If you can remember from a few weeks ago and my communications with those fine gentlemen from the Phoenix Think Tank there was a particular post they objected to in which I eviscerated their outrageous claims about the RAF and their over inflated claims about the Fleet Air Arm.
In that post, called Naval Aviation, Blogs and Think Tanks, I took selected quotes from the PTT and offered a rebuttal and exposing their nonsense. Because they objected to me quoting from their posts I agreed to remove the original but I thought an update, without them, would still be useful.
So, here it is, the post they tried to kill
This is not intended to be authoritative and I would strongly urge readers to research the facts and points of view (which aren’t facts) for themselves.
In the build up to the SDSR a number of web sites popped up that had a single theme, the promotion of the Royal Navy and Fleet Air Arm. There is absolutely nothing wrong in that, if you look at the broad aim of Think Defence it is to promote debate on the nature and role of UK defence capabilities, so when it comes down to chit chat, I think more is always the merrier.
As the SDSR timeline progressed and in its aftermath, it became obvious that the content and tone had changed in some of them from advocacy of a maritime strategy to the advocacy of a maritime strategy at the expense of the RAF. Instead of highlighting the unique contribution of naval aviation, where it compliments land based aviation and how it can be integrated into a joint force, articles increasingly turned to denigrating the RAF, its achievements and personnel, and often, calling for its disbandment.
The authors and contributors maintain that criticisms are not directed at individuals in the RAF but at it as a corporate body or its senior leadership, but it is hard to reconcile that with some of the content and its tone which verged in some parts on impugning the memory of service personnel killed on recent operations.
This is inter service rivalry at its worst, it is desperately depressing that in an environment of decreasing funding and increasing costs that clearly bitter relations continue to harm UK defence capability especially when that energy could be devoted to more productive matters.
It is obvious that they are passionate about the defence of the UK and that passion has been directed to the production of numerous articles and opinions which have achieved some traction in the mainstream media.
Perhaps they are right, perhaps not; there are always two sides to any argument and although I do not entirely agree with a maritime centric strategy it is an entirely valid thing to argue for, that doesn’t make me ‘anti Navy’ it just means I have a different opinion.
One of the pillars on which it bases its argument on, is the history of naval aviation, particularly British naval aviation and comparing it unfavourably to land based aviation.
One has to be careful about citing history as some justification for the future composition of UK combat air power because it is very easy to simply learn the wrong lessons, forgetting that yesterday was very different to today, and today will be very different to tomorrow. We also have a tendency to look back with rose coloured spectacles; it is human nature to be loyal to one’s own ‘tribe’
Being objective is very difficult.
Their position seemed to be that naval aviation is far superior and belittled the contribution of the RAF at every stage, citing numerous examples of where the RAF were found wanting and the FAA and/or naval aviation were superior, saving the day.
This view was then extrapolated forward to an assertion that the RAF should be disbanded.
The source of this historical perspective seemed to be an article on the Fleet Air Arm Officers Association website from David Hobbs (a former RN Commander and author of excellent books) in which the case was made for naval aviation at the expense of land based aviation. An additional set of conflicts were also used to highlight how the RAF, lacking strategic mobility, needed the Royal Navy and its carriers to get to the fight, as it were.
This article has since been removed but I thought it was highly selective, presented a completely one sided and narrow perspective on what air power is and only discussed operations where naval airpower was used, not naval and land air power.
The Fleet Air Arm Officers Association website is a brilliant site, with bags of interesting information, so I would urge readers to pop over and have a look;
So the original article then propogated across multiple sites and was often cited by associated articles, blogs and other published papers.
I am no professional researcher but I wanted to examine the evidence presented by the these websites, surely if the RAF are as bad as they indicate, successive governments, civil servants and chiefs of the defence staff have been hoodwinked for a protracted period by RAF propaganda and it should be exposed!
You might to Google for yourself to see if the article in question, and others that quote it, are still around. I seem to remember extracts from it were used in submissions to the House of Commons defence select committee as well.
So this is a quick run through of post war operations where air power, of any flavour, has been used, and this might allow a spot of comparing and contrasting.
Instead of quoting directly, I have paraphrased or described the claims made.
Contents
- 1944 to 1949, Greek Civil War
- 1945 to 1946, Indochina and Siam
- 1945 to 1946, Netherlands East Indies
- 1948, Palestine
- 1945 to 1950, Southern Arabia
- 1948 to 1952, Eritrea and Somaliland
- 1948 to 1960, Malaya
- 1949, the Berlin Airlift
- 1950 – 1953, Korea
- 1951 to 1956, Egypt
- 1952 to 1956, Kenya
- 1952 to 1959, Oman
- 1954 to 1968, Aden and Radfan
- 1955 to 1959, Cyprus
- 1955, Sudan
- 1956, Suez
- 1958, Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq
- 1958, British Honduras
- 1961, Kuwait
- 1962 to 1966, Borneo
- 1964, East African Mutinies
- 1965 to 1980, Rhodesia and Zambia
- 1972, British Honduras
- 1975 to 1994, Belize
- 1982, Falkland Islands
- 1983 Lebanon
- 1990 to 1991, The Gulf War
- 1992 to 1996, The Balkans
- Democratic Republic of Congo, 1997
- 2000, Sierra Leone
- 2003 to 2009, Iraq
- Summary
- Sources
1944 to 1949, Greek Civil War
In a 5 year operation the RAF deployed approximately 15 squadrons/detachments and Hurricanes, Spitfires, Beaufighters, Wellingtons, Boston’s, Mosquito’s, Dakotas and Walrus.
The FAA deployed a detachment of Sea Otters.
No mention of this in the article.
1945 to 1946, Indochina and Siam
Although it was a relatively small operation from a UK perspective, both the RAF and FAA were involved. 2 squadrons of Spitfires and 811 and 825 NAS with Sea Fury’s and Fireflies from HMS Warrior were deployed.
No mention of this in the article.
1945 to 1946, Netherlands East Indies
The RAF deployed Spitfires, Beaufighters and Mosquito’s in addition to Sunderland’s, Dakota’s and Auster’s from 14 squadrons/flights.
No mention of this in the article.
1948, Palestine
The article claimed that during the withdrawal phase, only naval aircraft from HMS Ocean could be used because the RAF aircraft had already been evacuated.
The first counter to that is the highly selective date, 1948. British forces had been in Palestine for many many years prior to this and in the pre war period the RAF and Army had perfected close air support tactics to such a degree that reaction times for airborne close air support were as low as 15 minutes, an interesting comparison with today.
In 1946 the infamous King David Hotel bombing prompted a reinforcement of Palestine in support of the British Mandate. Wikipedia has a good overview of the history of the conflict but without delving too deep into the wider conflict as one might reasonably imagine there was a sizeable RAF presence throughout, 12 squadrons in fact, No 6, No 13, No 18, No 32, No 37, No 38, No 178, No 208, No 214, No 621, No 651 and No 680. Between them, they operated Spitfires, Mosquito’s, Lancaster’s, Liberator’s, Tempest’s and Austers of various marks.
The main operation location was RAF Aqir but others were used including Ein Shemer, Qastina, Ramat David and Peta Tiqva.
By the end of 1947 the British announced their intention to withdraw and in the tense operational and political climate that followed all UK forces were gradually drawn down. The announcement came after the UN Resolution on Planned Partition which required the UK to withdraw by May 14, 1948 and the port of Haifa open for immigration by February. However, the British authorities deemed the opening of Haifa to be extremely unwise.
In April 1948 Tempests from 249 Squadron and Spitfires from 208 Squadron made a number of operational attack sorties in support of ground forces and the Lancaster’s of 38 and 37 Squadrons were relocated to Malta. The Union Jack was lowered on 14th of May and the state of Israel was declared the day after although British forces would not leave for some weeks after.
Within hours of the declaration Egyptian Spitfires had attacked Tel Aviv and Sde Nov airfields and on the 22nd of May also attacked Ramat David Airport in two sorties where the RAF were still tasked with covering the withdrawal. A number of RAF Spitfires and one Dakota were destroyed and 4 RAF personnel killed for the loss of 5 Egyptian Spitfires, 4 in the air and one with ground fires from the RAF Regiment. The Egyptians later apologised, they mistakenly thought the RAF had left and the forces on the ground were Israeli. The aircrew at the stations in question were reportedly recovering from a Dining In night in the mess in which they had decided to destroy the mess before handing over to the Israelis, hardly a model of military preparedness.
In 1946 the Royal Navy Palestine Patrol was established to prevent illegal immigration into the area and the Fleet Air Arm was renamed to the Naval Aviation Branch. The patrol continued its work right up until the end of the mandate.
HMS Ocean (the ship that conducted the first ever landing of a jet aircraft on an aircraft carrier and first ever embarkation of female crew) arrived off Haifa on the 7th May 1948 and was later joined by HMS Triumph.
On the 15th of May the High Commissioner left Palestine aboard onboard HMS Euryalas, escorted by the aircraft carrier HMS Ocean, HMS Chevron, HMS Childers, HMS Volage, HMS Pelican and HMS Widemouth Bay.
British forces then withdrew to the Haifa enclave, a simple collapsing perimeter.
Towards the end of June the rear party preparing to leave Haifa after recovering a great deal of heavy equipment, with Royal Marines, Royal Engineers, Coldstream Guards, Grenadier Guards, Dragoon Guards and other units carrying out these final moves. Providing air cover was HMS Triumph with 4 Seafires held at 30 minutes notice. RAF aircraft were also involved with a search for a missing 4/7 Dragoon Guards tank and the Seafires conducted a number of armed reconnaissance patrols, no doubt providing a highly visible coercive deterrent. There is some disagreement on exactly who and when the last British forces left Palestine but the overall picture is largely one of an ordered withdrawal.
On the 30th of June, with most British forces now out of Haifa, HMS Triumph’s Seafires conducted a flypast.
The remaining Royal Marines and Army units gradually shrunk the perimeter until the last of the equipment and personnel were embarked on the LST HMS Striker and the force sailed. A destroyer was left in international waters for a few days, just in case.
For a complete breakdown of UK forces that served in Palestine between 1945 and 1948 the ever brilliant Britain’s Small Wars has a comprehensive breakdown here and for further details of the Royal Navy Palestine Patrol, including the final few days, click here
In the book linked above there is no mention of HMS Ocean in the final days but other sources state she stayed with HMS Triumph.
Some great British Pathe newsreels on the evacuation here, here, here and here
So it would seem that the quote is largely correct in its highly selective construction but it fails to note the 3 years constant service in theatre by the RAF, the fact that RAF bases can’t be evacuated onto LST’s through a collapsing perimeter and would therefore have to have left long before, the actual nature of the protection and the continued operations in the area by the RAF some time after.
I would also question the assertion that only naval aircraft were capable of providing the protection required, Haifa is less than 200 miles from Cyprus and some of the longer range Mosquito’s had a range in excess of 2000 miles, the reason naval aviation was used was simply because it made more sense to do so, the aircraft could conduct limited sorties that suited the nature of the operation but would be available at short notice to cover any contingencies in what was essentially, an amphibious operation in reverse.
After the withdrawal, flying from Kabrit in the Canal Zone RAF PR Mosquito’s made daily sorties over the area and one was shot down by an Israeli Air Force P51 Mustang piloted by an American volunteer on November 20th 1948. Two similar incidents followed but in the very sensitive political environment at the time retaliation against the embryonic IAF would have certainly destroyed them and left the door wide open for Arab air forces to attack.
These incidents in 1949 were a lesson to the RAF about complacency, details in the Flight International archive here.
1945 to 1950, Southern Arabia
The RAF were engaged on a sporadic basis through this period with Mosquito’s, Brigands, Tempests and Lincolns.
No mention of this in the article.
1948 to 1952, Eritrea and Somaliland
RAF Hawker Tempest F6 aircraft of 6 Squadron deployed from Fayid to Mogadishu to fly a series of demonstration sorties. No.6 Squadron’s efforts were subsequently augmented by a detachment of Tempest F6s belonging to 8 Squadron, which operated from Hargeisa during March 1948.
In April, a detachment of Hawker Fury F6 fighter bombers from 39 Squadron was despatched from Khartoum in Sudan to Asmara in Eritrea to help counter guerrilla attacks mounted by Shifta bandits. The primary task of the detachment was to fly armed reconnaissance sorties in support of ground forces but they also conducted rocket attacks against rebel bases.
In August, unrest within Somaliland, triggered by the announcement that the disputed Ogaden territory was to be transferred to Ethiopia, leading to the despatch of No.213 Squadron (Hawker Tempest F6) from Deversoir to Mogadishu in order to ‘fly the flag’ and assist in restoring order. Following the withdrawal of the last British troops from the Odagen region of Somaliland on 23 September, No.213 Squadron left Mogadishu and returned to Deversoir.
Aircraft deployed included Mosquito’s, Tempests, Brigands and Lancasters.
Detachments remained until 1951 and operations from other locations until 1952.
No mention of this in the article.
1948 to 1960, Malaya
Following serious rioting and social unrest in early 1948, Sir Edward Gent, the High Commissioner for the Federation of Malaya, declared a state of emergency. The Malayan Communist Party was subsequently banned on 23 July. This marked the beginning of the Malayan Emergency (Operation Firedog). Operation Firedog represented a major commitment for the Royal Air Force (RAF).
A total of fifteen RAF squadrons served in Malaya at some stage of the emergency and many more United Kingdom-based units took part in temporary detachments to Malaya.
At the beginning of the operation the RAF presence was limited but during the emergency it escalated significantly. During the operation Fleet Air Arm aircraft would contribute when RN carriers were in the area. The full gamut of RAF and FAA aircraft were employed and a number of innovations progressed, including helicopter operations in a combined wing and psychological warfare. 848 NAS carried out its first airlift in 1953 when three S55’s lifted 12 members of the Worcestershire Regiment into the jungle in search of an insurgent commander and the naval rotary aviation component played a major role until the RAF could catch up and meet the requirements.
It would be fair to say that many of the jungle strike sorties were ineffectual and the most significant contribution to the overall campaign was provided by the fixed and rotary supply aircraft.
No mention of this in the article.
1949, the Berlin Airlift
147 RAF aircraft completed 65,857 sorties, transporting 394,509 tonnes of supplies.
No mention of this in the article.
1950 – 1953, Korea
The articles in question stated that the RAF’s involvement was limited to transport and some flying boat MPA patrols and the RN flew thousands of effective patrols. It also mentioned that the RAF supplied Meteor fighters to the RAAF but these had to be transported to theatre on RN aircraft carriers, the point being made that the RAF needed the RN even for that limited operation.
What happened
Aircraft carriers did indeed provide all the UK’s tactical strike and fighter capability during the Korea War. On their way to, and way back from Korea, Firefly’s from 827, 821 and 825 Squadrons from HMS Triumph HMS Ocean also conducted a number of sorties in Malaya but these were from land bases. Although to me this demonstrates the flexibility of naval aviation they weren’t actually flown from the decks and thus for some reason, left out of the article(s).
