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Volume 6 No 4 - Royal Air Force Centre for Air Power Studies

Volume 6 No 4 - Royal Air Force Centre for Air Power Studies

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the Russian <strong>Air</strong> <strong>Force</strong> during the first and second<br />

Chechen campaigns (see also <strong>Air</strong> <strong>Power</strong> Review,<br />

Spring 2003). The article is an interesting balance<br />

of political and military comment which is<br />

particularly relevant to RAF readers in view of our<br />

use of airfields in that region during Operation<br />

ENDURING FREEDOM.<br />

air power community. I and the Editorial Board<br />

would encourage any of the readership who are<br />

seized by any air power issue to air their views in<br />

an article in the journal.<br />

D Def S (RAF)<br />

Colonel Phil Meilinger USAF (Retired) is no<br />

stranger to <strong>Air</strong> <strong>Power</strong> Review readers, or indeed to<br />

anyone in the air power community. His<br />

article, ‘The <strong>Air</strong> and Space Nation is in Peril’,<br />

which is taken from a chapter in his recent book,<br />

<strong>Air</strong> War: Theory and Practice, is a polemic on the<br />

increasing effect of market <strong>for</strong>ces on the US<br />

aerospace industry and, in particular, the impact<br />

of the decline in research and development<br />

expenditure. Whilst somewhat evangelistic and<br />

aimed very much at the American military<br />

readership, the article provides a useful counterpoint<br />

<strong>for</strong> the received wisdom that US aerospace<br />

superiority will always be assured.<br />

The last article, by Francis Han<strong>for</strong>d, is a historical<br />

one concerning the deployment of <strong>No</strong> 3 Squadron<br />

to Halton during the large-scale Army manoeuvres<br />

of 1913. The description of the logistics ef<strong>for</strong>t<br />

involved in deploying the Squadron shows how<br />

seriously the RFC had been thinking, even at that<br />

stage, about the implications of expeditionary<br />

operations: the provision by Mr Alfred de<br />

Rothschild of a high tea of hot pies washed down<br />

with quarts of beer to 3,000 soldiers on three<br />

successive evenings during the exercise is<br />

something that officers negotiating host nation<br />

support should try to live up to! The flying<br />

anecdotes are equally intriguing, in particular how<br />

easy it is to draw the wrong lessons from<br />

individual events such as the ability of airships to<br />

operate in weather which would ground<br />

heavier-than-air machines.<br />

The readership of <strong>Air</strong> <strong>Power</strong> Review has steadily<br />

grown since 1998, to the extent that we now produce<br />

7,200 copies per quarter <strong>for</strong> a readership that<br />

spans the UK armed <strong>for</strong>ces and the international

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