility for allBritish forces in Iraq with the task of 'policing' the tribal unrest. The RAF also saw service inAfghanistan in 1925, where they wereemployed independently for the first time in their history, then again in 1928, when following the outbreak of civil war, the British Legation and some European diplomatic staff based in Kabul were cut off.[9]

Activities in Great Britain

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An RAF advertisement recruiting radio operators, from the 21 December 1923 edition ofThe Radio Times

It was during theinter-war years that the RAF had to fight for its survival[10] – some questioned the need for a separate air force, especially in peacetime. To prevent itself being disbanded and its duties returned to the Army and the Navy, the RAF spent considerable energies keeping itself in the public eye by such things as the annualHendon Air Show, supporting a team for theSchneider Trophy air racing competition, and by producing documentary films.[11] In 1936, a reorganisation of RAF command saw the creation ofFighter Command,Bomber Command andCoastal Command.[12]

Naval aviation

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Main article:Fleet Air Arm

The creation of the RAF removed all aircraft and flying personnel from the Navy, although the Admiralty remained in control of aircraft carriers. On 1 April 1924, theFleet Air Arm of the Royal Air Force was formed under Air Ministry control. It consisted of those RAF units that were normally embarked on aircraft carriers and fighting ships.[13] The Chief of the Air Staff, Lord Trenchard, his air staff and his successors argued that "air is one and indivisible" and hence that naval aviation was properly the responsibility of the RAF. The Admiralty took the opposite view and, during the first half of the 1920s, pressed hard for the return of naval aviation to their control. It has been argued that the British defence arrangements in the inter-war years had a serious impact upon the doctrinal development of British naval air power as the Navy lacked experienced naval aviators.[14]

During the 1920s and first half of the 1930s, Government spending on the RAF was limited and the air staff put a higher priority on strategic bombing than on naval aviation. The result of this was that by the late 1930s the Fleet Air Arm was equipped with outdated aircraft – like theFairey Swordfish three-man biplane torpedo bomber, among others – in limited numbers, as the rivalImperial Japanese Naval Air Service began using theNakajima B5N all-metal low-winged monoplane torpedo bomber from the IJN's aircraft carriers by 1938 as one example of how the Fleet Air Arm's aviation technology was literally "being left behind" by one of its future foes. By 1936, the Admiralty were once again campaigning for the return of naval aviation to their control. This time they were successful and on 30 July 1937, theAdmiralty took over responsibility for the administration of the Fleet Air Arm. Under two years later, on 24 May 1939, the Fleet Air Arm was returned to fullAdmiralty control under theInskip Award and renamed the Air Branch of the Royal Navy.[15]

Strategic bombing

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The RAF developed its doctrine ofstrategic bombing after taking influence from thebombing of Britain during World War I by the GermanLuftstreitkräfte. Trenchard established theIndependent Air Force, the world's first strategic bombing unit, to carry out similar British air raids on theGerman Empire.[7] This led to the construction of long-range bombers and became the basic philosophy in the Second World War.[16]

World War II (1939–1945)

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Main article:Military history of the United Kingdom during World War II
See also:Air warfare of World War II andCircus offensive
RAFDarrell's Island, in theImperial fortresscolony ofBermuda, duringWWII. This was the pre-war civil airport taken over by the RAF for staging trans-AtlanticFerry Command andTransport Command flights, including that of Prime Minister Winston Churchill on his return from the United States aboardBOACBoeing 314"Berwick" in 1942.[17] The Royal Air Force had also operatedRoyal Naval Air Station Bermuda until 1939, and Transport Command facilities moved toKindley Field in 1943 for landplane operations.

The RAF underwent rapid expansion following the outbreak of war againstNazi Germany in 1939. This included the training of British aircrews inBritish Commonwealth countries under theBritish Commonwealth Air Training Plan, and the secondment of many whole squadrons, and tens of thousands of individual personnel, from Commonwealth air forces. For example, by the end of the war,Royal Canadian Air Force personnel had contributed more than 30 squadrons to service with RAF formations; almost a quarter of Bomber Command's personnel wereCanadian.[18] Similarly, about nine percent of the personnel who served with the RAF in Europe and the Mediterranean were seconded from theRoyal Australian Air Force.[19] To these and other British Commonwealth personnel were later added thousands of men from other countries, including many who had fled fromGerman-occupied Europe.[20]