At the outbreak of the Korean War HMS Triumph, sailing to Hong Kong from Japan, joined the USN Valley Forge and the first sortie comprising 12 Seafires and 9 fireflies was launched against Haeju Airfield on the 3rd of July 1950.
The articles casually dismissed the role of the Sunderland yet fails to mention that there were there at the request of the Royal Navy, initially providing an anti submarine capability. Hong Kong was a vital staging post and naval base for the carriers, without Hong Kong it is unlikely the carriers would have been able to sustain their deployment and it was given the appropriate degree of protection. From mid 1949 in Hong Kong, 2 squadrons were maintained as a protective force, first with Spitfires and later with Hornets and Vampires. Photo recce Spitfires were also based in Hong Kong and regularly flew sorties over China. The RAF deployment in Hong Kong lasted from 1948 to 1997 and the FAA were also involved over a sustained period.
HMS Triumph was duly replaced by HMS Theseus in October and in April 1952 by HMS Glory. HMS Glory was replaced in May 1952 by HMS Ocean when she was replaced by HMS Glory in October. HMS Ocean carried out the final shift until the ceasefire was declared in July 1953 and during her deployment carried out a record breaking 123 sorties in one day.
This was a superb display of sustained deployment, a Sea Fury from HMS Ocean was also responsible for the first kill of a jet aircraft from a piston engine aircraft (interesting account here) and the first use of rocket assisted takeoffs from a carrier was also carried out by HMS Ocean in this period.
Video from British Pathe of HMS Glory in action off Korea
The carriers generally spent 18 days on station followed by a 6 day trip to Japan for replenishment where they would be in port for about a week before returning to the ops area.
Despite the superb contribution of naval aviation to operations in Korea it would be wrong to dismiss the contribution of the RAF. RAF Sunderland Flying Boats from 88, 205 and 209 squadrons were tasked throughout, 2 were lost. The Sunderland detachment came under the operational control of the United States Navy’s Fleet Air Wing (FAW) 6 and their duties included anti submarine, maritime patrol, weather reconnaissance and transport. The last detachment concluded operations on 31 July 1953.
Auster’s from 1903 Independent Air Observation Post Flight and 1913 Light Liaison Flight were deployed from 1951 until the ceasefire, 2 were lost to ground fire and over 3,000 sorties were completed. Both these flights were mixed RAF and Army, with the pilots usually being ex Royal Artillery.
RAF pilots also flew with other nations; the Royal Australian Air Force 77 Squadron and 6 pilots were killed or taken prisoner. At the ceasefire, 77 Squadron had flown over 18,000 sorties. RAF pilots also flew with the USAF, 51st Fighter Interceptor Wing at Suwon the 4th Fighter Interceptor Wing at Kimpo.
Given that a number of RAF personnel were killed in action I would say that the article is rather disrespectful to their memory and it is also worth considering why the RAF was largely in the backseat in Korea.
The simple reason is that they were heavily tasked in Malaya and not forgetting the early fifties was a period where air defence of the UK, the strategic deterrent and other locations were core roles.
1951 to 1956, Egypt
After the war the Egyptians naturally wanted to assert their independence and effect a British withdrawal. A number of RAF bases in the Canal Zone protected the canal and provided a buffer against Soviet expansion in the area. There was a simmering and escalating security situation with 40 service personnel killed and the RAF had Vampires, Meteors, Mosquitos, Meteors, Valettas, Dakotas, Proctors, Ansons, Lincolns and Austers in theatre.
No mention of this in the article.
1952 to 1956, Kenya
After the War, the Kenyan African Union was formed and from that came the extremist Kenyan Land Freedom Party, otherwise known as the Mau Mau. In 1952 the murder of a prominent local prompted the declaration of emergency. By the end of the emergency the RAF had dropped nearly 22,00 bombs and deployed Lincolns, Austers, Harvards, Meteors, Lancasters, Dakotas, Ansons, Proctors, Pembrokes and a number of Sycamore helicopters.
No mention of this in the article.
1952 to 1959, Oman
There had been a long series of close links with Oman that continues to this day and in this period British forces provided combat support, the RAF deploying Vampires, Meteors, Valettas, Lancasters, Lincolns, Shackletons, Canberra’s and Ansons.
Sea Hawks, Sea Venoms and Skyraiders from HMS Ocean HMS Bulwark were also deployed for a short period.
No mention of this in the article.
1954 to 1968, Aden and Radfan
The artice described how the withdrawing British forces were covered by an RN task force, this task force providing cover the RAF as it too withdrew from theatre.
What happened
Although British forces had been involved in various smaller operations in the region for many years things got serious in 1954 when the RAF airlifted troops to counter an attack against Fort Rabat. Supporting the troops were a small number of Vampires and air command post. The Vampires also marked targets for Lincoln bombers and operations continued for some time, in this phase up to 1957 when Shackeltons were also deployed. In 1960 Hunters saw service in the area and in 1960 and 1963 Sea Venoms and Sea Vixens from HMS Centaur and HMS Hermes were involved.
In October 1962 there was a revolution in Yemen and the situation escalated, with Egypt being drawn in. British forces then had dissident tribes, incursions from the Yemen and terrorist actions in Aden itself to deal with.
Combined arms operations continued through 1964 including Operation Nutcracker which involved Army, local forces, RAF and Wessex helicopters from HMS Centaur. After Nutcracker another operation was executed that included 45 Commando, a company of 3 Para, other Army units, local forces and a range of RAF aircraft. Hunters provided close air support and in May this forces was reinforced further, including Wessex helicopters from 815 NAS. The operation was ultimately a success and order was maintained after these combat operations using the well tried air control tactics.
A quote from Tim Toyne Sewell in the book ‘The British Retreat from Aden’
Spectator sport was watching the RAF Hunter (successor to the Venom) pilots attacking rebel positions deep in the valleys between the mountains. They flew at the limits, heading down the between the rock walls until it seemed that they must crash into the mountainside, firing into forts or sangars with long bursts of fire, before hauling back the stick and going vertically up over the mountain lip. It was real Biggles stuff and the RAF won plenty of plaudits from the Jocks, who knew that they would be well served if they needed help in an emergency
The Wessex helicopters were essential to the success of the operation and during the May to June period, RAF Hunters flew over 600 sorties, expending over 180,000 cannon rounds and firing 2,500 rockets. During the same period RAF also Belvederes flew over 1,000 sorties.
In 1964 it was announced the area would be granted independence but with a British military bases retained. This didn’t go down well with the locals and fighting continued in and around Aden for some years, in 1966 the intention to retain a base was reversed.
Plans were now made for a full scale evacuation involving the largest airlift since Berlin and many thousands of personnel and huge quantities of stores were airlifted by Hercules, Britannia’s and Belfast’s. In an echo of Palestine the final withdrawal was 42 Commando by Wessex helicopters from 848 NAS and 78 Squadron. These were covered by Buccaneers Sea Vixens from HMS Eagle. Although there were of course contingency plans if things get a bit sporty, in the end, the withdrawal proceeded without incident.
The article was again guilty of being highly selective in its dates.
1955 to 1959, Cyprus
When the Cyprus Emergency was declared in 1955 after the murder of a policeman there was already a significant British force on the island following the withdrawal from Egypt in 1954. The RAF and FAA contribution was relatively small but there was a contribution nevertheless.
No mention of this in the article.
1955, Sudan
The RAF deployed 3 squadrons of Tempests to support the run up to independence and attack dissidents in the south of the country.
No mention of this in the article.
1956, Suez
The article described a combined assault by UK and French carrier borne and land based aircraft, making the point that because of their position, the carriers reacted more quickly to calls for action than RAF aircraft from Cyprus and Malta. Despite, it said, only having a third of the British strike fighters the RN strike fighters flew two thirds of the strike sorties. RAF aircraft were said to carry fewer weapons and could spend little time on task and when on task most time was spent at high level to conserve fuel.
What happened
In October 1955 fighting broke out around the British bases in the Suez Canal Zone and 16 Independent Parachute Brigade was flown from Cyprus aboard the Vickers Vikings of Nos. 70, 78, 114, 204 and 216 Squadrons RAF to support the units stationed in the Canal Zone.
In August 1956 after the nationalisation of the Suez Canal by Egypt on 26 July Canberra bombers were deployed to Cyprus as part of an escalation strategy. In October following the Egyptian Government’s rejection of the ultimatum presented by Britain and France and its closure of the Suez Canal, British and French forces commenced operations against Egypt, called Operation Musketeer.
Twelve Egyptian airfields in the Canal Zone and the Nile Delta were attacked by Canberra and Valiant bombers. In an echo of recent operations this initial phase, called Operation Fairlove, was designed to neutralise the opposing air forces. The bomber force consisted of 17 RAF squadrons supported by 7 squadrons of Venoms, Hunters and Meteors operating from Malta and Cyprus. In addition to the RAF, the Fleet Air Arm fielded 11 squadrons, Sea Hawks, Sea Venoms and Wyverns.
Operations commenced on the 31st of October, with reconnaissance being carried out by RAF Canberra’s closely followed by Canberra and Valiant bombers. The night after both the RAF and FAA were engaged in bombing operations. The destruction of the Egyptian Air Force was swift and other targets were engaged although subsequent research has shown that some of the Egyptian Air Force was relocated South prior to the operation.
Subsequent analysis showed that the high level bombing was not as effective as first thought but as the threat of the Egyptian Air Force was reduced, medium level attacks were much more accurate and rules of engagement meant that civilian casualties were to be avoided at all costs.
Whilst the Canberras carried out many effective strike sorties the Hunters, with most of their drop tanks having been damaged by previous gunnery practice, were indeed limited to only 10 minutes over the target area.
Prior to the amphibious attack phase there was a shortage of viable targets for aircraft so strikes reduced.
Carrier borne aircraft, in addition to strike sorties, also carried out anti submarine and AEW tasks.
On the 5th of November 3 Para were dropped onto the El Gamil airfield by RAF Valettas and Hastings, the drop zone being marked with flares dropped by Canberra’s. The airborne force also included 7 jeeps armed with recoilless rifles, these, incredibly being carried under the wings of the Hastings. Although the WWII vintage jeeps had been out of service for some time they were the only vehicles available that were light enough for air dropping. FAA aircraft flew cab rank style close air support missions and by the end of the day in excess of 400 sorties had been flown. The size of the airdrop was largely dictated by the available space at the Cyprus airfields and capacity of the RAF’s transport fleet. This was an area that had seen rapid decline since the war and with the resource intensive effort to get the V Bomber force operational the air lift capacity was simply too small. In comparison with the French parachute force, British parachute forces were much less well trained and equipped.
On the 6th of November the amphibious assault commenced with 40 and 42 Commando, supported by Centurion tanks from the Royal Tank Regiment. The reserve, 45 Commando, was committed to and in a world first, carried out a ship to shore helicopter assault using Whirlwinds from 845 NAS and HMS Theseus and Whirlwinds and Sycamores from the Joint Helicopter Unit and HMS Ocean.
After helicopters had demonstrated their potential in Korea, Joint Helicopter Experimental Unit (JHEU) was formed at RAF Middle Wallop on April Fools Day, 1955, with both the RAF and Army in equal numbers. After many landings on an aircraft carrier sized runway at Middle Wallop, helicopters from the JHEU deployed to HMS Theseus in 1955 to develop the concept further.
Just before Suez, JHEU ceased to be an experimental unit and was renamed to the Joint Helicopter Unit, during Operation Musketeer they were extremely busy. JHU was a truly joint unit, Army and RAF pilots ferrying Royal Marines into battle.
RAF and FAA aircraft continued to provide support to the land operation although given their close proximity the FAA aircraft could remain on station longer. Close Air Support to the amphibious landing was provided by the FAA, 8 Sea Hawks armed with rockets and coordinated by an Air Control Team that consisted of 2 pilots (RAF and French Armeé de’l Air), 2 forward air controllers and an Army Ground Liaison Officer.
The FAA was involved with a friendly fire incident when a Wyvern mistakenly attacked the HQ of 45 Commando.
The same day a ceasefire was announced.
Suez, like every single combat operation, was a mixture of success and failure, many lessons were learned but what strikes me is the interconnected nature of the operation, all the services combining for maximum effect in what was a stunning tactical victory, strategy of course, was another matter.
1958, Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq
The article described how HMS Eagle provided support for airborne and amphibious forces and that carrier borne fighters were used to protect RAF transport aircraft because RAF fighter bases were to far away for their aircraft to be effective.
What happened
As part of a coordinated US/UK response to growing unrest in the area the UK flew elements of 2 Para to Amman from Cyprus in RAF Hastings. By the 18th, over 2,000 British troops were in Amman. The RAF transports were escorted by fighters from the powerful US Sixth Fleet and on the 20th a detachment of Hunters from Cyprus were stationed there.
1958, British Honduras
In April, Operation Quick Flight commenced, in light of the worsening relationship between the United Kingdom and Guatemala with regard to the status of British Honduras, a Royal Visit was conducted by Princess Margaret to demonstrate the United Kingdom’s commitment to preserve the integrity of the Crown Colony. The Vickers Viscount carrying Princess Margaret was escorted by two armed Canberra interdictors of No.59 Squadron, with two Canberra PR9s of No.58 Squadron acting as navigation leaders.
No mention of this in the article.
1961, Kuwait
The article decsribed how HMS Bulwark and 42 Cdo RM arrived in the area within 24 hours because of timely intelligence and used helicopters to provide rapid deployment. It stated that British troops arriving in RAF transport aircraft had only what they stood up in and had to both requisition vehicles and wait for RN amphibious shipping to bring in more. HMS Victoria arrived some time later but arrived with a complete package of power that subsequently dominated the area. It said that a single RAF Hunter squadron was deployed to Kuwait from Bahrain but lacked the logistics and radar cover to be effective, this being provided by HMS Bulwark. Because no RAF transport aircraft were available, as they were all being used for troop transport, the Hunters left as soon as HMS Victorious arrived.
What happened
In response to Iraq making a claim against Kuwait and moving troops south, British forces in the area were placed on 4 days notice to move. HMS Bulwark and 42 Commando were off Karachi and she joined the three frigates in area, moving into the Gulf. Plan Vantage was a prepared Reinforced Theatre Plan which envisaged supplementing local forces with those flown in from the UK.
On the 29th June HMS Bulwark started her voyage from Karachi and on the 30th the 2 Hunter squadrons moved to Bahrein from their respective regional locations and were operational the same day. A pair of Shackletons also moved to the same location and Canberra’s went to Sharjah (now part of the UAE) HQ 24 Brigade was moved into the Gulf from Kenya using a combination of RAF and civilian transport aircraft.
