PODCAST · history
The RAF Chronicle Podcast
by Mike Savory
The RAF Chronicle Podcast explores the history of the Royal Air Force through its aircraft, people, operations, squadrons, commands, and turning points. From famous episodes to overlooked campaigns, each episode offers clear, grounded, documentary-style storytelling on the service and the wider history it helped shape.
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The RAF Acts Alone: Pink’s War and Air Control on the Frontier
Welcome to The RAF Chronicle Podcast. In this episode, we examine Pink’s War, the 1925 campaign in South Waziristan that is often treated as the Royal Air Force’s first independent military action.Pink’s War was small in scale, but large in institutional importance. It tested the inter-war idea of imperial air control and offered the RAF a chance to demonstrate that aircraft could act as the principal instrument of pressure rather than simply supporting a larger ground campaign.This episode matters because Pink’s War opens onto wider questions about how the RAF developed, operated and defined its place in British air power history.In this episode:Why the North-West Frontier mattered to British strategy in IndiaHow Pink’s War was planned and carried out in 1925What the campaign revealed about inter-war air controlWhy the episode still matters in the wider history of air power and empireListen if you're interested in:Royal Air Force historyBritish military historyAir power and strategyAviation historyThe wider context behind famous RAF storiesExplore more from The RAF Chronicle: For more on the history of the Royal Air Force, visit therafchronicle.co.uk to read the latest articles and explore the archive.Follow the podcast: If you'd like these episodes delivered straight to you, subscribe or follow The RAF Chronicle Podcast wherever you listen.
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The Birth of the RAF: Why Britain Created an Air Force of Its Own
Welcome to The RAF Chronicle Podcast. In this episode, we examine why Britain created the Royal Air Force as a separate service in 1918.This episode traces the path from the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service to the birth of the RAF, explaining how wartime pressure, home-defence failures, Jan Smuts's report, and the growing strategic importance of air power pushed Britain towards a decision no other major power had yet taken.The creation of the RAF was more than an administrative merger. It was Britain's early recognition that air power had become too important, too wide-ranging, and too politically significant to remain subordinate to older service structures.In this episode:The separate development of the R F C and the R N A SWhy 1917 exposed the weakness of divided air organisationJan Smuts and the political case for an independent air serviceThe creation of the RAF on 1 April 1918Why that decision shaped inter-war doctrine, home defence, and later British air strategyListen if you're interested in:Royal Air Force historyBritish military historyAir power and strategyAviation historyThe wider context behind famous RAF storiesExplore more from The RAF Chronicle: For more on the history of the Royal Air Force, visit therafchronicle.co.uk to read the latest articles and explore the archive.Follow the podcast: If you'd like these episodes delivered straight to you, subscribe or follow The RAF Chronicle Podcast wherever you listen.
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The RAF Story Beyond the Legends
Welcome to The RAF Chronicle Podcast. In this opening episode, we introduce the series and set out what listeners can expect in the weeks ahead.The history of the Royal Air Force is far larger than its most famous aircraft and best-known battles. This podcast is designed to explore that wider story: the aircraft, the people, the operations, the squadrons, the commands, the turning points, and the ideas that shaped the service across the twentieth century and beyond.Some episodes will revisit familiar landmarks in RAF history. Others will look at lesser-known campaigns, overlooked figures, institutional change, doctrine, technology, and the wider logic of air power. The aim throughout is to tell these stories clearly, seriously, and with enough space to explain not only what happened, but why it mattered.In this first episode, we explain the purpose of the series and the broader historical approach behind it.In this episode:- Why the RAF’s history is bigger than its most famous legends- The kinds of stories the series will cover- How the podcast will move between aircraft, people, operations, squadrons, and institutions- Why lesser-known episodes matter alongside the iconic ones- The historical perspective that will guide the seriesListen if you’re interested in:- Royal Air Force history- British military history- Air power and strategy- Aviation history- The wider context behind famous RAF storiesExplore more from The RAF Chronicle:For more on the history of the Royal Air Force, visit therafchronicle.co.uk to read the latest articles and explore the archive.Follow the podcast:If you’d like these episodes delivered straight to you, subscribe or follow The RAF Chronicle Podcast wherever you listen.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
The RAF Chronicle Podcast explores the history of the Royal Air Force through its aircraft, people, operations, squadrons, commands, and turning points. From famous episodes to overlooked campaigns, each episode offers clear, grounded, documentary-style storytelling on the service and the wider history it helped shape.
HOSTED BY
Mike Savory
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