Modern RAF · 1991 – Present

Modern RAF

The post-Cold War RAF - leaner, more expeditionary and battle-hardened by Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya. A smaller force than at any point in its history, yet one of the most capable and combat-experienced in the world.

43 Total Records
4 Operations
7 Aircraft
0 People
5 Squadrons

The end of the Cold War brought not peace but a series of complex, unpredictable conflicts that demanded a very different kind of air power. The Gulf War of 1991 introduced precision-guided munitions, network-centric warfare and air-land integration at a scale never previously attempted. The RAF's Tornados flew the longest-range bombing missions in British history, and the service emerged from the conflict with a reputation for precision and professionalism that shaped its development for the next three decades.

Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria — each conflict brought new demands and new lessons. The unmanned air vehicle transformed reconnaissance and strike. Cyber operations emerged as a new domain. The F-35B and the return to carrier operations marked a fundamental shift in how British air power would be projected. A smaller service than at any point in its history, the modern RAF is nevertheless one of the most capable and combat-experienced air forces in the world.

"Air power is indivisible. If you split it up into little pieces, you merely ensure its defeat." — Air Marshal Arthur Tedder

The challenges ahead are different in kind from those that shaped the service's first century. State competition with Russia and China, the proliferation of advanced air defence systems, the integration of space and cyber into multi-domain operations — these are not problems that doctrine built for the Second World War or the Cold War can fully address. The RAF's ability to adapt, as it has adapted in every generation since 1918, will determine its relevance in the decades to come.