When the formal request for assistance came on the 29th British forces were poised ready. The first units to enter Kuwait were elements of 42 Commando flown off HMS Bulwark by Whirlwinds of 848NAS. The RAF Hunters arrived the same morning at Kuwait New Airfield and Britannias flew in 45 Commando and the 11th Hussars from Aden. A small contingent of the 3rd Dragoon Guards was put ashore from HMS Striker (the same HMS Striker mentioned above in the Palestine section)
The build up continued with Comets, Britannias and Beverleys bringing in 2 Para, 1st Battalion Royal Inniskillings and 2 company’s of Coldstream Guards complete with their equipment.
On the 4th the planned build up was complete and the composite force took up positions along the Mutla Ridge. The RAF aircrew were rotated onto Bulwark and Bulwark also provided the only air defence radar capability.
On the 9th of July HMS Victoria arrived with Sea Vixen fighters, AEW Gannets and much improved radar which extended coverage out to 150 miles. On the 18th, the RAF also established a second air defence radar site although it was not as capable as that of HMS Victorious. No moves were made on Kuwait and by the 20th plans for a stand down were in place. HMS Centaur relieved HMS Victorious on the 31st of July and by late September all units were at their normal locations.
No invasion came and one might reasonably chalk this one up to the effectiveness of an all arms deployment that rapidly built up ground forces that were supported by a range of airborne capabilities from both land and sea.
1962 to 1966, Borneo
This is where the article seemed to descend into siliness, clutching at straws to to score points, making a point that the RAF had to rely on the RN commando carriers to get into theatre because they lacked the range to self deploy which seems rather obvious. It then described how carriers and their air groups provided a deterrent against Indonesian intervention by a show pf presence in international waters, the RAF being unable to provide anything similar.
What happened
The then president of Borneo encourage a local group to revolt, seeking a unification of Malaysia, the Philippines and Indonesia and a number of attacks were carried out and a pre prepared plan, Operation Borneo, was commenced. RAF Beverleys and New Zealand and Australian aircraft flew a battalion of Gurkhas into a number of locations to reinforce and restore order. Hunters and Canberras were detached to provide close air support and Beavers and Austers continued to provide localised support. 42 Commando joined the action and HMS Albion was on the scene with Whirlwind and Wessex helicopters a short time later.
As mopping up operations continued HMS Hermes arrived to provide additional air cover
Things de escalated but by 1963 trouble was increasing with sporadic cross border attacks by Indonesian forces although both sides were at pains to keep the political rhetoric low key.
By late September Indonesia has started overflying the area with their B25’s and P51 Mustangs. In response the RAF detached Hunters and Javelins, this was reinforced in early 1963 with more Javelins and an air defence intercept zone was established.
Prior to the state of emergency being declared on the 2nd of September Indonesia paratroopers had conducted and airborne assault in West Malaysia. 14 Hunter sorties saw most of the ground force destroyed and the remnants were cleared by ground forces.
The Malaysian aircraft had penetrated via a radar gap and HMS Kent was subsequently positioned to fill it. Gannet AEW aircraft played a vital role until ground based radar coverage could be improved. RAF, RNZAF and RAAF aircraft continued to reinforce the air defence arrangements in the area.
In Borneo, ground operations continued and were supported by an increasing number of RAF, AAC and FAA helicopters and transport aircraft.
To provide an overt and visible deterrent to Indonesia detachments of the V Bomber force were routinely deployed to Singapore.
1964, East African Mutinies
Again, the article seemed to make great play of how RAF helicopters had to rely oy on the RN to get into the action.
What happened
A number of former East African British colonies achieved independence in the run up to this period and British forces were involved in minor roles, supporting evacuations for example.
On the 20th of January men from the 1 Battalion Tanganyika Rifles mutinied, detaining British officers, NCO’s and the High Commissioner. HMS Centaur sailed from Aden with 45 Commando, elements of the 16/5th Lancers and RAF helicopters. Although the captives were released the mutiny spread and the president of Tanganyika formally requested assistance. On the 25th 45 Commando conducted a heliborne assault into Colito on the coast supported by Wessex from 815 NAS and Belverderes from 26 Squadron RAF. The Belverderes were used to transport Ferret armoured scout cars of the Lancers. After restoring order the next objective was Tabora, some 400 miles inland.
An RAF Argosy flew in an RAF Regiment force to secure the airbase who were met by elements of 45 Commando flown in by the 2 Belvederes. Sea Vixens were planned to strike that day but the mutineers had surrendered and the attack was cancelled.
A number of other mutinies were effectively dealt with and the RAF, Army, RN, FAA and Royal Marines all playing various roles.
1965 to 1980, Rhodesia and Zambia
The article describes how during the Defence of Zambia (1965-66), the RAF took many months to deploy and in this period was covered by aircraft from HMS Eagle. Then for the Beira Patrol (1965-66) claimed that only aircraft from aircraft carriers could cover the area before the RAF arrived.
What happened
Following Rhodesia’s declaration of independence sanctions were imposed but these would also impact Zambia so it was decided to mount an air supply operation supplement their oil stocks. In mid November 1965 HMS Eagle arrived off Mozambique to provide air cover in case the air force of Rhodesia decided to attack the transports flying into Zambia. The plan called for the aircraft from HMS Eagle to mount defensive patrols until they were relieved by RAF Javelins. On the 1st of December the Javelins flew direct to Nairobi from Cyprus using long range tanks. Air defence radars were also flown in.
On the 19th of December the oil supply flights commenced and by the end of October 1966 when the airlift ceased, over 3 million gallons had been transported, although it was said much of this was for the Vixens!
HMS Eagle left the area in December and in January was replaced by HMS Ark Royal who took up station off the Mozambique port of Beira. HMS Eagle came back in early March to relieve HMS Ark Royal and commenced the blockade; this was called the Beira Patrol. Until Shackletons took over in August the FAA and RN carried out the task.
The Beira Patrol was a futile exercise, most of the oil was transported overland from South Africa and many saw it as a complete waste of time and resources better deployed elsewhere, Borneo for example.
1972, British Honduras
The article describes how a show of force by Buccaneers from Ark Royal prevented a threatened invasion of British Honduras (Belize) by Guatemala and that the RAF was too far away to do anything.
What happened
In January 1972 a small force of Guatemalan troops were sighted on the border and HMS Ark Royal, who was in the area conducting a training mission with the USS Bachante was detached to the area, Buccaneers from 891 NAS conducted a number of shows of strength on the border.
In February HMS Ark Royal returned to the area with the 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards who reinforced the garrison.
The country was renamed Belize in 1973
1975 to 1994, Belize
After negotiations between the UK and Guatemala broke down Guatemalan troops began massing on the border. From the 11th of October RAF Pumas were flown into the area by Belfast transports and the garrison increased to over a thousand personnel. Six RAF Harrier GR1A aircraft were flown to Belize, using in flight refuelling and stops at Goose Bay and Nassau.
By 1976, with things calming down, the Harriers returned to the UK, transported in Belfasts.
The situation escalated yet again and six Harriers were flown out to reinforce the garrison, yet again.
Although the expected invasion did not happen, as could be expected, a force of 4 Harrier GR3 was established and maintained throughout this period. The last Harriers departed in 1993 and the Pumas in 1994.
No mention of this in the article.
1982, Falkland Islands
Given the recentness and how obvious personalities have been vocal on this it should come of no surprise that the article was partiularly strident about the RAF’s contribution to the Falklands conflict.
First it made the point that RAF Harriers and Chinooks had no means of reaching the conflict other than the Atlantic Conveyor, HMS Hermes and HMS Invicible, how they had to rely on RN supplied radar, air defence, weapons and fuel to be effective, neither of which would have been there without the carriers. It then went on to describe how carrier borne strike fighters and helicopters were fundamental to the success of the operation, neither of which would have been there without the carriers. It again made the point, using the word ‘significantly, that the RAF ‘needed’ the carriers and ACO to ‘get them into action’
Not in the main article but claims made around the same time on the same collection of sites included statements that RAF Harriers flew many fewer ground attack missions than did Sea Harriers and on Black Buck it claimed that one bomb hit the edge of the runway, how this did not prevent its use by Hercules or Close Air Support aircraft and 62 bombs were off target, 21 of them not even being armed properly. One mission was reportedly aborted because a pilot left the cabin window open and declared a cockpit pressurisation failure. Comparisons were also made about comparative fuel use, how Sea Harriers delivered many bombs and hit their targets every time, that £10m of fuel was spent on knocking out one small surface to air machine gun and that the RAF placed ships in danger by insisting that the naval task force could not fire at any targets whilst the Vulcans were near the target.
What happened
Much has been written about the Falkland Islands conflict in 1982 and inevitably there are differences of opinion and perceptions, to research these differences would be a huge task, made even more difficult by the official history differing in some aspects from subsequent publications.
The first and obvious thing to say is that without the Sea Harriers the operation would have simply been extremely unlikely to have been successful. The anti aircraft systems on board the Royal Navy vessels and when ashore, ground based air defence systems, proved less capable than thought and no land based fighter cover was available. Even though British forces demonstrably failed to achieve complete control of the air what control was achieved was enough to provide the land and sea component the ability to retake the islands.
Operation Corporate was predominantly a naval and ground operation, the RAF were to play a series of supporting roles but these were vital to overall success. The final decisive operation was very much a land one but denigrating the RAF’s role is wrong.
Rather than going through the entire operation I am going to look at a few different air aspects of the campaign;
Black Buck – Anti Runway
They were and still are hugely controversial.
The famous Vulcan raids on Port Stanley, like much of Op Corporate, have been endlessly analysed with the obvious divergence of opinion. Some claim that it was nothing but showboating so the RAF could say they were involved and a complete waste of valuable fuel. To understand Black Buck one has to at least try and balance the certainty of post operation research with the degree of uncertainty that would have been experienced at the time.
The fact that several components for the Vulcan’s were recovered from museums and scrap yards makes this extraordinary feat of airmanship even more remarkable but what about its material impact on the operation?
It is obvious that the given our relative disadvantages, attacking well defended islands with a numerically inferior force at the end of an 8,000 mile logistic train the use of Port Stanley for fast jet operations was a major factor in planning. If Argentine forces could operate their Skyhawks and Mirage fighters from Port Stanley instead of at the limit of their range the balance of power in the air war would have massively changed and without some semblance of air control, no land operation could be countenanced. It was therefore imperative that Port Stanley was denied to Argentine forces, especially their Mirage and Skyhawk fighters.
This was a maximum effort operation, as far as practically possible all British defence forces were engaged and it is entirely understandable that all services wanted to get stuck in. There are a number of accounts of service personnel just turning up at the troop ships hoping (and I think there might have been a few successes) to get a ride south.
There were a number of strategic objectives of Black Buck; the first was to deny the airport to Argentine Mirage and Skyhawks and the second, arguably the most important, was to send a very clear message to the Junta that the UK could reach out and touch them. In both these strategic objectives, they were a success, it was also hoped that such a demonstration would force the diversion of Argentine aircraft to defence of the mainland, opinions on this seem to differ but most accounts confirm that some repositioning took place which would have meant less aircraft available for operations around the islands with obvious results. The degree of this repositioning was arguably not hugely significant but opinions and accounts do differ.
Critics point to the fact that only one bomb hit the runway on the first attack but this was calculated, conventional bombing doctrine against runways dictates that the attack line is at an angle to the runway, the angle being calculated using a number of factors. This is to maximise the possibility of a single or multiple hits, it should also be recognised that in order to maximise damage the bomb needs to land as near as vertical as possible and at high speed which dictated a medium level approach. The bombs penetrated the runway and surrounding areas creating a heave effect that rendered the surface unusable to fast jets with high pressure tyres. It has been noted that the Argentine combat engineers repaired the craters and this allowed Hercules, Pucara’s and even light jets to operate right up until the end of the operation. This is true but it was designed to stop fast Mirage and Skyhawk’s, not transports. The material difference that continual Hercules operations had on the outcome was immaterial, the same could not be said if Argentina had operated their Mirage and Skyhawk aircraft from the islands.
Launched from mainland Argentina, the Skyhawks, Mirages and Daggers were at the edge of their endurance, time over the islands was measured in minutes, they (Mirage and Dagger) were unable to use to maximise their speed advantage over the Harriers and usually concentrated on attacks against the land and sea forces without defensive weaponry. If Stanley could be used, this would change dramatically even if only the Skyhawks could be deployed (runway length issues), sortie rates would be much higher and who knows what the result might have been.
It came as a surprise that the Argentine forces did not make more of an effort to use Port Stanley, they might have thought it was too short, too vulnerable to attack or without the support facilities necessary but it could have been used as a divert location, refuelling stop or other use that fell short of full operations. They could have extended the runway and had the capability and materials to do so not only was the runway a target in the initial mission, the surrounding areas were also targeted. According to Wikipedia (which backs the claim up with Argentine document links) in early April arrestor gear was installed to enable S2 tracker and A4 Skyhawk landings with a small number deployed until just before the British forces arrived. There are pictures on a number of online forums that would seem to confirm this.
Sea Harriers conducted a follow up attack after the first Black Buck with cluster and conventional bombs but the degree of damage was uncertain. The claim that they could have dropped 1,300 bombs for the fuel of a single Black Buck is fair enough, but the task force didn’t have 1,300 thousand pounders and it would have needed 650 Harrier sorties to deliver them.
It has been claimed that Sea Harriers would have been more effective but with the munitions and delivery mechanisms available, the fact that Vulcan’s were available and the finite supply of Sea Harriers, which in a cold analysis, were too few in numbers, meant that the task force commanders rightly decided to marshal the Sea Harrier and use them for what they excelled at, namely air defence. If Port Stanley was without air defences then a lower level attack by Sea Harriers probably would have been able to completely deny the runway to all aircraft but this was not the case, Port Stanley was protected by a number of extremely effective anti aircraft systems and to prosecute such an attack, to get the necessary runway penetration, would have meant flying directly into the optimal engagement zone of these systems, it was simply too risky. The Vulcan could deliver this strike on one go, using its powerful ECM and large bomb load, whereas to use Sea Harriers would have diverted them from the valuable role of air defence and without ECM would have exposed them to great risk.
I can see the argument for greater use of Sea Harriers in the ground attack role in the early stages but I think the decision taken was the correct one, on balance.
It would also have been in the planners mind that post conflict there would be a need to defend the islands against any retaliatory attacks and denying the runway rather than completely destroying it might have been thought of as a sensible option.
When it became apparent that the Argentine forces were not repairing Stanley it dropped down the things to do list although they continued to try and deceive the task force into thinking otherwise, arranging the MB339’s with angled runway repair planking to simulate a Super Etendard for example. Some have claimed that the runway was repaired the following day but this is also to fundamentally misunderstand the nature of runway repair, what they did was fill the holes so the runway could be used for Hercules and light aircraft, this is not the same as effecting a proper repair and extension that would have been required for the Skyhawks and Mirage’s and their high pressure tyres.