A defining period of the RAF's existence came during theBattle of Britain. Over the summer of 1940, the RAF held off theLuftwaffe in perhaps the most prolonged and complicated air campaign in history. This arguably contributed immensely to the delay and cancellation of German plans for an invasion of theUnited Kingdom (Operation Sea Lion). Of these few hundred RAF fighter pilots,Prime MinisterWinston Churchill famously said in theHouse of Commons on 20 August, "Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few".[21] Although, he first spoke these words upon exiting theBattle of Britain Bunker atRAF Uxbridge on 16 August. However, in recent years some military historians have controversially suggested that the RAF's actions would not have prevented an invasion and that the key deterrent was the Royal Navy's command of the sea.[22]

Residential area ofHamburg after the 1943 RAF attack (Operation Gomorrah)

The main RAF effort during the war was the strategic bombing campaign against Germany. From 31 May 1942 RAF Bomber Command was able to mount large-scale night raids, sometimes involving up to 1,000 aircraft. From mid-1942 increasing numbers of these aircraft were heavy four-engined bombers such as theHandley-Page Halifax and theAvro Lancaster. Noteworthy raids includeOperation Millennium against Cologne, the first 1000-bomber raid;Operation Chastise, the 'Dambusters' raids on targets in the Ruhr Valley;Operation Gomorrah, the destruction of Hamburg; and the'Battle of Berlin'. The lighter, fast two-enginede Havilland Mosquito fighter-bomber was used for tactical raids likeOperation Carthage, a raid on theGestapo headquarters inCopenhagen, as well as a night-fighter.[23]

There exists considerable historical controversy about the ethics of large-scalefirebombing attacks against German cities during the last few months of the war, such as thebombing of Dresden, thebombing of Pforzheim, thebombing of Heilbronn, and other German cities.[24]

1948 Arab–Israeli War

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Main article:1948 Arab–Israeli War

Following the end of theBritish Mandate of Palestine, theState of Israel was founded on 14 May 1948. Egyptian forces crossed into Israeli territory as part of a widerArab League military coalition, with theRoyal Egyptian Air Force providing light bombers as well asSpitfires. On 22 May, the Egyptians attackedRAF Ramat David, believing the base had already been taken over by Israeli forces. TwoRoyal Egyptian Air ForceSpitfire LF.IXs strafed RAFSpitfire FR.XVIIIs ofNo. 32 Squadron andNo. 208 Squadron on the ground. Flying Officers Geoff Cooper and Roy Bowie of 208 Squadron. then took off in their Spitfire FR.XVIIIs to mount a standing patrol. Three Egyptian Spitfire LF.IXs launched a second attack, two of which were shot down by Cooper and Bowie. Flying Officers McElhaw and Hully, also of 32 Squadron, took over the standing patrol before the third wave of Egyptian Spitfires arrived. Flying Officer McElhaw shot both of these down.[25]

Due to the confused circumstances of the 1948 Middle East conflict, the RAF found itself fighting the Jewish militias, and later, the nascent Israeli Air Force. Royal Air Force bases in the region were attacked by both sides and reconnaissance aircraft were shot down. Among others, on 7 January 1949, Flying Officer McElhaw, who participated in the action against Egyptians described above, and two other pilots, were shot down by Israeli Spitfires while reconnoitering the aftermath of air attack on an Israeli column by Egyptian aircraft.[26]

Cold War (1947–1990)

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TheAvro Vulcan was astrategic bomber used during theCold War to carry conventional andnuclear bombs.

After victory in World War II, the RAF was to be further re-organized, as technological advances in air warfare saw the arrival of jet fighters and bombers. The first significantCold War action of the RAF was its support to theBerlin Airlift in 1948 and 1949 which was originally designated Operation Knicker and Operation Carter-Paterson and later titled Operation Plainfare.[27]

Although theUnited Kingdom did not base any RAF squadrons in Korea during theKorean War, theIndependent reported that 41 RAF officers seconded to serve with theUnited States Air Force,[28] several RAF pilots saw action while on exchange with the USAF, mainly flyingF-86 Sabres, they were credited with seven kills. At least one pilot was killed when hisF-84E Thunderjet was shot down by anti-aircraft fire on 2 January 1952 as he attempted to strafe a column of trucks near Sunsan, a village north ofPyongyang.[29][30][28] Other RAF pilots flewMeteors inRoyal Australian Air Force squadrons on ground support attacks. Two flights of Army Cooperation aircraft flew in support of artillery spotting and reconnaissance. In addition, three RAF squadrons of flying boats based in Singapore detached one squadron at a time on a monthly rotational basis to Japan and flew maritime and meteorological reconnaissance missions in the Yellow Sea and Tushima Straits.[31]

