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Telegraph
02-08-2025
- General
- Telegraph
The majestic bombers that used to defend Britain
It's ironic that the finest hour of Britain's V-Force of strategic nuclear bombers came long after it had been stripped of its nuclear capability. On April 30 1982, a lone Avro Vulcan carried out what was then the longest bombing mission by any air force – and only surpassed recently by the US's raid on Iran's nuclear facilities – when it flew 16 hours and 6,600 nautical miles from Ascension Island to the Falklands. The target was Port Stanley airfield (then in the possession of the Argentinians, who had invaded the islands a month earlier). Dropping 21 1,000-lb bombs, Flight Lieutenant Martin Withers was able to cause enough damage to the runway to prevent Argentine fast jets from using it, if not transport planes. Jonathan Glancey describes this raid in detail – and the fact that another V-Force bomber, the Victor, played a significant role in both the Falklands and Gulf wars – in his impressive new history of Britain's nuclear bombers, V-Force: Britain's Nuclear Bombers and the Cold War. But, he tells us, that raid was the bombers' last hurrah. The Vulcans were taken out of service in 1984, the Victor nine years later. The original V bomber, the Valiant, last flew on operations in 1964. The meat of Glancey's book explains how the V-Force was developed originally as nuclear bombers, up until 1968 when the deterrent was transferred to the Royal Navy's Polaris-equipped submarines. With previous books on Concorde, the Harrier and the Spitfire, Glancey is an aviation nut who's interested as much in the technical wonder of these planes as he is in the legacy they leave in the public consciousness. His book, he writes, 'looks at these winged Cold War warriors – warts, rivets and all – through the lenses of invention and engineering, of rivalry with fellow Nato countries as well as with the Soviet Union, and of popular culture too'. It is, he continues, a 'story of success, with compromise and failure along the way', and might serve as a universal parable for most defence procurement. The author provides plenty of context. We get potted versions of the history of strategic bombing (the 'bomber will always get through,' as Stanley Baldwin said in 1932), the development of the atomic bomb, and even the technical capabilities of rival US and Soviet nuclear bombers. Glancey is at his best, however, when he sticks to the story of the V-Force, which began with Britain's decision in 1946 to build its own atomic bomb (and later hydrogen bomb). Once we had the bomb, we needed a way to deliver it. Hence in 1947, six aviation companies were invited to tender designs for long-range jet bombers. The two eventually chosen were Handley Page's reconfigured crescent-wing HP80 (Victor) and Avro's striking Delta-wing 698 (Vulcan), both marking 'new territory in terms of design and engineering'. The Victor, with its swept-back wings, high tailplane and giant air intakes, had the appearance of a 'deeply strange fish'; the Vulcan left 'elongated delta-shaped shadows' on the ground as it flew overhead with an 'unearthly howl'. The first Valiants, Vulcans and Victors were delivered to RAF squadrons in 1955, 1956 and 1957, respectively. Though less advanced technically than its sister planes, the Valiant 'carried out the entire gamut of tasks asked of V-Force, short of dropping a live nuclear bomb on an enemy target'. That included conventional bombing raids (over Aden in 1956), testing an A-bomb over South Australia that same year, and, too, Britain's first H-bomb over Malden Island in the Pacific in 1957. Ultimately, V-Force would be 'the front line of aerial cavalry' were the Soviets to ever fire the first shot of World War III. Its shelf-life, however, was relatively brief. The beginning of the end was the development of the Soviet Union's surface-to-air missiles, which could intercept enemies from the ground. Particularly the S-75 Dvina, which shot down high-altitude American U-2 spy planes in 1960 and 1962, and triggered the Cuban Missile Crisis. This forced V-Force to switch to low-level attack methods, which in turn revealed weaknesses in the Valiant's airframe. After one near-fatal accident when a rear wing-spar fractured, all 50 Valiants in service were grounded for good. There was a plan to equip them with a US-made nuclear missile, Skybolt – but then America grounded that too. Glancey has written an engaging and affectionate account of the V-bombers, not least the figures who made it all possible: the brilliant British engineers who designed the planes; the pilots who were prepared to risk (and most often sacrifice) their lives to accomplish their missions. He also explores the political chicanery that prevented many other superb aircraft designs – military and civil – from ever becoming a reality. There is, ultimately, a whiff of nostalgia and regret in these pages. Britain's nuclear deterrent has become increasingly reliant on US politics and technology; this is, says Glancey, partly thanks to an 'almost wilful deindustrialisation'. France, by contrast – with a smaller economy than Britain's – retains an independent nuclear deterrent, and makes its own multi-role fighter, the Rafale. It's not about money, 'but rather a lack of will, or interest perhaps'. Does this matter? Yes, argues Glancey – and he's right. It's not a question of guns over butter, but more about 'considered self-defence, of Britain being a dynamic Nato partner'. Such arguments have never been more timely. ★★★★☆ Saul David is the author of books including Sky Warriors. V-Force: Britain's Nuclear Bombers and the Cold War is published by Atlantic at £22. To order your copy at £18.99, call 0330 173 0523 or visit Telegraph Books
Yahoo
30-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Review: The Wild Adventures of Women in Anthropology (opinion)
Today the stereotypical anthropologist sits all day philosophizing about the most basic human interactions while waiting for layers of ethics committees to approve any contact with real people. But anthropology was once a swashbuckling, adventurous field, built around freewheeling interactions with alien peoples in far-flung lands. Ursula Graham Bower was one such early anthropologist—and boy did she swashbuckle. In 1937, she left Britain to visit a friend in the colonial government of India. Instead of finding a husband, as she was expected to do, Bower fell in love with Nagaland, a hilly and unruly frontier zone where her friend was stationed. She spent a decade doing full-time anthropological research there. Although Nagas had a strict gender hierarchy, Bower became an "honorary man" to them by showing off her rifle skills on the hunt. Then Japan invaded the British Empire in 1942. Bower partnered with a Naga leader named Namkiabuing to form "V Force," a special operations unit that battled Japanese infiltrators. Everyone involved expected to die. The men of V Force went into battle wearing their funeral beads, and the Japanese army put a bounty on Bower's head. But she survived the war and became a celebrated author in Britain. Intrepid Women: Adventures in Anthropology, a coffee table book published jointly by Oxford's Bodleian Libraries and Pitt Rivers Museum, is filled with characters like Bower. Mākareti was a Māori noblewoman who built up New Zealand's tourist industry and became a high-society celebrity in the 1900s before beginning serious academic work on Polynesian culture. Elsie McDougall was a widow who, with no academic training, became a world-class expert in indigenous Central American textiles and survived a 1935 shipwreck. These stories of a more adventurous time are illustrated with photos of strange and beautiful artifacts from the museum. The post Review: The Wild Adventures of Women in Anthropology appeared first on