This from the Telegraph in 2007
Immediately after the Argentine surrender, I and a Falkland Islander drove the length and breadth of the Stanley runway looking for signs of damage and repair. There were none and the concrete was in as good condition as when I had been responsible for its security in 1978 and 1979.
My friend and I marvelled, not for the first time, at the inventiveness of the Argentine engineers. Certainly the RAF’s bombing operations against Stanley airport were strategically useful but of little tactical value to us actually in the Falklands.
Lt Col Ewen Southby-Tailyour, Ermington, Devon
In response, I think this from someone qualified in airfield bomb damage repair is relevant.
Sir – Ewen Southby-Tailyour (Letters, May 5) is wrong in his description of the damage to the Stanley runway. As Commander, Royal Engineers, I was responsible for its repair immediately after the surrender. There was one large crater caused by a 1,000lb bomb from the RAF Vulcan raid, and four smaller craters resulting from earlier Harrier attacks. (The Argentines had also created dummy craters to confuse our aerial reconnaissance.) Repairing the large crater and the large area of runway took about two weeks and 1,000 square metres of captured Argentine runway matting. Lt Col Southby-Tailyour is, however, correct in stating that Argentine aircraft were able to continue to use the runway, despite the bombing raids, by temporarily backfilling the craters. This, perhaps, is why his “recce” did not spot the true extent of the damage
Black Buck 7 used proximity fused bombs against facilities and positions and Black Buck 2 bombs failed to go off. It is Black Buck 2 that comes, rightly, in for criticism. Depending on which account you read they were either incorrectly fused or incorrectly armed, such is conflict, mistakes can be made and many were made by all three services.
Back to the overall goal, accepting that we did not know whether Argentine forces were going to use Stanley for fast jets (Mirage, Skyhawk, Dagger etc) or not, the goal was to deny them the ability to do so and by a combination of Sea Harrier, Black Buck and naval gunfire this goal was achieved.
Were the Black Buck raids an unqualified success, no, of course they were not and there is no disputing the cost in tanker capacity and fuel (it might be worth comparing the fuel to that used by the task force as a whole) or the inter service rivalry that would have been in the back of people’s minds but the final word should go to Admiral Woodwood at a seminar held at the RAF Staff College in 2002
My dark blue aviators said “Oh, it’s the air force just trying to get in on the act”, but I said, hang on a minute, there will be two things. If they do hit the runway, that can’t be bad, they can disrupt it… but also it will have exactly that effect of causing them [the junta] to think they could come at us on the mainland. It is showing reach and therefore it is deterrent. And I suspect it made them hold back some of their Mirages, which could have acted as top cover for their A-4 raids. So I signed up for it and told my aviators to shut up.’
Black Buck – Anti Radar
The other Black Buck missions, 3 to 6, were designed to destroy Argentine radar installations in and around Port Stanley, a modern Westinghouse AN/TPS-43F and supporting AN/TPS-44. These posed a significant threat because they could be used to support inbound strike sorties by Argentine aircraft, locating the approximate area of the carriers by plotting the Sea Harriers flight path for example.
The Grupo de Artillería Antiaérea 601 posed a serious threat and was reinforced with a detachment of Grupo 1 de Artillería Antiaérea that manned some of the radar equipment. In addition the radar sets mentioned above the occupying forces also had Roland 2 launchers, Skyguard fire control radar, radar controlled 35mm twin Oerlikon-Contraves cannons, twin 20mm cannons and Super Fledermaus fire control radars.
On paper, a formidable array
After Black Buck 1 and the first Sea Harrier sortie, during which the air defences were ineffective, the second wave of Sea Harriers was met with intense fire, although, again, ineffective. Subsequent operations against Goose Green resulted in the loss of a Sea Harrier to radar directed 35mm weapon and it was reported that after this, subsequent air to ground missions were carried out at an altitude outside of the engagement envelope of the 35mm weapons until low level strikes were resumed by the RAF GR3’s later in the operation, again, not sure if this is true but it would make sense, the Sea Harriers were a precious and finite commodity.
Black Buck 4 was the first mission armed with the AGM-45A Shrike anti radiation missile but was cancelled when one of the tankers had a refuelling equipment failure. Black Buck 5 was flown on the 32st of May and the principal target was the TPS43 radar, it shot and missed, plain and simple, the missile striking about 10 meters from the radar.
Black Buck 5 this time had 4 Shrike’s, a pair each tuned into the TPS43 and Skyguard radars. The TPS43 crews wisely switched off their transmitters but not so the Skyguard crew and a successful strike took place, killing 4 and destroying the equipment. This was the mission that had to divert to Brazil due to low fuel and was unable to jettison the remaining Shrike, this fell into Brazilian hands and was never seen again (I think it might be in a museum in Brazil somewhere)
A small number of Shrikes were parachute dropped into the sea next to HMS Hermes by Hercules transport aircraft, these were recovered and assembled but by the time the weapons were ready the Argentine forces had surrendered.
After the conflict, the remaining 35mm cannons and fire control systems were recovered to the UK and pressed into service.
RAF Crewing
Roughly one in four aircrew on the Sea Harrier force were RAF and they accounted for about a quarter of the kills.
Harrier GR3
After the initial warning order was received modifications of the GR3 to enable naval operations commenced including drilling holes to allow water to escape, fitting lashing points, fitting transponder equipment to allow recovery to the carriers and a very hasty Sidewinder fit. Without radar the GR3 would be much inferior to the Sea Harrier in the AD role but in the absence of anything else, they would have to make do.
The GR3’s and additional Sea Harriers were flown to Ascension Island for embarkation on the Atlantic Conveyor. One Sea Harrier was kept onboard at alert state to counter any Argentine 707’s and in the first few days after leaving the island some tanker support was available should it be needed.
After transferring to the Hermes on the 18th of May, the first operational sortie was completed on the 20th
Because in the period between the initial operations and when the reinforcements arrived there had been no Sea Harrier losses so the GR3’s could be used for their primary role, close air support, combat reconnaissance and interdiction using cluster bombs, thousand pounders, rockets and the twin 30mm Aden cannon pods. The GR3’s were also capable of using the newly obtained laser guided bombs but these were not used effectively until the closing stages of the operation due to unfamiliarity. When they were used, they were devastating, destroying a Company HQ and 105mm artillery piece. Although the writing was clearly on the wall for the occupying forces by this time, the precision strikes must have contributed to the desire to surrender. It was a fearsome capability.
Ground based air defences included the automatic weapons and missile systems mentioned above and Blowpipe and SA-7 MANPADS. Two GR3 losses were both attributed to ground based air defences, another to small arms fire and the fourth to an accident.
A little known element of Harrier operations in the Falkland Islands is the port San Carlos Forward Operating Base (FOB)
The Atlantic Conveyor was carrying Harrier spares and a full FOB, the Royal Engineers managed to improvise with the small stocks of matting they had. It wasn’t perfect, the AM2 matting that went down would have been far more suitable but it did provide limited capacity. A pair of GR3’s were usually located there as a quick reaction alert for ground forces and Sea Harriers used it is a refuelling point. It might be an interesting ‘what if’ to ask what impact on subsequent air, land and sea operations if a fully functioning Harrier FOB was established early after the initial landings.
An interesting quote from Major General Julian Thompson as recorded at a Falklands Seminar in 2003.
I was the commander of the 3rd Commando Brigade in the Falklands. In his presentations, CAS* said that his squadron helped to turn the tide at Goose Green. I can tell him that it did turn the tide. 2 PARA were stuck on a forward slope, in daylight, being engaged by 35mm AAA at 2,000 metres range, something to which they had absolutely no answer. Suddenly like cavalry to the rescue out of the sky came three Harriers which promptly took out those guns and turned the tide of the battle. There is a tale behind that too. We had previously been supported by CAS’s squadron on exercise in Norway and we had a very high opinion of what they could do. While we were on our way south, I turned to my primary FAC, who was an RAF Phantom back seater on a ground tour, and I told him that I needed No 1 Squadron. He said that I would never get them. I asked why and he replied they simply couldn’t get there. Thank God you did Peter, because you really did pull the fat out of the fire for us, for which I would like to say thank you, very much indeed.
* Chief of the Air Staff (CAS) at the time of the seminar, Sir Peter Squire
There have been other claims that the guns were knocked out by mortars but it is still an interesting quote, here, on page 155
Bravo November
The single RAF Chinook survivor of the Atlantic Conveyor moved 1,350 troops and 1,600 tonnes of supplies during the short time from when it was operational to the surrender. On one occasion it was used to move 81 fully tooled up paras to Fitzroy. It was supplemented by 4 more when the Contender Bezant arrived, a day after the surrender.
There is no doubt it was decisive, especially in moving the 105mm light guns and ammunition into position. There is an enduring myth that Argentine forces were poorly trained conscripts who gave up after the first shot but this is simply not true, their positions around Stanley were well constructed and fighting was fierce, often close quarters with bayonets and small arms. Without the artillery support provided by the 105mm Light Guns casualties would have been much higher, the limiting factor was ammunition supply and the Chinook was instrumental in providing the ammunition to these guns.
Others
VC10’S and Hercules were engaged in a more or less constant airlift effort between the UK and Ascension Island throughout the conflict and beyond.
Without the huge logistical effort from the RAF the task force would have been unable to transfer all the Harriers south and unable to obtain spares and time critical stores. Hercules also carried out a number of parachute supply drops sorties to the fleet in excess of 24 hours and in total amassed some 14,000 hours.
One might reasonably argue that these incredibly long Hercules sorties that provided vital supplies to the RN were as important as any other.
These continued after the cessation of hostilities.
A little known element of the operation was the contribution of Nimrods, flying from Ascension they carried out various roles throughout, some very close to the Argentine mainland.
RAF Regiment personnel were also deployed.
I am currently researching a more in depth piece on Black Buck but posts on the Atlantic Conveyor and the San Carlos FOB can be found here and here.
1983 Lebanon
In 1983 a small British peacekeeping forces was deployed to Lebanon. In addition to operating Chinook helicopters the RAF also mounted Op Pulsator which detached a flight of 6 Buccaneers to Cyprus. A number of show of force flights were mounted over the British area of responsibility and in one incident, the alert state was raised because a tank round entered the area but was quickly lowered when the Druze Militia Commander immediately apologised to British forces for a stray round.
No mention of this in the article.
1990 to 1991, The Gulf War
Confusing carrier aviation with British carrier aviation the article highlights the role played by USN carriers and states that HMS Ark Royal operated in the Eastern Mediterranean in a ‘containment role’ that was not, in the event, used.
Although not in the original article, associated pieces published at the same time claim that ‘informed sources’ confirm that of the eight RAF aircraft lost, only one was due to enemy action. The others were, it claimed, due to unfamiliarity with the JP233 delivery profile, ‘finger trouble’, whatever that is, and a so called basic lack of air warfare munitions experience. I think it is at this point that things started to get heated and objectivity thrown clearly out of the window.
Hold on, I thought this was about British Combat Airpower not American. So that would be the largest deployment of the land and aviation forces since the colonial operations of the fifties and RN aviation was limited to a containment role that wasn’t used, surely some mistake.
What happened
The Gulf War is another intensively studied conflict.
The RAF flew 5,417 sorties using Buccaneers, Tornado GR1, Tornado F3, C130, Victor, VC10, Jaguar, Nimrod and Tristar aircraft. 1,126 guided bombs were dropped, incidentally, more than the US Navy and US Marine Corps put together.
RAF tankers provided a significant proportion of aerial refuelling support to the USN
JP233 was developed to destroy the runways of relatively compact European airfields and prevent repair. The Iraqi airfields were huge in comparison and given the ability to strike the hardened aircraft shelters with precision weapons and the general lack of Iraqi air force resistance there was some debate whether they should be used at all. The RAF and USAF in theatre did not think they were needed but it was reported that this was over ruled by the MoD. In the event, over 100 JP233 missions were used but only one JP233 mission resulted in a lost aircraft and this was several minutes after release. We also have to put this into some context, the RAF had extensively trained for ultra low level attacks using Tornado, it was thought, possibly correctly, this was the only way to penetrate Warsaw Pact airspace and it was this low level penetration anti runway mission that they were extensively prepared for and were tasked for as part of NATO plans for Europe.
Intelligence failures led to the underestimation of the density of AAA and because there was little scope for realistic training, only trials crews had conducted live firings, the effect of a night time deployment of the weapon, which created a series of flash photography like illuminations, made the aircraft vulnerable.
A change of tactics on was announced January 23rd, medium altitude bombing to move out of the AAA danger zone was now the preferred option. Accuracy suffered but gradually improved and with the introduction of the Buccaneer in the laser designator role the move to guided weapons was commenced. The initial decision not to deploy Buccaneer was based on logistics, avoiding introducing another type into theatre was desirable but when the low level and JP233 missions were compromised the problem with medium altitude dumb bombing was that the Tornado force was not trained to do so and the aircraft systems were not optimised. The concerns about ramp space and logistics were valid, but they were misplaced. Buccaneer arrived in late January, a rapid deployment and during the operation, despite its age, the Buccaneer had one of the best availability records of all aircraft.
Once the precision issues were resolved by the deployment of Buccaneer and TIALD, the Tornado make an effective contribution and it is telling that for the first time in 30 years the RAF published a new doctrine soon after.
In early February the first Tornado mission with the TIALD pod was launched.
Because of the relatively poor performance of the Tornado F3 it was decided that it would play only a limited role, providing combat air patrols in the rear areas, just in case. The Jaguar contribution, relatively speaking, was also not significant.
A total of 6 Tornado’s were lost on combat operations and one 1 from mechanical failure
17th January 1991; hit by numerous AAA fire and after successful release of JP233 was seen to hit the ground, aircrew killed
17th January 1991; hit by a surface to air missile after releasing weapons and unable to control aircraft, crew ejected. Mission, using 1,000 pound bombs against an Iraqi airfield, aircrew captured
19th January 1991; hit by surface to air missile whilst on a ‘run in’ for a loft attack. Mission, night attack against Iraq airfield using 1000 pound bombs, aircrew captured after navigator initiated ejection.
20th January 1991; suffered a technical failure and was unable to land, aircraft went to a safe area and the aircrew ejected
22nd January 1991; after successfully releasing their 1,000 pound bombs in an attack against an air defence site the aircraft was lost. The likely cause was AAA fire
24th January 1991; subject to explosion during a night time medium altitude attack against an airfield. Investigation concluded the explosion was caused by premature detonation of bombs, aircrew captured.
14th February 1991; subject to attack by two surface to air missiles whilst engaged in a medium altitude daylight mission in conjunction with Buccaneer. Pilot initiated an ejection and was captured but navigator killed.
