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The Royal Air Force in the Cold War, 1950–1970
The Royal Air Force in the Cold War, 1950–1970
The Royal Air Force in the Cold War, 1950–1970
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The Royal Air Force in the Cold War, 1950–1970

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Soon after the Second world War, wartime allies became Cold War adversaries, and by 1950 the perceived threat of a Soviet strike on Western Europe or Britain dominated military planning. For the next forty years, the Royal Air Force was in the front-line of the Cold War. In Britain and Germany, light bomber crews exercised in preparation for a future conflict, while interceptor pilots stood by ready to counter incursions by Soviet aircraft. Between 1956 and 1969, the elite crews of the iconic V-Force of nuclear bombers trained to perform the ultimate mission, striking targets deep in the heart of Russia. Protecting British interests overseas, personnel at stations across the Middle East and Far East were regularly engaged in supporting operations during the many colonial conflicts which occurred throughout the 1950s and 1960s.Undertaking these duties were new British-designed aircraft introduced to squadrons from the early–1950s. The names of these extraordinary aircraft, which included the Hunter, Lightning, Vulcan and Canberra, became synonymous with the Cold War.In this book, Ian Proctor uses over 150 highly evocative colour images from a single remarkable Air Ministry collection to portray the RAF and its personnel between 1950 and 1970. He provides a selected insight into service life, the aircraft, recruitment and training, and the operations and exercises undertaken by the RAF during a twenty year period of the Cold War.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 30, 2015
ISBN9781473844414
The Royal Air Force in the Cold War, 1950–1970

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    The Royal Air Force in the Cold War, 1950–1970 - Ian Proctor

    Introduction

    This book offers a photographic portrait of the Royal Air Force during the early part of the Cold War, specifically the years between 1950 and 1970 when it underwent considerable change in form and function. The remarkable photographs that form the heart of this book provide a fascinating glimpse into a relatively neglected period of aviation history, when the RAF fulfilled its defensive and offensive roles during a time of great political tension.

    The featured images come from a single collection of approximately ten thousand photographs held by Imperial War Museums. Created between 1952 and 1969 by the Air Ministry’s (later MoD’s) Photography and Reproduction Branch (PRB), these images were deposited with the Ministry of Defence’s Negative Library and remained largely unknown until transferred to the museum in 2005. Only a small percentage of this series has been published previously. This book contains over 150 of these images, for the first time published together in their original colour.

    Formed of small vignettes, documentary and event photography, the collection offers today’s audience an insight into the Cold War duties and day-to-day activities of the RAF. Though there are the expected depictions of royal and military dignitaries and key historical events, the focus throughout is on the work of the ‘ordinary’ serviceman and woman.

    Created as public relations images, these photographs were used by the RAF and the Central Office of Information, appearing in aviation periodicals and newspaper supplements illustrating the work of the RAF. Mostly they featured in brochures aiming to encourage recruitment into a particular branch or trade suffering a shortage of manpower. These two functions have guided the collection’s content and the images’ style.

    The collection’s strength lies in the images recording the latest aircraft and the personnel working with them – images intended to inspire boys to become the next generation of aircrew. Similarly prominent are sets depicting the learning and lifestyle available during training at the RAF colleges or at the various schools of technical or administrative training for would-be officers and airmen in skilled, ground-based trades. The recruitment of regular, long-term aircrew and technicians declined sharply at times during the 1950s and 1960s, and the concentration on these subjects is firmly illustrative of the collection’s role in recruitment.

    The collection affirms the importance of the RAF’s day-to-day role at a time when the public was increasingly separated from it, particularly following the abolition of National Service in 1960. To an audience in the 1950s and 1960s, images of armourers ‘bombing up’ the V-Force, interceptors scrambling or even the aerobatic display teams recreating stylized aerial combat were seemingly familiar. The public memory of the Battle of Britain and the campaign over Germany was still fresh, while those born after 1945 were surrounded by depictions of RAF heroics in the adventure comics and war films of the 1950s. The Ministry’s photographs reinforced the message that the RAF of the Cold War, like its Second World War predecessor, was operating confidently as the front line of British defence. At a time when economic uncertainty questioned the RAF’s long-term role, communicating this message was important.

    By extensively photographing the introduction of new technology and the variety of roles and experiences undertaken by personnel, a valuable resource and a unique social record of the RAF was created. The RAF is presented in a way in which it wished to be seen; confident, modern and relevant. Yet this confidence belies the uncertainty faced by the service. From the late 1950s, regular defence reviews and budgetary cuts substantially affected the role and shape of the RAF, most notably emanating from Minister of Defence Duncan Sandys’ infamous 1957 White Paper ‘Defence: Outline of Future Policy’, which foresaw a massive change in the RAF’s priorities and direction.

