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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 July 2016
The subject of this paper is the interaction between airborne and ground attack missions by aircraft, and the defence systems now available to deny or counter such attacks. I should like to make it clear from the start that I am restricting myself to air operations in a non-nuclear land battle scenario and I speak not as an expert in attack missions, but rather in a historical and speculative fashion, as one who has been concerned with some of the techniques concerned with air defence.
You may, from me, expect a highly biased approach to the subject of the paper and probably you are right, but I should warn that if you expect me to conclude that the aircraft is doomed then I must reassure you that I believe that the aircraft remains a most flexible instrument of warfare and will for the foreseeable future exercise an extremely important position in the land and air battle.
Lecture given at the Luton and Stevenage Branch on 20th March 1975. Paper No. 295.