I haven’t seen the Board of Inquiry documents and the information above is from an RAF website but I would not presume to know any better. Not sure what ‘finger trouble’ is and ‘informed sources’ should publish their revelations so they can be verified.
After ground operations ceased and with the majority of forces withdrawn the RAF continued to contribute, as did the other services, to operations in the north.
The Iraqi no-fly-zones were established in April 1991 (north) and August 1992 (south) as a coalition (US, UK and France) initiative in support of UNSCR 688 demanding an immediate end to Saddam’s brutal repression of Kurds in north and Shias in south. Operation Haven was mounted in support of the US Operation Provide Comfort in the north and this involved the Royal Marines and various RAF aicraft. This was then followed up with Operation Warden and in 1997 Operation Northern Watch commenced. The Southern Watch operation was called Jural.
On 16-19 December 1998, the US and UK took military action against Iraq under Operation Desert Fox on the basis of Iraq’s non-compliance with UNSCOM and the growing concern that Iraq was continuing to develop its chemical and biological weapons capability. In 1999, Tornado GR1’s carried out a number of strike sorties against Iraqi facilities
A good summary of the no fly zones and Desert Fox was published as part of the Iraq Enquiry, here
Suffice it to say, this was a sustained deployment for the RAF.
1992 to 1996, The Balkans
The main article and similar posts made the point that carrier aircraft were able to reposition and thus be effective when RAF aircraft were hampered by poor weather at land bases. A carrier was ordered to be available to cover a possible withdrawal under fire as only carrier based aviation could guarantee cover. They made the claim that Tornado operations, when grounded due to bad weather, were successfully conducted by the Sea Harrier FA2 operating from the carrier and that the Sea Harrier was instrumental in establishing and maintaining the no fly zone.
What happened
Operations in the Balkans took place over a number of separate phases, operations and years.
Bosnia
In 1993 in support of Operation Deny Flight the RAF deployed Tornado F3s, Boeing Sentry AEW1s, SEPECAT Jaguars and Tristar tankers.
During 1993 and 1994 the Sea Harrier was deployed on three separate non contiguous tours in support of Deny Flight and on the 16th of April 1994 a Sea Harrier was shot down by a SA-7 whilst carrying out a close air support mission.
In 1994 8 Harrier GR7’s were deployed to Gioia del Colle in Italy on July 28th to relieve the Jaguar force and undertake ground attack and reconnaissance tasks as part of Operation Deny Flight. These were reinforced with more GR7’s later. In total, the GR7 flew just over 175 sorties and remained deployed until 1999 as part of the NATO Rapid Reaction Force.
Kosovo and Serbia
With the collapse of diplomatic talks to settle the conflict in Kosovo Operation Allied Force commenced. Tornados, Harrier GR7’s and Sea Harrier FA2’s took part, plus the usual array of support aircraft; it was also the first operational outing for Royal Navy Tomahawk cruise missiles.
The operation was from March 24 1999 to June 10, 1999
HMS Invincible arrived from the Gulf on April 17th and flew their first combat air patrol (of 102 flown) soon after. On the 27th of May, HMS Invincible arrived back in the UK on May 27th, 1999.
GR7’s flew 870 sorties and released 894 weapons, ending at 16 aircraft in theatre.
On April 4th Group Captain Travers Smith, an RAF spokesman, commented
This is yet another form of frustration. Now that the weather has cleared they have taken off, but there is nothing for them to hit. This was the first of the daytime operations for the GR7’s that have managed to get airborne (without weather problems). Their prime purpose today would have been to hit mobile targets that would have been identified by other means. During the period that GR7’s were airborne, no such opportunities presented themselves, so the Harriers returned with their bombs
The weather was to play a significant role, of the 78 day campaign, only 25 days had good weather. This coupled with highly restrictive rules of engagement, the lack of all weather precision munitions and an extremely capable and wily opponent meant that considerable challenges were placed in the path of the air forces and as usual, many lessons were identified, particularly the need for all weather precision munitions and improved communications/coordination with NATO allies.
The weather over the target played a more significant part in hampering the air operation than the weather over the launch area so no amount of repositioning would have helped.
Despite this the GR7’s, with their integrated GPS/INS were approved to release weapons through the clouds against pre approved targets where the risk of collateral damage was relatively low. Tangential, but relevant to the list, USMC Harrier II’s were also employed from naval vessels but of the 58 sorties planned, many were cancelled, about a third, due to bad weather.
The air campaign was followed by the ground component which saw the use of 8 RAF Chinooks and 6 Pumas.
A good overview of this phase is here
Democratic Republic of Congo, 1997
In Operation Determinant 4 Pumas were deployed to Libreville and Brazzaville in the Congo, with support troops, as a precaution against the possibility that British citizens might need to be evacuated from the Zairian capital, Kinshasa
No mention of this in the article.
2000, Sierra Leone
The article talked up the benefits of having a floating base and national command centre. It also claimed that RAF pilots embarked on the the carrier were so concerned about finding their way back to the ship the Sea Harriers had to do their missions for them
What happened
The engagement in Sierra Leone comes in three parts, Operation Palliser, Basilica and Operation Barras.
Palliser
Civil war started in Sierra Leone in 1991 and before it ended in 2002 over a million people had been displaced and the widespread and indiscriminate violence, sexual violence, mutilation and use of child soldiers was to leave a lasting legacy. Into this complex mix had been thrown private military companies, diamond mining and interventions from neighbouring countries. UN Security Resolution 1270 established the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) that was a 6,000 strong ground force (rising to 11,000), including 15 British personnel as observers.
Operation Palliser was mounted to evacuate non combatants (NGO’s, UK/EU citizens et) from the country when increased fighting threatened the capital, Freetown and 208 Zambian UN soldiers were ambushed and captured by the Revolutionary United Front (RUF)
In early may 2002, the UN requested to support the ineffective UNAMSIL which was rapidly loosing control of the situation. Initially, France, the UK and USA declined, getting involved in an African civil war had little attraction but given the historic ties the UK had with Sierra Leone it was viewed by Robin Cook and Geoff Hoon as our back garden.
On the 5th of May Brigadier David Richards (yes, that one) the Joint Task Force Headquarters (JTFHQ) commander was ordered to deploy.
On the 6th of May, lead elements, the Operational Liaison and Reconnaissance Team (OLRT), arrived at Lunghi Airport in Freetown to prepare for the rest of the force.
On the evening of the 7th of May, RAF Hercules and Chinook, staging out of Senegal, had transported 1 Para and supporting elements to Lunghi Airport.
Also on the 7th of May the Amphibious Ready Group, elements of which were on exercise in the Med were also ordered to deploy. The ARG comprised HMS Ocean, HMS Chatham (type 22) and two RFA vessels. It was to be joined by HMS Illustrious, more RFA vessels and HMS Argyle (Type 23). Also aboard were 42 Commando RM, 4 Sea King, 2 Lynx, 2 Gazelle, 2 Chinook, 7 Sea Harriers and 7 GR7’s.
The troops at Lunghi set up as a consolidation point for evacuees and on the 8th were reinforced and secured Aberdeen Peninsula and the road between the airport and Freetown. Evacuation commenced almost immediately with nearly 300 individuals flown out.
On May 11th the ARG arrived offshore and conducted a number of shows of force using embarked RM and Harriers. 47 GR7 sorties were flown, the first on the 17th and 85 Sea Harrier sorties.
Even without carrying drop tanks the bring back performance, in the temperatures encountered, was one 504 pound bomb, the Mk107 engine was later to improve this enormously but was not fitted to Sea Harrier because of the cost and relatively small fleet.
On the 17th of May the pathfinder platoon was involved in a firefight with the RUF at Lunghi Loi Village.
With the situation stabilising and the evacuation complete 1 Para were relieved by 42 Commando on May 26th
Palliser ended on 15th June but a number of personnel were committed to build on the security gains made during Palliser.
So it seems to me that the RAF effected theatre entry, again, surely this is some mistake!
Basilica
Operation Basilica established a small advisory team and in July a battalion of Royal Irish Regiment set up a jungle training camp just outside Freetown. A little known operation was also mounted during this period, called Operation Kukhri, to assist the UN forces rescue 220 Indian soldiers that had been surrounded by the RUF. C130 and Chinook were involved
It is also worth noting that op Silkman, an amphibious show of force’ conducted in November (after Barras) was hugely effective in supporting the UN forces and ongoing peace process
Barras
On August 25th a small party of RIR travelling in 3 Land Rovers were captured by the West Side Boys, a rebel group. After a series of protracted negotiations a rescue operation was mounted including SBS/SAS, 1 Para, 3 Lynx and 3 Chinook helicopters.
2003 to 2009, Iraq
The article highlights how a lack of range meant that carriers had to ‘take them to the fight’ and how they caused difficulties on HMS Ark Royal because of a lack of blade fold.
What happened
Operation Telic commenced and RAF aircraft provided about 6% of coalition sorties and released over 900 weapons, of which 85% were precision-guided.
The air tanker fleet dispersed 19 million pounds of fuel, over 40% of which is given to United States Navy and Marine Corps aircraft.
Aircraft involved included Tornado, Harrier, Tornado f3, Nimrod MR2, Tristar, VC10, E3 Sentry, Hercules, Nimrod R1, BAe125, Hercules, Canberra, Puma, Merlin and Chinook.
The operation lasted from 19th March 2003 to 30th April 2009.
The initial UK operation was to secure Umm Qasr, especially oil installation on the Al Faw peninsula and this was carried out in conjunction with the USMC and Polish personnel.
The Iraq – Lesson learned document from the MoD provides a good overview of the assault on Al Faw, here
The joint plan was for special forces to secure helicopter landing sites and other key areas then 42 and 40 Commando would clear the remaining area and secure them over the assault phase. The majority of heliborne assaults were launched from Tactical Assembly Area Viking, in Kuwait. A, B and C Co of 40 Commando lifted from Kuwait and D Co from HMS Ocean. The landings were supported with a variety of land and ship based weapons and aircraft.
More information here and here
Al Faw is often used to highlight the effectiveness of aircraft carriers but in all the pieces I have read from the usual suspects, none of them make any mention whatsoever of the role of TAA Viking or the Army units that took part and it is this kind of selective view of history, deliberately excluding the role of others that really niggles me.
Summary
So there we are; a rambling trip through the last several decades of UK military aviation. I have left off operations in Afghanistan and Libya deliberately and might look at these separately and as I mentioned above, will be looking at Black Buck in some detail soon.
The list above also excludes air defence of the United Kingdom, development and maintenance of the strategic deterrent until Polaris, supporting the Polaris and Trident deterrent submarines, supporting the BAOR, transport, various humanitarian deployments and search and rescue.
If you have got this far then I congratulate you on a feat of unparalleled endurance!
Clearly, both the RAF and FAA have contributed significantly to operations since the end of the war, no one can doubt this.
The historical evidence leads to me the conclusion that land based and naval aviation are entirely complimentary but the campaign by some has over inflated the value of aircraft carriers, made extensive use of selective arguments and in some cases used juvenile language to try and argue that one is somehow ‘much betterer’ than the other, it’s like saying my dad is bigger than yours.
The definition of ‘British Combat Airpower’ is also rather selective for it assumes that combat power is derived purely from strike fighter aircraft, this is complete nonsense of course, logistics and intelligence are equally as important, if not more so.
There is no doubt in my mind of the value of naval fixed wing aviation but instead of putting forward a balanced view those made by some of its over enthisiastic supporters are highly partisan, make a selection of cheap shots and have little or no reflection in the reality of history, without any operational or political context and with language that more or less tries to belittle the contribution of the RAF and its personnel, it is really not the way to make a compelling case.
I think it also actually fails to properly highlight the huge contribution made to British operations and the art of combat flying by the Fleet Air Arm and its predecessors and thus scores a spectacular own goal.
There is some of underlying truth in what the campaign says, naval aviation in the Suez campaign for example was much more responsive, of course it was, it was only a few minutes flying time away from Port Said, but that fundamentally misses the point that Suez was a brilliant all arms operation that made maximum use of the capabilities of all three services.
It is one thing making a case for your service, it is one thing to highlight the significant historical achievements of the Royal Navy and Fleet Air Arm, it is one thing to highlight the undoubted flexibility of naval aviation but it is quite another to denigrate another service with little or no basis in fact, make a collection of childish arguments that say more about them than the service they seem to be spending so much energy on denigrating and see naval aviation in the wider context.
I find it rather amusing that the collection of anti RAF ranters are doing a much better job of promoting the RAF than even the RAF would ever hope to do.
Carry on fellas, your doing a grand job.
I wonder if the articles in question have been removed, you know what, I can’t even be arsed to check.
Sources
http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/research/documents/Journal%2035A%20-%20Seminar%20-%20the%20RAF%20Harrier%20Story.pdf
http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/research/documents/Journal%2030%20-%20Seminar%20-%20The%20Falklands%20Campaign.pdf
http://www.raf.mod.uk/rafcms/mediafiles/C0054AE0_1143_EC82_2EE9013F84C9F82E.pdf
http://www.ejection-history.org.uk/aircraft_by_type/tornado.htm
http://www.airforcehistory.hq.af.mil/Publications/Annotations/gwaps.htm
The Falklands conflict twenty years on: lessons for the future
Osprey – Essential Histories 049 – The Suez Crisis 1956
Suez 1956: Operation Musketeer
Certain Death in Sierra Leone, The SAS and Operation Barras 2000
The Royal Navy in the Falklands Conflict and Gulf War: Culture and Strategy
Air War in the Falklands
Argentine Air Forces in the Falklands Conflict
The Official History of the Falklands Campaign Vol. 2
Britain, NATO and the Lessons of the Balkans Conflicts
Kosovo: Lessons from the Crisis, MoD
The Lessons of Bosnia
European Contributions to Operation Allied Force
Disjointed War
Conflict in the Balkans
Britain’s Air Arms in Action 1945-1990
@Topman – to prevent duplication can you link to where it has been done to death?
When two companies merge they make synergies by binning loads of management and duplicated processes. Just the same in this instance. You wouldnt need the top levels of the RAF as their work would come under the other structures. You wouldnt need an RAF officer college, you wouldnt need any RAF bands,separate HR, separate uniforms, etc etc etc.
If you dont disband the RAF surely it is still more efficient to remove the helicopter stream from them?
And ignoring costs, surely the transport helicopters would be most efficiently and effectively managed by the service that uses them almost exclusively?
Hi Chris B,
“The Dutch assign their Apache to their air force and have had no real issues with that.”
