RAF The birth of the world's first air force

Richard Overy

Book - 2018

"The birth of the Royal Air Force during World War I marked a pivotal moment in modern military and political history. With Europe's western front frozen in a bloody stalemate of trench warfare, both sides sought some means of directly attacking enemy resources and morale. The new technologies of air power were used at first for reconnaissance of enemy positions for artillery strikes. By 1917 German bombers had begun raids on British cities, including an attack on London that killed hundreds, with eighteen schoolchildren among the casualties. Public outrage in Britain sparked a call for air defense and spurred political support for an independent air ministry. Prime Minister David Lloyd George and his minister of munitions, Winsto...n Churchill, led the debates over how to shape Britain's air power during the war. The immediate path to an independent RAF is a fascinating story of political, bureaucratic, and personal rivalries. By the end of World War I, the RAF was launching effective bombing campaigns on industrial and military targets in western Germany. It survived postwar retrenchment thanks largely to Churchill, who as colonial secretary gave the RAF special responsibility for enforcing imperial control in the Middle East, especially in the new League of Nations mandates of Palestine, Transjordan, and Iraq. The RAF helped to shape the way air power developed not just in Britain but notably in Germany and the United States. The massive bombing campaigns of World War II against civilian and industrial targets in major cities are rooted in this history. This compact book shows a master historian at work. In command of the archival sources, at home in all dimensions of the story, Richard Overy crafts an engrossing narrative of this turning point in our history."--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Published
New York : W.W. Norton & Company 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Overy (author)
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
Originally published: The birth of the RAF, 1918 : the world's first air force. London : Penguin Books, 2018.
Physical Description
x, 149 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780393652291
  • Britain and the war in the air
  • Battles in the sky, battles in Whitehall
  • April Fools' Day 1918
  • "A very grueling business": saving the RAF.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A skillful pocket history of the founding of the Royal Air Force in 1918 and its fate after the armistice.This is well-traveled ground for veteran military historian Overy (History/Univ. of Exeter; WWII Remembered: From Blitzkrieg Through to the Allied Victory, 2015, etc.), who emphasizes that in 1917, after three years of war, Britain's army employed a large air force and its navy a modest one, and no airman yearned for an independent service. That was a decision made by politicians in London and provoked by German bombing raids. Although trivial by World War II standards, the 1,400 Britons killed provoked panic and desire for revenge as well as a more effective air force. "The politicians wanted a force to defend the home front against the novel menace of bombing," writes the author, "amidst fears that the staying power of the population might be strained to the breaking point by the raids." Naval and army commanders opposed the decision, and one of the detractors was Hugh Trenchard, the commander of the Royal Flying Corps who felt that a major reorganization would distract from support of ground forces in France. After consolidation became inevitable, Trenchard reluctantly agreed to become Chief of Air Staff but quarreled so badly with his civilian superior that he resigned after three months. Despite fierce, almost comic-opera disputes over uniforms, ensigns, and titles, ably recounted by Overy, the RAF was up and running by summer 1918. It performed well supporting ground forces against the final German offensive, but this change also encouraged the fantasy, still going strong, that air power alonestrategic bombing then, drones nowwill win wars. Shared by civilian leaders, it kept the RAF alive during disastrous cutbacks after 1918 but meant that it got off on the wrong foot in WWII.This is a story Overy has told in earlier, much longer histories, but this is a fine introduction. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.