Reaper Force - Inside Britain's Drone Wars. Peter Lee M.

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Reaper Force - Inside Britain's Drone Wars - Peter Lee M. страница

Reaper Force - Inside Britain's Drone Wars - Peter Lee M.

Скачать книгу

      

      For the members of the RAF Reaper Force and their families

      The views and opinions expressed in this book are those of the author alone and should not be taken to represent those of Her Majesty’s Government, MOD, HM Armed Forces or any government agency.

      CONTENTS

      1 TITLE PAGE

      2 DEDICATION

      3 EPIGRAPH

      4 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

      5 TERMS AND ABBREVIATIONS

      6 PREFACE

      7 INTRODUCTION

      8 1 INTO THE DRONE LAIR

      9 2 WATCHING

      10 3 KILLING

      11 4 PIONEERS

      12 5 CIVCAS

      13 6 THREE MONTHS

      14 7 MISSING THE GORILLA

      15 8 CHOOSING

      16 9 HAPPY BOXING DAY

      17 10 INSIGHTS

      18 11 MEDALS

      19 12 MARRIED TO THE REAPER

      20 13 REFLECTIONS

      21 EPILOGUE: REMEMBERING

      22 PLATES

      23 ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      24 COPYRIGHT

       ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

      There are many people who have enabled this book to come to fruition, the majority of whom, for security reasons, cannot be named. I acknowledge you all here.

      I begin with my amazing and supportive wife, Lorna, for her unwavering belief in this project and for her practical advice; my daughters, Samantha and Fiona, who are a continuous source of inspiration, laughter and pride; my mother, Sheila, and my late father, Peter, who taught me that life is an adventure to be lived to the full.

      From the RAF, the current Air Officer Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition & Reconnaissance (ISTAR) Force Commander, RAF Waddington. He opened the gates to the Reaper Force for me with infectious enthusiasm, asking only for a fair telling of the Reaper story.

      The RAF Waddington Station Commander.

      Five current and previous Officers Commanding of 39 and XIII Squadrons, who have not only given me unparalleled, continued access to their facilities and people, but have actively promoted the idea of the Reaper story being told through the experiences of the operators. One Squadron Commander not only took me ‘flying’ on a day-long ‘live’ mission, but allowed me to try out the sensor operator’s (SO’s) controls to give me a real understanding of the equipment and the challenges of using it.

      The current and previous Director of Defence Studies (RAF) have gone above and beyond in engaging with the Air Staff and the MoD to secure various permissions.

      My three official reviewers have been with me from the outset – the Director of Defence Studies (RAF), a previous Officer Commanding 39 Squadron and Dr Peter Gray, Senior Fellow in Air Power Studies, University of Birmingham – and have also excelled in providing incisive critique and helpful additional detail throughout the book.

      My unofficial team of reviewers expanded from an initial core of one active pilot, SO and mission intelligence coordinator (MIC) to include spouses and interested veterans of the Reaper Force I met along the way. They have added detail and context, and helped me with procedures, processes and terminology.

      Jeff and Alicia Richard, whose son, US Marine Corporal Matthew T. Richard was killed in action in Afghanistan in 2011, and the US Marines, led by Squad Leader Sergeant Seth Hickman, who helped me to tell Matthew’s story.

      Andrew Lownie, my literary agent, who did so much to help me secure a publisher.

      My friends and colleagues at the University of Portsmouth who have provided practical and moral support throughout the project.

      My friends and colleagues across the academic ‘drone’ community, and those from the anti-drone activist community, with whom I have discussed, reasoned and argued over several years, and who have shaped my thinking in the process.

      The past and present members of the RAF Reaper Force, and their spouses and partners, who have welcomed me into their community, laughed with me, shed tears with me and entrusted me with their most profound experiences. I promised each of you that I would be honest, accurate and fair, and have strived to match that undertaking at every stage.

      Andrew Jeffrey, Joel Anthony, Hayden Hunt and James Robertson for contributing photographs which, with others, are credited in the captions to the photos in the plates section.

      Toby Buchan, my editor and great source of encouragement and guidance.

      I give you each my profound thanks. This has been the most exciting, moving, challenging and fulfilling project of my life. All of the credit belongs to you and any failings in the pages that follow are mine.

      Other photographs are Crown copyright; the link to the licence on the National Archives website can be found at http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/

       TERMS AND ABBREVIATIONS

      9-LINE A series of nine confirmations and checks, and the legal approval, that make up the authorisation to carry out a weapon strike, and includes the location and identity of the target, and the weapon choice

      AIRFRAME The structural elements of an aircraft, including the fuselage, wings and undercarriage, but excluding the engine. RAF personnel sometimes use ‘airframe’ interchangeably with ‘aircraft’

      AUTH Authorising Officer. Supervises Reaper crews and operations from the Squadron Operations Room

      BDA Battle damage assessment

      BUDDY LASE When two aircraft and crews work together to strike a target – one aircraft fires a laser-guided missile or bomb, while a second uses its laser-guidance system to ensure that the weapon hits the target that the laser is ‘lighting up’

      CAO

Скачать книгу