- the last round of (their) defence cuts brought about an interesting concept:the 3 marine bns and the 3 paracommando (light army, or ranger) bns are seen as one force; again , that did not need them transferred under one admin command, just training together and developing/ evolving a joint doctrine
In your post that then followed, you raise the Puma report. It was interesting as it evaluated the pro’s and con’s of the so-called (self-contained) Puma Force and whether the concept should be adapted more widely
@ Chris M
I think somewhere on here and I put up a bit on Gabby’s blog about the same issue. Just to cover your issue about helicopters, the army already do as they hold the budget and control of JHC through Land, you would think that but evidence suggests otherwise. I’ll admit it does make perfect sense online, but in reality it’s different. For example it sounds perfectly logical that army would want to invest heavily in helicopters as they use them. Yet one of the first things they did when getting hold of the budget was remove a big chunk out of it. Look at the faff over wildcat the AAC got lumped with it, why? They didn’t have enough clout within the army and got dragged along with the navy’s needs. The AAC isn’t really a teeth arm it’s officers don’t get to the top. That has issues if you want a/c to remain important, I’m not argueing for a mafia either just balance, which I don’t think is there. It’s not really the main aim of the army so doesn’t recieve as much attention is people think. As to used more effectively, going by the report into the army’s use of helicopters (which I think is online) during initial Op Telic that is wide open to question.
I see the old for and against the RAF as an institution has reared it’s head. The usual suspects have appeared (me included) and the usual arguments advanced(ditto).
Topman
Why would (say) the RN desire to keep the RAf’s squadron structure?
One of the criticisms of the RAF is that (like the other services, but more so)It structure no longer properly addresses what it is required to do or actually does.
For example. The huge disparity between deployed numbers of Aircraft and those actually available to fly is such that the traditional 12-18 aircraft squadron is next to useless, generating perhaps 2-4 aircraft at the end of the runway ready to go. When interventions like Libya/Afghan, even QRA require rather more aircraft to operating ‘in country’.
Rather as the size of military units grew in the Napoleonic era from, companies regiments to brigades and then divisions. as the numbers required to have the required effect grew, so did the scale of deployment and command/support structures.
In effect we have the reverse going on to the same effect. The effectiveness of modern strike aircraft is such we need less of them, but the support of them is now so technical that they need huge support structures, to produce a few flyable aircraft.
Recent history seems to be that they need to be deployed ‘by the dozen’ flyable airframes which I suspect would need say (as a guestimate) a 36 aircraft single unit. 2- 3 times the current squadron size. For example (and I never thought I would say this)! If we are having the elephants, to keep 12 aircraft at see we will need 36 or so per Elephant. Seems sensible to me to have one such unit per elephant rotating 12 aircraft pilots etc on deployment.
Now that holds for support unit size as well, given likely economics of scale support unit sizes would have to adjust.
In effect a lot of the support for the RAF structure, is rather like the RN’s fixation with fats pointy ships.
We have always done it this way, so that’s the way it is done, and anyone who does it will have to do it this way.
I remain to be convinced that is the case.
Isnt the fact that the army dont own the helicopters/crew part of the problem with JHC? They can cut the budget on other services’ helicopters and staff, not hurting their own cap badges. If all the transport helicopters belonged to the army then that would give the AAC more mass and influence, and give the army no excuses if the helicopters didnt perform to expectation.
Unlikely, just a bigger budget to shuffle around.
@ IXION
I didn’t think I’d be round and round on this one again so soon.
‘Why would (say) the RN desire to keep the RAf’s squadron structure?’
I believe the FAA have a similar number to each sqn type for type.
If I understand you are wanting a structure that supports larger units to be deployed ? If that is the case it already exsists in a Wing. Used in Op Telic formed from the whole fleet. Day to day such a formation is a bit big to deal with, but as and when the need arises it can be easily formed. This is usually the case with fj, but with for example C130 they worked under a wing day to day concept as you suggest. They maybe something in it, as for example that’s how the Saudis their Tornados in wings of about two dozen.
@Ixion – that is why the FAA should get all the F35s, and all based in the South West (reopen St Mawgan?? or will they all fit at Yeovilton?)
Topman
Why would a: (for want of a better word) Wing sized squadron,(perhaps better dealt with by simply dispensing with the squadron altogether); Be too unwieldy day to day?
Are not most FJ units fairly statically based and maintained?
As for The FAA doing it that way anyway:-
I suspect a big element of ‘Big brother RAF does it that way’ so for a whole host of interoperability/ cultural/ logistical reasons it makes sense to do it that way.
I suspect if the RAF moved the way it did things, FAA would follow.
I just used squadron size that as an example of why Just Becuse the RAF does it that way, why would anyone who took over their roles automatically do it that way?
I suspect if RLC took over air transport, they may have some views on organisation that were very un-RAF like.
For example the whole history of civil aviation since the early 80′s, has been non ex-airforce business types; taking over running things; and vastly cutting costs from the national flag carrier, ‘Airforce’ in Civies’ organisational model. See BA / Air France’s struggles with the likes of Virgin and RyanAir.
Likewise a USMC attitude towards pilots as ‘ A Marine that happens to fly an aircraft some of the time’, If applied by the Army to CAS and other battlefield support operations may well produce different structures.
@ Topman
According to one former well known RN commander the FAA can maintain 1000 airframes with just one chief, an AB, a Sea Cadet to make the tea, and a ship’s cat to answer the phone. True. Honest.
We need someone gullible, sorry I mean addicted to the internet to find out the FAA strength and numbers of airframes and then compare that to the RAF squadrons per aircraft number. Less cats.
@ X
They might be able to but that would depend, does the cat get a rum ration?
I’d be more surprised if someone hadn’t already done just that and then gone on to question how much the cat food costs and it’s precise content or some other such…
Chris M
It will be a bonkers situation, for the f35 B not to all be based at the same central base, for training/maintain’e/ logistics/ command control personnel – you name it.
It should be dark blue- will probably be purple, for the sole reason that If you think for one minute the RAF will let a sexy pointy bit of kit like the F35 slip though their fingers……
X
Td did a lot of work some posts ago on this and (If I remember correctly), came to the conclusion that there was not much in it when you factored the support element given to FAA BY RAF.
That is completely different question to RAF structure etc- e.g. the IDF air arm reputedly does what it does, for a lot less men per aircraft than the RAF. Still we all know how shit there are.
This is a defence blog concerned with the safety of our nation.
On no account should cats get anywhere near sophisticated weaponry!
Remember.
1) They are members of one of the APEX predator families.
2) They are born knowing where the Jugular Vein is.
3) They know where we sleep – they tend to sleep where we sleep.
4) I have met enough clever ones, to know when they develop an opposing thumb we are toast..
I remember an old cartoon:-
Picture a big hollowed out Volcano Lair with the standard big futuristic, meeting table and chairs.
The CAT number one surrounded by his hench-cats is reading from a list.
1) Automated Mouse farms- Check
2) Automated Salmon fisheries – Check.
3) Automated Dairy Farms- Check
4) Automated Food canning factories- Check
5) Tin opener that does not require Opposing thumb- Check.
(Slight Pause (Or Paws)).
‘KILL THE HUMANS KILL THEM ALL!’
We have been warned.
@ Gareth Jones,
Low wing vs high wing,
Predominant issues include; 1) loading the aircraft, 2) location of the wing box (where it meets the fuselage), 3) operating environment, 4) ease of maintenance,
I’ll start with four and work back, confusingly. In the private airline industry, reducing costs is critical to the health of the airline. Low wing aircraft make it easier to access the engines for routine maintenance, which saves a packet on maintenance.
Civilian aircraft are also guaranteed to be taking off and landing at concrete airports with fewer worries about things like debris, something which a military transporter can’t guarantee.
A low wing aircraft sees the wings meet at the fuselage quite low. If a civvie aircraft were high wing it would cut into the available cabin space and cause some issues with the layout of the aircraft.
A low wing aircraft needs longer undercarriage (which is also an issue with rough landings) which causes serious issues with loading it with cargo, especially in the case of very heavy objects like vehicles. A low loader is much better for that.
@ ChrisM,
“When two companies merge they make synergies by binning loads of management and duplicated processes”
– That’s actually a misconception. That only really works when two businesses do almost identical functions, such as when one construction company takes over another.
If you spread RAF equipment over the other two services, they will need people to take on all the needed functions. You’ll need a head of helicopters, in fact you’ll now need two. Same with fast jets, same with transports. You can’t just eliminate jobs without eliminating the functions that these people perform.
“And ignoring costs, surely the transport helicopters would be most efficiently and effectively managed by the service that uses them almost exclusively?”
– The RAF is the service that uses them most. The army are effectively passengers. They don’t run the maintenance, they don’t do the navigation, they don’t fly them. If you switched the helicopters over, you would need to bring in all those people from outside. And for what? What have you gained? Nothing. It’s not like the RAF hoardes the helicopters in a warehouse somewhere and only lets the army play with them once a year. As much of the fleet as can be is provided for use.
It’s just a complete waste of time, an anti-RAF wet dream that doesn’t serve the best interests of the personnel on the ground. And that’s what worries me the most with all these anti-RAF fanatsies. They have nothing to do with what is best for operations, it’s about service rivalries.
That’s a completely unacceptable angle to be approaching these decisions from.
@ IXION,
– I think you’re having the precise same issue that I used to (and sometimes still forget about) and that’s confusing administrative formations on paper in the UK with the elements that are needed and put together for operations. It doesn’t matter what aircraft are put in what admin formation here, as long as we can generate the needed abilities on the front line, which so far we have.
I’m not really sure what else you would expect the FAA to do? It cant bypass maintenance cycles. It cant bypass airframe hours. So in other words it’s going to find itself in precisely the same boat as everyone else.
Chris B
I do not suggest that numbers of support staff to aircraft maintanence etc will differ that much: – Although I repeat, published figures, (whose relaibility and impartiality I cannot confirm)suggest,various highly effective forces do those jobs with a lot less people.
It is the top heavy admin structure which we need to lose. If every time we want to put 12 functioning aircraft int he field, or on the elephant, if we have to involve 2-3 different small groups of aircraft rather than one big one it costs more.
I make the point:- 1 Pay scheme / personel / uniform / vehicle fleet managment / base support admin etc, will be cheaper. Mergers of complimentary organisations the world overpull off this on a daily basis. Why a Light blue dark blue or green merger would be any different, and economies of scale not be obvious I fail to see.
After all, TD’s scrap the FAA and AAC, and give it all to the light blue requires exactly that in order to work.
New Russian Spy plane:
http://defensetech.org/2012/05/29/17340/
@ Chris B
The AAC/FAA/RAF all do the same stuff – they fly things – so there will be synergies. The AAC and FAA wouldnt need Heads of Helicopters – they already have people who do that.
The RAF dont use the Chinooks most – they just fly them for the users.
I dont want to abolish the RAF, just want them out of the helicopter business and out of the F35s completely (assuming all F35s are Bs and carrier capable). The RAF would then keep its name, but would not be an individual service equivalent to the Army or Navy but effectively report to Joint Headquarters as a provider of Airlift (or into the RLC if you really want some fireworks…) and Home Defence and maybe all flight training. You could then take the whole top off the organisation and make the pyramid flatter for what is left.
@ ChrisM,
I’m sorry, but your last post must be some kind of bizarre joke.
“The AAC/FAA/RAF all do the same stuff – they fly things – ”
– In the same way that you and Michael Schumacher do the same stuff right? After all, you both drive. How much difference can there be?
“The AAC and FAA wouldnt need Heads of Helicopters – they already have people who do that”
– They wouldn’t need them because they have them? Eh? Now start adding in other aircraft streams. All of a sudden the FAA and AAC will have head of fast jets, heads of fast jet training, heads of transport, heads of large fixed wing training etc, you get the point.
You can’t just take all those jobs that the RAF provide and say, we wont need that anymore. You will. The AAC will need someone responsible for large transports. Whoever takes over the RAF’s ISTAR will need a head of ISTAR. Just because you’ve changed the uniform doesn’t mean you’ve eliminated the capability, and in most cases it’ll need to be duplicated in both services.
If you really want to save money, and this is going to cause a riot, the best way would be to fold the FAA and AAC into the RAF.
“The RAF dont use the Chinooks most – they just fly them for the users”
– In the same way that your local bus company doesn’t use its buses the most, it just drives them for the customers right? No? That’s right, the bus company owns the buses, drives them, provides maintenance for them, tasks them as needed across the various elements of its business sector.
Your plans just make very little sense. I’ll ask you the same two questions that I ask of everyone else that proposes a similar thing and if you wish to engage in a further discourse on the subject then I expect two bloody fantastic answers that don’t touch on any of the points I’ve brought up so far, for example corporate expertise or the cost of transference for no appreciable gain in capability. After all, what’s good for the geese is good for the gander, huh?
Question One; Why not amalgamate all the available sea lift such as responsibility for the Point Class, Albions and Bay’s into a command that is then given to the army? The RN would have absolutely no say or control of it what so ever. The Royal Marines would also be transferred to the army. After all, the army are the main users of this lift, are they not?
Question Two; Why not scrap the Royal Navy almost entirely and party out its kit to the other two services? The RAF would take control of the Carriers and any ships needed to protect them. They would also be responsible for all helicopter aviation at sea. The Army would take control of all sea lift assets and would be given some escorts as well to protect them. The Royal Navy would be reduced to operating the CASD and the submarine force, for which it wouldn’t need any senior organisation and instead could just report to the Joint Headquarters as providers of sub surface action. This would flatten their pyramid massively and save a fortune would it not?
I await your response with great anticipation and an almost childish sense of glee, safe in the knowledge that these two questions are the equal of your proposal but just the other way around, and both are equally as ridiculous. The only conceivable reason you could possibly give for rejecting them is because they involve the massive reduction of the Royal Navy and not the RAF, which of course is an impossible position to defend because it would mean your entire argument was built around single service bias and not rational thought of what is best for the nation and its defence.
In your own time.
@Chris M
I would really like to see the RAF out of the helicopter business in particular, simply because unlike most of platforms they are exclusively there to provide for troops on the ground. Hence why I think the Army would get the most out of them.
The rest of it I’m not so sure about. Half the time I want to abolish the RAF all together, the rest of the time I go all soft and just favour a bit of an adjustment, on the lines you and others have suggested.
Their is also the problem of whether the FAA could handle that kind of additional number of aircraft. Even if personnel cross over it’s only worth it if it brings about greater efficiency and flexibility of resources, otherwise their isn’t much point.
It seems to be that as British military power has receded over the last half a century it has left behind in it’s wake several irregularities of command set-up and an illogical division of resources. Id like to see this corrected as much as possible to increase clarity and hopefully effectiveness, something that is very important in these times of austerity when every penny counts and every capability has to be squeezed of all it’s worth.
So I don’t really mind what solution is dreamed up, as long as it brings results!
@Chris B
Having just read you’re long post to Chris M you do make a fair bit of sense.
As I just said, I really only want clarity and simplicity (as far as possible). So maybe the best way to achieve this is a real division of resources (which you joked about, but I am taking quite seriously).
The most extreme case would be to have ALL aircraft in the RAF, ALL troops (including RAF regiment and the Marines) in the Army and ALL boats of any kind in the Navy. That may be a bit radical and would no doubt cause a riot, but perhaps it isn’t such a bad an idea?
