NOTE ON FIRST LINE STRENGTH As the term "first line strength" is employed in different senses by different authorities it is necessary to define the sense in which the phrase is employed in the foregoing memorandum and elsewhere in Air Ministry announcements. The aircraft provided for a Royal Air Force squadron fall into four categories:- (1) the Initial Equipment aircraft, (2) the Immediate Reserve, (3) the Workshop Reserve, and (4) the Stored Reserve. 0nly "Initial Equipment" aircraft are operated, and the various categories of reserves are maintained to ensure that the "Initial Equipment," is kept up to establishment in peace and war. Thus the "Immediate Reserve" represents a reserve of aircraft kept with a squadron to make good loss by crashes, etc; the "Workshop Reserve", as the name implies, that margin of aircraft which experience shows will normally be under repair at any one time. Finally, the "Stored Reserve" is the provision made to meet war wastage until such time as it is covered by war production. The "Initial Equipment" of a squadron is thus its "first line"; and all other aircraft which are provided for the squadron, though identical in type with the initial equipment aircraft, have no other function than to preserve the first line intact against wastage. The first line strength of a squadron is thus the number of initial equipment aircraft it possesses - a number standardized for each type of squadron. The first line strength of the whole Air Force is the aggregate of the initial equipment of all operational squadrons. The first line strength thus excludes reserves of all categories and training aircraft of all categories. |