
Royal Air Force
Royal Air Force, the aerial warfare branch of the British Armed Forces responsible for UK air defence and power projection.
Last refreshed: 9 June 2026
Timeline for Royal Air Force
Mentioned in: £5bn UK drone plan follows Healey exit
Drones: Industry & DefenceMentioned in: NATO F-16 downs drone over Estonian soil
Drones: Industry & DefenceMentioned in: Kuwait Patriot fire kills three US jets
Iran Conflict 2026What weapons did RAF Typhoons use against drones in the Gulf?
Where are RAF Typhoons based in the Middle East?
Background
The Royal Air Force (RAF) is the United Kingdom's air warfare service, founded on 1 April 1918 as the world's first independent air force. With approximately 31,000 regular personnel and a fleet including Typhoon FGR4 multirole fighters, F-35B Lightning II stealth jets, and Voyager tankers, the RAF operates from bases across the UK, Cyprus, and the Falklands. Its home command sits at RAF High Wycombe, and its Typhoons are among the most capable multirole platforms in NATO, carrying the ASRAAM, Meteor, and Brimstone missile families.
In May 2026, 9 Squadron RAF Typhoons operationally deployed the APKWS laser-guided rocket system for counter-drone missions in the Middle East, flying from RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus and Al Udeid Airbase in Qatar at approximately GBP 20,000 per shot, marking one of the first confirmed uses of rocket-based C-UAS by a European NATO ally.
The RAF has been forward-deployed to the Gulf under Operation Shader and related frameworks since 2014. The APKWS system, originally developed for US platforms, was adapted for the Typhoon under a UK-US integration programme managed with BAE Systems. At GBP 20,000 per shot it is cost-effective against drone threats compared with Meteor or Brimstone missiles costing hundreds of thousands of pounds each. The deployment establishes the RAF as one of the first NATO air forces to generate a counter-drone combat record using a rocket-based system, data that will feed the UK's broader c-UAS doctrine and the GBP 115 million Hormuz drone procurement package committed in May 2026. The RAF is also embedded in the Project NYX Apache loyal-wingman assessment phase through BAE Systems.