1st Edition

The Air War in Ukraine The First Year of Conflict

Edited By Dag Henriksen, Justin Bronk Copyright 2025
    252 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book provides a comprehensive account of the use of airpower in the first year of the Ukraine conflict.

    Airpower has been central to political, military, and public debates from the outset of the Russo‑Ukrainian war. After having started with whether the US and NATO should attempt to establish a No‑Fly Zone over Ukraine to protect the civilian population, the international discussion soon focused on the underperformance of Russian airpower. The fact that the initial contest for air superiority over Ukraine ended in an uneasy state of mutual denial came as a surprise to Western analysts, who suspected Kyiv would fall within a relatively short period of time. The surprise and relief that it did not only fueled urgent and ongoing discussions on how NATO nations could support the Ukrainian war effort. Regardless of nationality, age, level of education, or ethnicity, the near‑daily footage of Russian missiles, bombs and drones hitting residential areas and bombarding infrastructure to deprive an entire population of electricity and water has been emotionally imprinted on generations who have only known peace. Why the Russians have used airpower with such brutality, and how Ukraine and its allies have defended against this threat, is an important topic to understand even outside a specialist military audience. The aim of this book, therefore, is to provide an analysis on why the air war over Ukraine unfolded as it did during the first year of the war.

    This book will be of much interest to students of air power, military and strategic studies, Russian and eastern European politics, and International Relations.

    Introduction   

    Dag Henriksen and Justin Bronk

    1. Russian Airpower in Context: The First Year of the War

    Michael Kofman

    2. Russian VKS Operational Planning for Ukraine, Hybrid War, and the Role of the Russian Special Services

    Sean M. Wiswesser

    3. Long Range Precision Fires in the Russo-Ukrainian War

    Jack Watling

    4. The Battle of Hostomel Airport and Air Assault Operations

    Nick Reynolds

    5. Russian SEAD Efforts during the Air War in Ukraine

    Guy Plopsky and Justin Bronk

    6. How Ground-Based Air Defences Have Shaped the Air War Over Ukraine

    Justin Bronk

    7. The Drone War over Ukraine

    Samuel Bendett and Leonid Nersisyan

    Epilogue   Airpower in Ukraine: Old lessons revisited?

    Dag Henriksen

    Biography

    Dag Henriksen is the Head of research and development at the Royal Norwegian Air Force Academy (RNoAFA). He is the author/editor of four books, including, most recently, Political Rationale and International Consequences of the War in Libya (2016) and Autonomy in Military Operations (2023).

    Justin Bronk is a Senior Research Fellow for Airpower and Technology in the Military Sciences team at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) and the Editor of the RUSI Defence Systems online journal.