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Ep. 6: Frank Ledwidge on Aerial Warfare

School of War
School of War
Episode • Nov 23, 2021 • 41m
Biography
Frank Ledwidge is a senior fellow of law and strategy at the Royal Air Force College in Cranwell, England. Ledwidge served as an officer in the Royal Naval Reserve and later worked in British foreign policy, focusing on the Balkans, the Middle East, and Central Asia. In 2015, Ledwidge earned his doctorate in War Studies at the King's College in London. He is the author of several books, including Losing Small Wars: British Military Failure in Iraq and Afghanistan, Investment in Blood: The True Cost of Britain's Afghan War, and Aerial Warfare: The Battle for the Skies.

Times

01:14 - Introduction

04:27 - Origins and importance of aerial war in the World War I

10:43 - From aerial reconnaissance to aerial bombings

12:43 - The Interwar Period and the "prophets" of air war

17:57 - How aerial bombing theories influence British and American World War II strategy

22:04 - Air raid casualties

29:05 - Control of the air during the Cold War

34:49 - Perceptions of the U.S.'s mistaken bombing of the Chinese Embassy

36:49 - Aerial warfare in modern wars

38:57 - Theories of air warfare applied to space


Recorded November 2, 2021

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