To complement the UKnuclear weapons which were difficult to manufacture quickly, in 1958 the RAF and otherNATO nations were provided with American nuclear weapons underProject E as a stopgap measure. The UK had manufactured less than 50 of the 200 atomic and hydrogen bombs it required at that stage. The RAFV bomber squadrons took sole responsibility for carrying the UK's nuclear deterrent until the development of theRoyal Navy's Polaris submarines. Following the introduction of Polaris in 1968 the RAF's strategic nuclear role was reduced to a tactical one, using theWE.177 gravity bombs. This tactical role was continued by the V bombers into the 1980s and until 1998 byTornado GR1s.[32][33]

The primary role of the RAF in theCold War years was the defence ofWestern Europe against potential attack by theSoviet Union, with manysquadrons based in West Germany. With the decline of theBritish Empire, global operations were scaled back, andRAF Far East Air Force was disbanded on 31 October 1971.[34]

Despite this, the RAF fought in many battles in the Cold War period. In June 1948 the RAF commenced Operation Firedog against Malayan terrorists during theMalayan Emergency.[35] Operations continued for the next 12 years until 1960 with aircraft flying out ofRAF Tengah andRAF Butterworth. The RAF played a minor role in theKorean War, withflying boats taking part.[36] From 1953 to 1956 the RAF Avro Lincoln squadrons carried out anti-Mau Mau operations inKenya using its base atRAF Eastleigh.[37] TheSuez Crisis in 1956 saw a large RAF role, with aircraft operating fromRAF Akrotiri andRAF Nicosia onCyprus andRAF Luqa andRAF Hal Far onMalta as part ofOperation Musketeer.[38] TheKonfrontasi againstIndonesia in the early 1960s did see use of RAF aircraft, but due to a combination of deft diplomacy and selective ignoring of certain events by both sides, it never developed into a full-scale war.[39]

Belize (1975–1994)

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Belize (the former British Honduras) had been threatened for a number of years by Guatemala which claimed rights to the territory.[40] In 1975 following the breakdown in negotiations between the United Kingdom and Guatemala, Guatemalan troops were active close to the border, and in October 1975 threeWestland Puma helicopters were flown out to Belize Airport as the British garrison was reinforced to a 1,000 troops.[40] In November sixHawker Siddeley Harriers of1 Squadron were flown to Belize to provide some defence of the border and support the troops.[40] By April 1976 the threat had reduced the Harriers were flown back to the United Kingdom.[40] Further negotiations failed to come to an agreement and in June 1977 the garrison was again reinforced with six Harriers returning in July.[40] Although Belize was not invaded the Pumas and Harriers were kept in Belize, the three Pumas as 1563 Flight (manned in rotation from 33 and 230 Squadrons, and 1417 Flight with four Harriers (manned in rotation from 1, 3 and 4 Squadrons).[40] The airfield was defended by the RAF Regiment with Rapier and Bofors L40/70 detachments.[40] While there was a civil war in Guatemala in the 1970s and 1980s, the British forces provided a deterrent as well as using the country for jungle warfare training.[40] In 1991 Guatemala recognised Belize and the Harriers left in July 1993 and the Pumas in 1994.[40]

Falklands War

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Vulcan overAscension Island on 18 May 1982

TheFalklands War in 1982 was mainly fought by the Navy and Army due to the distance of the battlefield from friendly airfields; however RAF aircraft were deployed in the mid-Atlantic atRAF Ascension Island and on board the Navy's aircraft carriers alongside aircraft of the Fleet Air Arm. A detachment from No. 1 Squadron was deployed to the British Fleet during the War, operating fromHMSHermes and flying ground attack missions against Argentine forces.[41][42] RAF pilots also flew Royal NavySea Harriers in the air-to-air combat role and four RAF pilots shot down five Argentine aircraft.[43]

The most high-profile RAF missions in this conflict were the famousBlack Buck raids usingAvro Vulcans flying from Ascension Island. However, the Service did many other things during the conflict, with its helicopters in the Falklands themselves, its Harrier GR3s flying fromHMSHermes, its fighter aircraft protecting Ascension,Nimrod MR2 maritime patrol aircraft scanning the South Atlantic, and tanker and transport fleet helping in the enormous logistical effort required for the war.[44]