@myself, 10 minutes ago.
Actually looking again you could aim for near total division of assets, I doubt total division would be possible or even practical.
For example it wouldn’t make sense for the ASW Merlin’s to be in the hands of anyone except the FAA, purely because they are so specific to the maritime role.
But broadly, it’s a concept that I wouldn’t mind talking about.
They all fly stuff. Your point about me and Schumacher both driving is irrelevant. They all fly high tech military aircraft – extremely similar. If they arent then you are actually arguing FOR the helicopters to go to the AAC as they are so different from the jets.
You may need Heads of Streams, but some of them already exist in the Navy/Army, and they would report into current Navy/Army commanders instead of the RAF top brass. There is a lot of duplication.
A bus company is totally different as its customers are individuals, and not an army. A more relevant comparison would be Tescos logistics – they either own and operate the lorries or they competitively contract it out, with the contractor reporting to them.
The reason for the RAF being the “victim” is that it is a supplier to the other services, particularly the Army, not an end in itself. The Army wins wars, the RAF just help them out. The Navy controls the sea, and now the strategy is based around the carriers the Navy can do its own air support.
Giving everything that flies to the RAF takes command of the operators away from the users, which is illogical.
Specifically on Q1 – the army are not the main users of the Albions and Bays are they? The Royal Marines are. The Army help out with the numbers occassionally.
I thought the original reason for the helicopters being split between the services was that it was expected that Chinook air and ground crews would be woken from their slumber by room service tapping on their door, bringing tea and toast; while Lynx crews would be woken by another squadie pissing into their muddy hole – something that’s not been so apparent over the years that a purple helicopter force has operated from large, static airbases. On that basis, it is impossible for delicate, fragrant RAF personnel to be given AAC aircraft – though Army personnel can be taught to use indoor toilets, so could take over the RAF’s choppers.
@ ChrisM
Oh dear, you’ve been well and truly guzzling the kool aid haven’t you?
“They all fly stuff. Your point about me and Schumacher both driving is irrelevant. They all fly high tech military aircraft – extremely similar”
– Yes, landing a C-17 and landing a Lynx Wildcat are identical aren’t they. How silly of me to not spot the similarity.
“If they arent then you are actually arguing FOR the helicopters to go to the AAC as they are so different from the jets”
– How do you figure that one out? One service operates both jets and helicopters, and has a corporate background of flying both going back to the very introduction of the helicopter into military service and beyond. The other does not. But you want to transfer all of that to the less experienced service, because somehow the experience of operation of multiple complex flying machines and intergrated air spaces makes an organisation less qualified than it’s smaller, less experienced sibling that leans on the larger organisation for a significant degree of its support? Okey dokey.
“You may need Heads of Streams, but some of them already exist in the Navy/Army, and they would report into current Navy/Army commanders instead of the RAF top brass. There is a lot of duplication”
– Yes… by the FAA and AAC. You seem to be missing the point that a larger FAA and AAC would require very senior commanders, for both services. The would need chiefs of their respective air arms, with the appropriate seniority to sit at the highest tables to talk budgets and strategies. That would double the cost of the functions currently provided by the RAF. The only other choice is to not assign these individuals, in which case the air arms will fall by the wayside as they struggle for funding and proper representation; precisely the reason why a seperate airforce was established in the first place.
“A bus company is totally different as its customers are individuals, and not an army.”
– No it’s not. It’s a perfect example. The bus company supplies a bus to a particular route to pick up whoever happens to be the passengers on that day (an infantry company). It has the biggger picture in mind and can shift buses around to better accomodate the passenger requirements in different areas, as well as organising connections with other “buses” or even the bigger “trains”. Helicopters do other things except shuttling soldiers around in the same way that a bus company is not the exlusive preserve of the commuter at the bus stop.
“The Navy controls the sea”
– HAHA, Have a word with yourself. Even user x, an ardent Naval supporter, is not that silly.
“The reason for the RAF being the “victim” is that it is a supplier to the other services, particularly the Army, not an end in itself. The Army wins wars, the RAF just help them out”
– What do you think the Navy is then? It’s a supplier to the army as well, providing safe transport across the sea as one of its primary roles. Of course this is a simplification. The Navy does other things, as does the RAF. The provision of QRA has nothing to do with the army, and nor did the intervention in Libya (except on a very sneaky, strategic level). Your assessment of the RAF is fundamentally flawed and shows a serious lack of study.
“…and now the strategy is based around the carriers the Navy can do its own air support”
– On a very limited basis, presuming the carriers make it into service.
“Specifically on Q1 – the army are not the main users of the Albions and Bays are they? The Royal Marines are. The Army help out with the numbers occassionally”
– The primary purpose of these vessels is to deliver the army by sea, transporting their tanks and other heavy equipment along with the Points. The main purpose of the Royal Marines is to fight on land. Using your rational both the transport ships and the Marines should be part of the army.
But as I said, I knew when the shoe was on the other foot all your original arguments would suddenly be swapped about. If it’s RAF kit we’re talking about then you’re all “ohh, that should be given to the prime user” but when its Navy kit suddenly its “ohh, you can’t touch that, that belongs to the Navy”.
It reveals the sad and somewhat depressing nature of your comments, i.e. that you don’t really care what is the most operationally effective or cost efficient method. All you care about is taking things away from the light blue and giving them to other people, for some arbitrary reason that defies explanation.
How does that help defence? Why should a significant chunk of the armed forces been completely upheaved and moved around, providing zero additional operational benefit and zero cost benefit just because you don’t like light blue shirts.
It really bugs me. It’s beyond petty and goes into the realms of spiteful vindictiveness.
@Chris.B
It’s entirely reasonable for @ChrisM to advocate that support helicopters go to the Army, their allocation to the RAF is owed more to a half century old budgeting problem than considered decisions. Forgetting the existence of RA crewed observation planes and the Glider Pilot Regiment is a little silly. It’s common sense that users are better able to decide what services they require than a third party, and support helicopters are hardly a priority for the RAF the way they are for the Army.
The existence of separate administrative chains of command within the RAF duplicates similar ones within the Army and RN. Removal of the former is unlikely to double costs.
The RM would probably be best off within the Army, and there’s a case for the Points and amphibs being similarly organised and funded. Air defence is unquestionably a largely RAF function, but that’s hardly enough to justify a whole separate service.
Ad hominem attacks by anyone don’t serve discussion. None of us know each other’s motivations and there is precious little point in speculating.
@Chris B May 29, 2012 at 20:21
- I am not an RAF abolitionist but your challenge proved irresistible. I have kept my answers short and sweet but there is more where they came from.
“Question One; Why not amalgamate all the available sea lift such as responsibility for the Point Class, Albions and Bay’s into a command that is then given to the army? The RN would have absolutely no say or control of it what so ever. The Royal Marines would also be transferred to the army. After all, the army are the main users of this lift, are they not?”
- Your question is based on two flawed premises: First, Point Class apart, you have labelled floating weapons systems as ‘sea lift’ and tried to equate them with ‘air lift’ assets (presumably C-130s, C-17s, CH-47s, etc.). To the best of my knowledge, none of the RAF’s strategic or tactical ‘air lift’ assets deploy on prolonged, relatively autonomous operations and employ their own C4I, armament, combat personnel (RN & RM), aviation and boats for such tasks as MIOPS (Maritime Interdiction Operations), intelligence gathering, ASW, anti-piracy and anti-drug smuggling patrols, rendering humanitarian aid, providing disaster relief, NEOs, etc. Secondly, the Army is not the principal user of these vessels when they are performing most of their maritime functions. The Royal Marines are not called ‘sea soldiers’ for nothing.
“Question Two; Why not scrap the Royal Navy almost entirely and party out its kit to the other two services? The RAF would take control of the Carriers and any ships needed to protect them. They would also be responsible for all helicopter aviation at sea. The Army would take control of all sea lift assets and would be given some escorts as well to protect them. The Royal Navy would be reduced to operating the CASD and the submarine force, for which it wouldn’t need any senior organisation and instead could just report to the Joint Headquarters as providers of sub surface action. This would flatten their pyramid massively and save a fortune would it not?”
- Much of this is down to ethos. While plenty join the Royal Navy (and the Army) to fly, I’d suggest that few if any join the RAF to go to sea, much less leave their home bases for up to 10 months at a time every 18-24 months. The RAF is also unique in sending its officers into combat while just about everyone else stays ‘behind the wire’. The RN not only has an ‘all of one company’ concept but also treats its ships as integrated weapons systems of which the aircraft form one element. RN (and RFA) ships are not just floating airfields that wave their aircraft off then sit twiddling their thumbs until their return. With regard to ‘sea lift’ assets, see my answer to question one. Last but not least, I am amused if you believe it sensible (or indeed possible) to divorce sub-surface activity from surface and air activity in the maritime environment.
@Chris B
Are you now or have you ever by any chance been a serving member of the RAF? I’m detecting quite a bit of anger in you’re defensive responses.
As Wf said we are here to discuss, if we can’t do that in an effective manner then what’s the point!
@Wf
Yes exactly! People can advocate what they wish for the future, it’s totally open for discussion
What can’t be denied is that a lot of the budgetary allocations and structural framework can be argued to be anomalies, decisions made long ago that have questionable relevance to today.
Wanting to find a way of achieving some logic and clarity in a confused mess can be no bad thing!
@ Challenger
“Are you now or have you ever by any chance been a serving member of the RAF?”
– No.
The closest I would come to any connection to the RAF would be a Grandad who was a firefighter on one of the RAF bomber bases in WW2, not sure which one or whether he was even technically RAF or not, and an Auntie who is mad as two cuckoo clocks stuck together with crazy glue who once served in the WRAF. Other than that, nothing.
My issue is simple Challenger. I came here, to Think Defence, to talk about defence and try to find like minded individuals (and even some not like minded), to discuss the state of defence and perhaps to come up with solutions that maybe, if someone from a higher power in defence is watching, are taken on board.
I want to see what is best for the nation and frankly what is best for the men and women deployed on the front line, where death and serious injury are very real concepts that they live with daily, as opposed to being abstract concepts that we talk about here behind the comfort of our keyboards.
That may sound somewhat cheesy or hokey, but I don’t care. It is something which I believe in very passionately and maybe misguided, an idealist perhaps. I do not care what people think of this, because it is me, I am what I am and I think what I think, and I feel what I feel, so that is that and I do not care if people think it naive or optimistic or just down right laughable.
However, I did not come here to listen to people bashing one of the services and plotting its downfall on the simple premise that they don’t like it, or because they served in another service and are bitter because the RAF took all the shiny flying toys and they were left with the dull ones.
I have nothing but contempt for people that would advocate the destruction of a service that has a very good track record of doing what is needed of it on operations and providing the support that is part of its job description, just because people do not like the fact that RAF crews live on air bases or that they get shorter tours (with consequently shorter intervals).
If that is a problem for ex-serving members of the Navy then fine, they should not have joined the Navy. When I used to do 16 hour night shifts I did not complain to people about it because I was the one that agreed to do them in the first place.
So that is where I source my hostility from. Because there is no sound rational behind all these proposals for stripping away chunks of the RAF or completely disbanding it. Not one solid reason has been put forward. All I’ve seen and heard so far has been an incessant stream of ridiculous claims that have no basis in fact or reality, which only serve to demonstrate the profound lack of understanding on the part of those who make these comments, and which seem to be underwritten by a current of service bias that is only thinly veiled.
I fail to see why such irrational, petty, absurd, agenda driven arguments should be treated as anything remotely resembling a reasoned debate, when clearly they are driven by anything except a desire to find the truth and to help those in the service.
@ wf
“It’s common sense that users are better able to decide what services they require than a third party, and support helicopters are hardly a priority for the RAF the way they are for the Army”
– You’re right. It’s not like the RAF has requested, and been requesting for quite some time now, more transport helicopters from the MoD. Oh wait…
“Forgetting the existence of RA crewed observation planes and the Glider Pilot Regiment is a little silly”
– Maybe if glider planes and Observation planes bore any resemblence to the large transports, fighter planes and large ISTAR assets that are being advocated as being handed over to the Army, then you might have a point.
“The existence of separate administrative chains of command within the RAF duplicates similar ones within the Army and RN. Removal of the former is unlikely to double costs.”
– So the army and Navy have administrative chains dedicated to the through life management of C-17, C-130, Chinook, Tornado, Typhoon? No? Brimstone? Paveway? Aviation fuels? Air bases? I didn’t think so. Which means they will need ALL the same chains as the RAF does. Yes, even in the senior levels. You will need a Chief of the Naval Air Staff and a Chief of the Army Air Staff, along with all their relevant subordinates. In many cases you will end up with two streams – one army, one navy – to cover functions that the RAF currently does with one. You will save nothing and probably increase a number of the costs. This simplistic view that the RAF = a bunch of pilots and a few ground crew is misleading.
@ Dunservin’
– You should have left the bait if you knew what it was.
Regarding your reponse to question one, you’re quite right that those assets do other things, which is the point I was trying to make to Chris M that’s it’s not as simple as saying “well, Globemaster carries troops thus it should be managed by the army”. RAF lift assets do a number of roles, which include transporting personnel including Naval personnel. They also have roles to play in things like disaster relief, supporting the operation of Fast Jets, Search and Rescue (in the case fo the now former MPA) etc. And all the while that they’re doing this they are not solely supporting the army. You make my argument for me.
Your response to question two is precisely the response I was expecting. If I may quote you “Much of this is down to ethos”. So in other words, ethos is a legitimate argument when we’re talking about subsuming Naval assets, but not the other way around, because presumably the RAF has no ethos of its own or its ethos is irrelevant? How convenient.
While criticising RAF bods for not wanting to go to sea, you forget about the pilots that did just that in ’82 and performed very effectively in their new role. Now tell me how many of the armies Apache pilots who recently served in Libya off of a carrier signed up to go to sea? None I expect, but they just got on with the job at hand, as it seems current military types have an annoying tendency of doing, especially when that goes against the neat little propoganda paragraphs that often seem to find their way into the statements of senior serving officers when they give evidence to parliament. You over rate I think this concept about peoples willingness to go and do certain jobs.
As for this “… much less leave their [RAF] home bases for up to 10 months at a time every 18-24 months”.
First of all you’re right, the RAF don’t do 18-24 month tour intervals. I believe the current requirement is one every 16…
So you believe that RAF personnel sign up in order to sit around at home all day? I would say new recruits would have to be somewhat idiotic if they indeed believed that they would spend the next four to five years sitting around at Brize Norton with no requirement to move about or go abroad. I think you give them not nearly enough credit.
