Richard C over on Cold War Hot Hot Hot gave this such a glowing review that I felt an overwhelming desire to acquire one. It s quite literally another of the Cold War Classic must have titles, given that you are interested in gaming the Air Land component. For me that was one of the critical aspects of warfare in this period, playing the period without it would be like wargaming Afghanistan with no representation of ISTAR, you would be missing one of the key enablers.
Why is this book a gem it explains all facetes of the air battle with amazing clarity, the author an ex officer in the RAF brings both his own experience to bear and the experience of those he interviews. Each of the chapters focuses on a different aspect of air warfare and is underpinned by the knowledge of a serving officer currently flying in that role, which brings with it a fantastic level of detail.
I found the whole thing riveting, despite its association with the Boys in Blue and read it pretty much cover to cover. Having said that the structure of the book with each chapter focusing on a different role makes it a very effective reference vehicle and I have been back to it on numerous occasions since that first read.
The chapters cover:
- The view from the top - Commander 2 ATAF
- Integrating the land air battle a soldiers point of view - G3 Air Staf, HQ NORTHAG
- The air defence battle - F15C, 32 Fighter Sqn USAF
- The long punch - F111E, 79 Tactical Fighter Sqn USAF
- The bridge Droppers - F111F, 494 Tactical Fighter Sqn, USAF
- The Airfield Bashers - Tornado GR1s, 17 Sqn, RAF
- The Carpet Bombers - Tornados, Jagschwader 31, German Air Force
- The Jump Jet Dimension - Harriers, 3 and 4 Sqn, RAF
- The Battlefield Brusiers - A-10, 509th Tactical Fighter Sqn, USAF
- The Intelligence Gatherers - US RF-4C Phantom Recce, 1st Tactical Reconnaissance Sqn, USAF
- The Tank Swatters - British AT Helicopter Regiments, 635 Sqn, British AAC
- The Electronic Foxers - EF 111 Raven, 42 Electronic Combat Sqn, USAF
- The Wild Weasels - F4G and F4E Phantoms of 52 Tactical Fighter Wing, USAF
- Guardians of the Baltic shore - Tornadoes and F104s, Marine Flieger Geshwarder 1 and 2, German Navy
- Protecting the lifeline - No 11 Group, RAF Fighter Command
- Air Battle Central Europe an Overview - This pulls together the information from the preceding chapters in a coherent summary.
I would say this is the most digestible book I have read on the subject, it's sadly the only book I have read and the only one I feel I need to read so comprehensively and effectively does it address the topic. There are some highly useful books on operations and warfare that are right dull reads, this isn't one, if you have an inkling to understand the Air Land dimension in the later stages of the Cold War you need to read this book. The red covered version is the US release published 1987 and the Blue the UK published 1986, bizarrely I have both but have yet to compare the content.
Richards Review on Cold War Hot Hot Hot is a little more comprehensive than mine and provides an equally ringing endorsement, it's worth a read as well . If you can land a copy on or below £4 its a steal, to be frank its worth a lot more than the second hand price.

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