After the war, the RAF remained in theSouth Atlantic to provide air defence to the Falkland Islands. The mid-Atlantic base onAscension Island continued to be used as a staging post for the air bridge between Great Britain and the Falkland Islands. In 1984RAF Mount Pleasant was built to provide a fighter and transport facility on the islands thereby strengthening the defence capacity of the British Forces. Various radar sites were established and a detachment of theRAF Regiment provided anti-aircraft support until that role was transferred to theRoyal Artillery. In 2009 the air defence F3s were replaced by fourTyphoons which are based atRAF Mount Pleasant.[45]

1990–2000

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Gulf War

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During the build-up to theGulf War, RAF fighters were based inSaudi Arabia andKuwait. On 17 January 1991, the main air campaign began and over 100 RAF aircraft took part in virtually every conceivable role.[46] It marked an important turning point in the RAF's history as it was the first time the service had usedprecision-guided munitions in significant amounts. In the years following the end of the war, the RAF were involved in operations to enforce theno-fly zones over Iraq and the Service took part in theBombing of Iraq in 1998.[47]

Balkans

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In 1993, RAF Tornado F3s and AWACS aircraft contributed toOperation Deny Flight, NATO's operation to restrict airspace movements overBosnia and Herzegovina. The operation continued until late 1995.[48]

TheKosovo War in 1999 saw the RAF fight over Europe for the first time since World War II. During thebombing of Yugoslavia, the RAF operated theHarrier GR7 andTornado ground attack jets as well as an array of support aircraft.[49]

2001–present

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"War on Terror"

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RAF GR4 Tornado fighter on a combat mission over Iraq duringOperation Telic.

As part of the British contribution (codenamedOperation Veritas) to the2001 invasion of Afghanistan at the start of theWar in Afghanistan, the RAF provided support to the United States by operating air-to-air refuelling tankers and reconnaissance aircraft as well as proving the use of its bases. Chinook helicopters have provided airlift support to coalition forces. In late 2004, as part ofOperation Herrick, RAFHarriers were based atKandahar Airfield inAfghanistan, operating in theclose air support role against theTaliban. The Harriers were replaced by an equivalent force of Tornados GR4 in spring 2009.[50] From March to May 2002,No. 39 Squadron took part in Operation Ramson, looking for terrorist threats in Somalia.[51]

The2003 invasion of Iraq saw a large RAF deployment to the Gulf, including RAF strike aircraft. The RAF also staged the base for the 4 US B-52 Bombers which attacked Iraq almost every night. The only RAF losses were afriendly fire incident when an RAF Tornado jet was shot down by a USPatriot missile killing both pilot and Weapons Systems Officer due to the Patriot missile mistakenly recognising the Tornado as a Mig, and a Hercules transport plane shot down by ground fire killing the ten personnel on board just after takeoff from the US controlled airfield. Following the invasion occupation of southern Iraq by British Forces, the RAF was deployed at Basra. As part ofOperation Telic,Merlin,Puma and Chinook helicopters operated from Basra, protected by theRAF Regiment, forming 903 Expeditionary Air Wing.[52]

In January 2013, theBBC reported that the RAF supportedOperation Serval- the French-led operation against Islamist militants inMali. The UK's contribution was codenamed Operation Newcombe, C-17 Globemasters from No. 99 Squadron transported French armoured vehicles from French Évreux Air Base toBamako.[53] TheBBC also reported that the RAF deployed a Sentinel R1 aircraft at the request of the French for surveillance support.[54]

TheGuardian reported that the RAF conducted Operation Turus in response theChibok schoolgirls kidnapping byBoko Haram inNigeria in April 2014. A source involved with the Operation told theObserver that "The girls were located in the first few weeks of the RAF mission," and that "We [RAF] offered to rescue them, but the Nigerian government declined," this was because it viewed any action to be taken as a "national issue," and for it to be resolved by Nigerian intelligence and security services, the source added that the girls were then tracked by the aircraft as they were dispersed into progressively smaller groups over the following months. As of 4 March 2017, 195 out of the 276 of the girls kidnapped are still missing.[55]

The RAF is currently participating in theInternational military intervention against ISIL, the British participation is codenamedOperation Shader. Flying out of RAF bases in Cyprus, they have been known to have destroyed multiple ISIL targets and deliver humanitarian aid inIraq (2014–present)[56] as well as carry out surveillance missions inSyria.[57]