As for the 10 month tours that’s interesting, because an old friend of mine who has recently become one of the newest recruits into Her Majesty’s Navy should be landing on “those Islands” in the next day or so, and is spending two weeks with Dauntless, before jetting off to the Caribbean for about 2 and half months. This was described (he posted it on his Facebook wall no less) as being a, quote, “half tour”. Which would put a full tour at 6 months and would correlate with loose Naval mouths on other forums that the average Naval tour of duty (from the personnels perspective, if not the ship itself) is in fact 6 months, not 10.
Then we have this; “The RAF is also unique in sending its officers into combat while just about everyone else stays ‘behind the wire’”
How is this seen as a negative? That officers, who are supposed to be leaders, would fly into harms way? If it were the other way around I suspect you would be complaining that the officers were sitting at home and letting the juniors go into battle.
And if you really must insist on this stupid bloody ‘we have bigger balls and share more of the burden than the light blue, going into action etc’, then I ask you to consider this; the RAF has suffered 22 killed in Afghanistan. Happy now? Has this placated your lust for equal RAF blood, all in it together and all that? Does this make them more manly now in your eyes? Perhaps make them more worthy of your mighty praise now, oh gracious decider of who is and who isn’t assuming the most risk on operations? Or would you care for a breakdown first on how many were blown up by IED’s, how many were shot, and how many died in the Nimrod crash?
Then we have “The RN not only has an ‘all of one company’ concept but also treats its ships as integrated weapons systems of which the aircraft form one element”.
And presumably the RAF doesn’t treat its aircraft the same, as just one component of the deployed capability? Perhaps you presume that the RAF ground crew just sit around themselves when the aircraft are off? I mean its not like they have other things to be doing is it? I certainly can’t think of any other tasks that they could be doing while the officers are away.
We could go on, but I think I’ll stop it here.
I presume from your user name that you are an ex-service person? Yet you treat the other services with such contempt, such disdain, despite the fact that in the end they’re all fighting for the same side to achieve the same objectives, or at least supposed to be. I find that a little unsettling personally.
And as expected (you essentially answered for Chris M) you gave me not one good reason why his proposal wouldn’t work the other way around. Of course we all know it wouldn’t work, in the same way that chopping up the RAF and trying to hand pieces of it around to the other services wouldn’t work. But when the shoes on the other foot suddenly it’s all, “oh what about our ethos, what about our history” as if the others have none of their own and your own service is the sole owner of words like “tradition”, “corporate knowledge” or “ethos”.
Not one good reason has been put forward and I strongly doubt one will.
Chris.M
“The AAC/FAA/RAF all do the same stuff – they fly things – so there will be synergies.”
Have you ever been through a merger?
You, personaly?
Ever sat on a transition team?
Chaired one?
The theory, is synergies save costs.
The reality is mergers create larger organizations, and larger organizations spend more money talking to themselves than smaller ones.
Headcounts frequently increase after the merger, because everyone protects “their” turf
Please, for all that is holy, won’t somebody think of the Alsations?
Any how I always view this RAF business as a de-merger of the RFC and RNAS.
And though head counts sometimes increase during mergers they also reduce. Ask many in the financial sector over the past decade or so.
And as for protecting turf many argue it is about concentrating assets in the area they are used eg. RAF Army Co-operation squadrons to the AAC. It is about demarquation which isn’t always a bad word.
Any way it is all getting silly. The next one of you to mention RAFcide will have to go and get their hat. Gees guys…….
Chris B
This is going to sound silly but I sort of agree with you on one point.
I do not accept, nor support the kind of ‘My service is best, (insert Army Navy air force) and everyone else smells’ arguments about force mergers. Implying that the RAF are all effeminate sybarites, who cant fight without 5* service, and all wear soft soled shoes and use to much Brylcream, compared to us hearty sons of Nelson / Wellington Is bollocks.
HOWEVER… In answer to your points (Yes I know they are Baldrick style cunning traps but what the hell this is a discussion blog).
1) Yep give the Amphib and transport to the Army along with the marines. I have said it before I have listened to all sorts claim, the Marines are special, and not at all like soggy Paras’. It’s all balls as the Army have been treating the Marines like what they are – a high quality light to medium infantry/ recon unit for years! Indeed the Paras and Marines have regularly relieved one another on identical ops / deployments; and did pretty much the same job save for the amphibious landing speciality, in the nameless isles.
If I am saying give RAF REG to army can’t give special pleading to Navies Popski’s private army can I.
2) You want to give Elephants to RAF that’s very tempting.
BUT a no go for this reason.
Elephants will not deploy that often and unless you give the RAF exclusive use of 3-4 t45 and 4-8 t26 to sit around in port waiting for then elephants to leave there enclosures it won’t work. And would bea shock waste of resources.
Further and this is where your argument falls down. The navy does all sorts of stuff that has nothing to do with the RAF or the Army. Surface ASW,SSN,SSBN, for starters. Everything the RAF does is in essence for someone else. With the posssible exception of the largely discredited ‘Deep strike’ capibility. (See Below)*
Where do the subs go and if it remained separate service that defeats the point.
Like I said ALL plans for mergers of whatever type, or movement form one force to another and of whatever capabilities, IMPLICITLY ACKNOWLEDGE the benefits of scale. And by the stripping out of layers of middle management.
Those benefits have by and large been proved by modern commercial practice.
As I pointed out TD’s whole ‘if it flies its light blue’, relies on that as it’s bedrock.
I have no axe to grind about the RAF, I have seen examples of shocking service insularity, and down right bloody mindedness, from it’s denizens. (in particular an incident involving leaving freezing soldiers on a hill in an exercise because it was time to knock off and go home, where frankly we were lucky no one died).
But I have seen and heard that from Pongos and the Andrew too, that’s just human nature.
* BTW being given out on news last night that ONE OF (my emphasis), the many reasons we are not going to be attacking Syria….
Is coz they is too hard and have lots of air defence capabilities we don’t fancy having a go at…
@Chris.B
“You’re right. It’s not like the RAF has requested, and been requesting for quite some time now, more transport helicopters from the MoD. Oh wait…”. So? My point is still valid, that a capability requirement is best funded by those that use them, and given that it’s taken this long for new Chinook orders, it sort of proves my point. The RAF sees Typhoon as it’s core requirement, and prioritises accordingly. It’s understandable from the organisational point of view.
“Maybe if glider planes and Observation planes bore any resemblence to the large transports, fighter planes and large ISTAR assets that are being advocated as being handed over to the Army, then you might have a point.” I thought that anything that flies was the same? Your point was we shouldn’t take away the support helicopter role from the RAF because it had pioneered the use of such, which I suspect the Yanks might be surprised to hear.
“So the army and Navy have administrative chains dedicated to the through life management of C-17, C-130, Chinook, Tornado, Typhoon? No? Brimstone? Paveway? Aviation fuels? Air bases? I didn’t think so. Which means they will need ALL the same chains as the RAF does. Yes, even in the senior levels. You will need a Chief of the Naval Air Staff and a Chief of the Army Air Staff, along with all their relevant subordinates. In many cases you will end up with two streams – one army, one navy – to cover functions that the RAF currently does with one. You will save nothing and probably increase a number of the costs. This simplistic view that the RAF = a bunch of pilots and a few ground crew is misleading.” Actually, most of that is handed by civil servants, not uniformed personnel. Since the AAC and FAA presumably handle JP8, Hellfire, Lynx etc and similar equipments, and are often based on current or former RAF bases, I can’t really see the point you are trying to make: there will be more work for the existing structures, but 2 rather than 3 will see a reduction in depts, mainly in the MOD rather than the service.
@IXION: good points there
If I had to sum up the conundrum of a separate air force service, it’s that it was formed because it was assumed that wars would be won by the independent use of air power. This has been repeatedly disproved, so now we hear that it needs to exist for administrative convenience on the basis that things that fly are the “same”. It’s not exactly compelling, because tools should not be driving strategy, but requirements, and silo’ing off “flying” will result in organisational resistance to anything that reduces the latter, even if it’s a better solution
@Chris B
The closest RAF connection I have is my Great Grandfather. I believe he was in Coastal Command for the first half of the war (I have a very interesting photo of a merchant ship in flames and going down, alas no name or date though). The story goes that after injury he spent the second half of the war on light duties and was allegedly Glen Millers driver for one or more of his trips to London.
I completely agree with you’re view that we all come on here and read and post, hopefully in the process finding some likeminded individuals, and even if we disagree it’s still productive to have difference and debate.
Again I agree that what’s really important is serving the national interest and the interests of undoubtedly brave and dedicated service personnel (we can at least agree on one thing!). Id add in-to that the idea that the taxpayer also deserves to get real value for money out of the defence budget and be served by flexible and capable armed forces.
I am not partisan against the RAF in particular. I am not, nor have ever been in the armed forces so I consider myself neutral. My views have never had anything to do with who gets what shiny toy (that’s the kind of petty jealously that id want to try and rectify). I have singled it out more recently because that was the theme that this thread was heading towards. For the record if we were talking about Navy or Army waste id be as vocal in my views.
Anyway I agree that we should probably leave the ‘RAF abolishment’ idea behind. For my part I have never been totally convinced by any argument for or against. I have really been in two minds, oscillating between various points rather than sticking to one overwhelming view.
I would however say that all of this speculation. Some of us think certain changes would be productive and some of us don’t, their can’t be right or wrong because we have no idea how these views would transfer in-to reality.
I’m still going to believe and advocate that some changes of association, some clarity amongst the confused cross service interdependence would be a good thing. Just as you don’t have to agree with me, I don’t have to agree with you. That’s what’s great about living in a relatively democratic land!
After all, we are all friends here!
@ wf
‘If I had to sum up the conundrum of a separate air force service, it’s that it was formed because it was assumed that wars would be won by the independent use of air power. This has been repeatedly disproved, so now we hear that it needs to exist for administrative convenience on the basis that things that fly are the “same”.’
That could be equally argued for any service, no-one wins modern wars/campigns on their own.
Cor, there’s a lot of rivalry here.
Can anyone list out the RAF structure. I’m having serious problems understanding the contradicting statements within the RAF’s own website!
1 Group (combat)
901 EAW?
902 EAW?
etc
2 Group (support)
22 Group (training)
And roughly what assets each wing holds?
@ Simon
I hope this clears things up a little.
1 Group run all the FJ
2 Group all AT, SH + RAF Reg.
22 Group run all the training in the RAF across all trades and branches.
901 EAW and the rest of EAWs are admin formation to cover all the Non formed unit personnel on a particular station namely the larger flying units. Something like Ellamy for example, the flying sqns deploy and the support functions like the drivers, admin, support staff are ‘badged’ within that formation.The commander of the EAW is the same as the Station Commander.
Simon,
Groups are 2 star commands, dedicated to some similar roles (e.g. transport, ISTAR, training, and being pretend Biggles). EAWs are subordinate to Groups in peacetime and grew out of trying to give Station Commanders a proper job. They are the deployed HQs on 6 month rotations.
Sort of like Divisions in the Army, and Brigade HQs. There was always a jump in the RAF between Squadrons and Groups, probably not easy to manage. So EAWs were invented to give Kevin something to command in between Squadron and Group.
Topman, James,
So…
Somewhere like RAF Cottesmore/Coningsby would constitute an EAW?
…and….
These EAWs are the “deployable unit” that work on rotation?
What kind of assets does an EAW have? Are we talking a defined number of FJ, AEW, tankers, etc?
@ Simon
Not Cottesmore, it’s an army barracks
but yes units such as Coningsby would have a EAW on them and other large flying stations. No they don’t work on rotation they are just an admin function for that unit. They don’t have assets per se more just a deployable unit to put all the support personnel into. Not to to try and confuse you further but their are EAW out in the ME there are 2 (I think) overseas in Herrick or supporting plus an EAG above those EAW. They are similar to the EAWs on stations around the UK
@Topman: “That could be equally argued for any service, no-one wins modern wars/campigns on their own”. Agreed! So why do we need a separate service to perform some duplicate and some unique capabilities based around flying when the other two services also perform flying tasks?
@James: I suspect you’ll find EAW’s were patterned after similar USAF units organised after a successful trial in GW1 by a composite wing flying from Incerlik in Turkey.
Topman,
I’m confused
Can you point me to a link that makes sense? The RAF one doesn’t. It goes on about an Expeditionary Air Force made up of an Expeditionary Air Group and Expeditionary Air Wings (901-904). The link to the EAG then takes you off to another page which implies 901-904 EAW are part of the EAG!
Wiki (that highly reliable source) makes more sense but implies an EAW is part of a station or part of a group!!! Which is it? Which wing is part of which station and which group!!?!?!
Are you simply saying that an EAW is built from whatever is needed at the time but is managed by a particular station?
@ wf
Same reason we need an army, which is no different from your point (edited to make a point) ‘a seperate service to perform some duplicate and some unique capabilities when the other two services have ground troops.’
Topman, you’d better not be trying to make a case that the RAF Regiment are anything other than a comedy dance troupe. It is one of the few things that Royals and the Army can agree upon.
i’ll give you a clue. The MoD don’t try to deploy them into a combat role. Bumbling around airfield perimeters is about all they are useful for.
@ Simon
Don’t worry your not the only one! It’s more formalising and numbering command structures that were there already than adding anything, a tidying up of CoC if you like.
‘The link to the EAG then takes you off to another page which implies 901-904 EAW are part of the EAG!’
They are, to use army terms, think of it as 3 companies dotted about the ME with a btn HQ controlling it.
‘EAW is part of a station or part of a group!!! Which is it? Which wing is part of which station and which group!!?!?!’
It is part of a station, as above it’s a ‘ghost’ unit when not deployed.
I think the confusion comes from the 2 types of EAW the ’900s’ which are there to support air ops in theatre and as that is long term deployment so it has been decided to have a ‘permanant’ EAW in the ME.
Then (still with me ! ) there are 1xx EAWs these are the ‘ghost’ ones. Used on Ellamy from Coningsby more to support single station deployments.
‘Are you simply saying that an EAW is built from whatever is needed at the time but is managed by a particular station?’
The day to day ‘ghost’ ones are taken from personnal on the unit that it is based at.
Phew! I know it’s pretty confusing even to those serving
Topman,
I think I get you, but so as to not waste your time, I’ll buy a book.
I just hope I don’t find out it’s matrix managed otherwise FBOT will have a field day
@ James
Don’t worry I know your thoughts on them
All banter aside, they’ve always been ok by me, but then since it’s not really my field I’m probably not in position to judge. But they do the job they are tasked with, PJHQ seems happy enough they wanted more of them so the RAF formed up 2 more Sqns. You can only do the job your tasked with, all issues with the army aside, they keep our jets when on the ground complete without holes in, that’s good enough for me.
@ Simon
‘I think I get you, but so as to not waste your time, I’ll buy a book.’
Not at all, as one of the very few crabair types here, some has to act as translator
@Topman: You may recall my expressed desire to subsume both the RM and RAF regiment into the Army…
So, why is the technical practice of flying require a separate service again?