    This book uses the photographs to introduce elements of the RAF’s work during the early Cold War period. The chapters have been selected to highlight the strengths of the collection and represents both operational and non-operational aspects. In the front line were squadrons of Fighter, Bomber and Coastal Commands and Second Tactical Air Force (later RAF Germany), along with the ground units supporting them. From 1950, interceptor pilots in Britain and Germany and later tactical nuclear bomber crews, were maintained at a heightened alert state waiting for orders that would signal the start of war. Similarly, the RAF was the first guardian of the UK’s nuclear deterrent, perhaps the best remembered of its Cold War roles. For this role, a fleet of highly iconic nuclear bombers and medium-range ballistic missiles was built up, manned by elite air and ground crews. While in Europe the Cold War never turned hot, overseas the RAF was engaged in a number of successive low-intensity campaigns as it withdrew from its stations in the Far East and Middle East. At a time when global travel was still rare, RAF personnel were deployed to some exotic locations in a number of roles, many saw active service.

    Several of the British aircraft operated by the RAF have become icons of the Cold War. Yet, frequently pushed to enter service quickly, many of these only reached their potential after successive modifications. Contending with the ramifications from the 1957 White Paper, and a series of budget cuts, the RAF struggled to equip its squadrons with British aircraft. The unclear direction of a rapidly shrinking RAF led to the demotivation of potential recruits and a related reduction in applicants to be aircrew. This compounded a similar problem in the long-term recruitment and retention of technicians required to operate increasingly technical equipment. To the public, the most visible indicators of the changing RAF were the popular display teams, which regularly performed during the 1950s and 1960s. Beyond their value in PR or recruitment these teams served a purpose, but by the mid-1960s their existence was under threat.

    The photographs were deposited with the museum with limited accompanying information and understanding this vast collection and its contents is an ongoing process. To get this far, I have had the help of a number of ex-servicemen, too many to name individually, but I would expressly like to thank Peter Symes, Derek Straw, Chris Moreshead, Basil D’Oliviera and Min Larkin who were incredibly patient and polite in response to my many questions about RAF life. I am grateful also to Lee Barton of Air Historical Branch who reviewed the text, and to Ting Baker, who patiently edited it. Naturally, I claim any and all errors or omissions as my own. I would like to thank my colleagues for their endless advice, in particular Alan Wakefield, Ian Carter, Mariusz Gasior and Helen Mavin. My last thanks must go to my parents without whom none of this would have been possible. My late colleague and friend Dave Parry, Senior Curator of Photographs at the IWM, himself a former RAF Telegraphist, encouraged me to investigate this collection and inspired me to produce this book and it is in his memory that this book is dedicated.

    HM Queen Elizabeth II‘s coronation review at RAF Odiham, Hampshire, 15 July 1953. Sizable by later standards, the RAF in the early 1950s was principally equipped with wartime aircraft inadequate for the Cold War. Seen on display are Meteor FR.9s from the Second Tactical Air Force in Germany Vampire F.3s from Fighter Command and 2TAF, Coastal Command Liberators and Washington B.1s on loan to Bomber Command from the USA. A sign of the future, overhead a flypast of swept-wing Sabres, led by Flight Lieutenant N. A. Burns of 441 Squadron RCAF. In December 1953, 66 Squadron at RAF Linton-on-Ouse became the first of Fighter Command’s two stop-gap Sabre squadrons. (RAF-T 91)

    In one of collection’s earliest images, the RAF Regiment parades the Queen’s Colour past Buckingham Palace, London, on 17 March 1953, after receiving it from Her Majesty at a ceremony in Hyde Park. Ceremonial events, and the awarding of Colours and Standards, were reintroduced to the RAF during the later stages of the war by King George VI. The Colour a 3ft 91n square cloth mounted on a pike, is traditionally awarded to units and establishments to recognize service. The RAF Regiment was presented with its colour the fourth of seven awarded to the RAF, just eleven years after the unit was formed. (RAF-T 90)

    Wing Commander A. D. Frank and his crew stand near Vulcan B.1 XA896 of 83 Squadron at RAF Waddington, 21 August 1957. This crew was one of the three Vulcans and three Valiant crews selected to represent the RAF at the 1957 Strategic Air Command Bombing Competition at USAF Pinecastle, Florida. Note the aircraft has not yet been painted in the V-Force’s more familiar all-white gloss. XA896 was one of the first Vulcans to be delivered to 230 OCU on 7 March 1957, later serving with 83 and 44 Squadrons. In 1964, it was transferred to the Ministry of Aviation to test the engines of the proposed Hawker P.1154 supersonic fighter, and scrapped when the programme was abandoned. With their futuristic designs, the aircraft of the V-Force became symbols of the Cold War. Rather than maintain secrecy, the Air Ministry heavily promoted the custodians of the RAF’s nuclear weapons. (RAF-T 335)

    Crew of a Victor B(K). 1A of 55 Squadron silhouetted against the setting sun at RAF Marham in 1969; the unique shape of the aircraft is instantly recognizable despite the low light. The V-Force formed the RAF’s strategic nuclear deterrent from 1956 to 1969, perhaps not coincidentally reflecting the date range in which the majority of these photographs were taken. In May 1965, 55 Squadron, moved from Honington to Marham to become the first of three Victor squadrons operating in the air-to-air refuelling role. It retained this role until 1993, having provided a vital service during the Gulf War (RAF-T 8083)

    Senior aircraftmen of 90 (Signals) Group collect their lunch from a dining

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