In 2015, RAF Pumas deployed to Afghanistan as part ofOperation Toral, to provide helicopter support to NATO forces conducting theongoing training and advisor mission with theAfghan Security forces.[58]

In September 2018,Forces.net reported that RAF Chinook helicopters and personnel had been deployed to Mali to supportOperation Barkhane- the continued French counter-terrorist operation in Mali.[59]

Libyan civil war

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In 2011 the RAF played a significant role in theNATO intervention in Libya. The British participation was codenamedOperation Ellamy and the RAF contribution involved the deployment ofTyphoon multirole fighters,Tornado GR4interdictor/strike aircraft,[60]Sentry AEW.1AWACS aircraft,[61] aNimrod R1 signals intelligence aircraft,[62][Note 1] aSentinel R1 airborne standoff radar aircraft,VC10 air-to-air refuelling tankers[63] andTriStar air-to-air refuelling tankers.[64]

Other operations and activities

[edit]
Tail of Tornado GR4 ZG750, marking 25 years of Tornado GR operations, at the 2016Farnborough Airshow.

In 2004, four RAFPanavia Tornado F.3s deployed to theBaltic States for three months to provide the British contribution to the NATO-ledBaltic Air Policing operation[65] and in 2005 support and transport aircraft were dispatched to South East Asia following the2004 Indian Ocean earthquake disaster in order to provide aid relief support.[66]

The RAF's 90th anniversary was commemorated on 1 April 2008 by a flypast of 9Red Arrows and 4Typhoons along theThames, in a straight line from just south ofLondon City Airport Tower Bridge, theLondon Eye, theRAF Memorial and (at 13.00) theMinistry of Defence building.[67]

In September 2016, it was reported that four RAF Typhoon fighter jets from No. 2 Squadron (with supporting Voyager aircraft from No. 10 and 101 Squadrons, as well as C-17 Globemaster transport aircraft) were deployed to South Korea to take part in Exercise Invincible Shield: which marked the first time that South Korea hosted a major air exercise with an air force other than the United States. The Exercise's goal was to enhance interoperability between the RAF,Korean Air Force and USAF, whilst deepening the UK and Republic of Korea's partnership in security and defence.[68][69] In October 2016, it was reported that they were also deployed to Japan as part of Invincible Shield where they took part in their first-ever joint exercise drills with theJapanese air self-defence force, South Korean and USAF air assets also took part in the exercises. The Japan's defence ministry said to theGuardian that "The purpose of this exercise is to enhance tactical skills of Japan air self-defence force unit and strengthen Japan-UK defence cooperation. We have no specific country or region in our mind," South Korean and US officials said the drill would improve the allies' ability to strike key targets in North Korea, including military facilities and those linked to the regime's leader,Kim Jong-un; the drill in Japan was also known as Exercise Guardian North 16 and it ended in early November.[70][69] The exercises in South Korea included the first UK-Republic of Korea Fighter exercise, that took place from 4 to 11 November.[68]

The RAF celebrated its 100th anniversary on 1 April 2018 and to commemorate the achievement, a range of special events and celebrations will take place throughout the year.[71]

Shorter range, tactical-airlift transport was provided by theLockheed Martin C-130J Hercules, known as the Hercules C4 (C-130J-30) and Hercules C5 (C-130J) in RAF service, based at RAF Brize Norton and flown byNo. 47 Squadron.[72] Twenty-five C-130Js were originally ordered in December 1994 (fifteen C4s and ten C5s),[73] the first Hercules C4 to be delivered wasZH865 in August 1998,[74] with the first Hercules C5 (ZH881) in May 1999.[75] The 2010 SDSR called for the retirement of the Hercules fleet by 2022,[76] with the 2015 SDSR amending this to maintaining the fourteen Hercules C4s until 2030.[77] The draw-down of the Hercules C5 fleet began in 2016, with two left in service by December 2020.[78] The fourteen C4 extended variants were scheduled to retire on 31 March 2035. However, due to the crash of Hercules C4ZH873 in August 2017,[79] one Hercules C5 was retained to keep the fleet at 14 aircraft.[80] The 2021 Defence Command Paper brought forward the retirement of the Hercules fleet to 2023.[81] The Hercules was retired from RAF service on 30 June 2023.[82]

Number of personnel

[edit]
Main article:Personnel numbers in the Royal Air Force

Following the end of World War I, the RAF was greatly reduced in size and only rebuilt in significant number in the years immediately preceding World War II. At its peak during World War II, there were over one million RAF servicemen. Following the demobilisation after World War II, the RAF has steadily declined in numbers.

