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The RAF's Cross-Channel Offensive - Circuses, Ramrods, Rhubarbs and Rodeos 1940-1941 (Hardcover)
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The RAF's Cross-Channel Offensive - Circuses, Ramrods, Rhubarbs and Rodeos 1940-1941 (Hardcover)
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The story of the RAF, and in particular Fighter Command, during the
Battle of Britain has been told many times. It is a tale of the
gallant pilots of The Few', in their Hurricanes and Spitfires, with
the nation's back to the wall, fighting off the Luftwaffe's
airborne assault against enormous odds. But the story of Fighter
Command's operations immediately after the Battle of Britain is
less well known. Marshal of the Royal Air Force Hugh Montague
Trenchard commanded the Royal Flying Corps in the First World War.
His policy then had been for his aircraft and men to be continually
on the offensive, always over the German lines taking the fight to
the enemy. After being promoted to command the RAF, Trenchard
retired in 1930. In November 1940, Trenchard showed up again at the
Air Ministry and proposed that the RAF should Lean Towards France'
- that it should go on the offensive. The RAF would, claimed
Trenchard, win the resulting battle of attrition. One of the main
outcomes of the RAF's new offensive stance was the introduction of
the Circus sorties. These were attacks undertaken by a small force
of bombers with a powerful fighter escort. They were intended to
lure enemy fighters into the air so that they could be engaged by
RAF fighters, the primary objective being the destruction of
Luftwaffe fighters, followed by the protection of the bombers from
attack. A further development of the Circus missions were Ramrods,
Rhubarbs and Rodeos, all of which were variations on the same
theme. A Ramrod was similar to a Circus, though in this instance
the primary objective was the destruction of the target, the main
role of the accompanying fighters being to protect the bombers from
attack. A Rhubarb was a small-scale attack by fighters using cloud
cover and/or surprise, the object of which was to destroy German
aircraft in the air and/or striking at ground targets, whilst a
Rodeo consisted of a fighter sweep over enemy territory with no
bombers. Drawing on official documents and archive material, as
well as accounts by many of those involved, James Starkey reveals
just how Trenchard's views won through and the RAF went on the
offensive from late 1940 into 1941. Was it a failed strategy? If
so, why was it not halted once the results began to be seen?
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