Year1918[83]1951[84]1975[85]1985[85]1993[85]1997[85]2005/2006[86][87]20092011[88]2012[89]2015[90]
Regular316,170[91]148,90095,00093,40080,90056,90048,70043,80040,09038,93031,830
National ServiceN/A88,900N/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/A
Regular ReserveN/AN/KN/K29,80046,10045,40035,00035,1606,900[92]6,6602,220
Volunteer ReserveN/A18,100N/K1,2001,8001,4001,4001,4801,360[93]1,360

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^FromJane's Defence Weekly, 16 March 2011, operational requirements forced theRoyal Air Force to deploy one of its two remaining Nimrod R1s two weeks before they were due to be withdrawn.

References

[edit]
  1. ^The Finnish Air Force claims to be the first independent air force in the world. When it was founded on 6 March 1918, it consisted of one aircraft and was commanded by a junior officer. Shores, Christopher.Finnish Air Force, 1918–1968. Reading, Berkshire, UK: Osprey Publications Ltd., 1969. (ISBN 0-85045-012-8).
  2. ^"Smuts report – recommending the formation of the RAF". RAF Museum. Retrieved31 December 2017.
  3. ^"Commissioned ranks of the Royal Air Force 1919–Present". Air of Authority – A history of RAF Organisation. Retrieved31 December 2017.
  4. ^Roskill.The Naval Air Service. Vol. I. p. 747.
  5. ^"Royal Air Force Memorial by Philip Ward-Jackson"(PDF). Royal Air Force Benevolent Fund. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 12 January 2021. Retrieved31 December 2017.
  6. ^"Oldest WWI veteran dies aged 113".BBC News. 18 July 2009. Retrieved18 July 2009.
  7. ^abRobson, Stuart (2007).The First World War (1 ed.). Harrow, England: Pearson Longman. p. 75.ISBN 978-1-4058-2471-2 – via Archive Foundation.
  8. ^Orange, p. 33
  9. ^"Afghanistan: 80 years since the British evacuation of Kabul".The Telegraph. 25 February 2009. Retrieved31 December 2017.
  10. ^"Lloyd, M.P., The Rt. Hon. Geoffrey,Sir Christopher Bullock K.C.B. C.B.E. Memorial Service Address, 15th June 1972"(PDF).
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  12. ^de la Ferté 1960, p. 108
  13. ^"Sea Your History – Interwar: Fleet Air Arm". Archived fromthe original on 2 April 2016. Retrieved11 December 2008.
  14. ^Till 1979
  15. ^"History of Fleet Air Arm Officers Association, FAAOA". Retrieved22 May 2016.
  16. ^Tami Davis Biddle, "British and American Approaches to Strategic Bombing: Their Origins and Implementation in the World War II Combined Bomber Offensive,"Journal of Strategic Studies, March 1995, Vol. 18 Issue 1, pp 91–144; Tami Davis Biddle,Rhetoric and Reality in Air Warfare: The Evolution of British and American Ideas about Strategic Bombing, 1914–1945 (2002)
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  20. ^"The Polish Pilots Who Flew in the Battle of Britain". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved31 December 2017.
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  22. ^Robinson, 2005
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  34. ^"Overseas Commands – Iraq, India and the Far East". Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation. Archived fromthe original on 6 August 2008.
  35. ^"Operation Firedog : air support in the Malayan Emergency, 1948–1960". Imperial war Museum. Retrieved31 December 2017.
  36. ^"Seletar's Sunderlands". RAF Seletar. Retrieved31 December 2017.
  37. ^"Flight Lieutenant Jack Sherburn: Pilot awarded a DFC for his gallantry against the Mau Mau who went on to serve in Suez and fly with Yuri Gagarin".The Independent. 20 August 2014. Retrieved31 December 2017.
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  91. ^Including WRAF personnel
  92. ^Does not includes numbers of personnel with liability for recall
  93. ^Excludes University Air Squadron personnel

Sources and further reading

[edit]

Historiography

[edit]
  • MacKenzie, S. P. "Per Ardua: Achievements, issues, and opportunities in writing the history of the Royal Air Force."War & Society 39.4 (2020): 310-325.

External links

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