The pilots, who cannot be named for security reasons, said their feelings were a mixture of frustration, anxiety and elation.
They were particularly frustrated after poor weather aborted raids in the early hours of Saturday.
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The commanding officer of Number One Squadron, which is spearheading the RAF action, said the pilots had spent hours planning the strikes and building themselves up to fly into combat.
But he said: "Of course, that is part of the job."
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/305000/images/_305795_mod150.jpg)
Low cloud cover caused major problems for the Nato force in identifying bombing targets, he said, and also made routine procedures, such as mid-air refuelling, difficult and dangerous.
"If we know the weather is going to bad, and we knew the weather was not going to be brilliant, we do not want to go and risk ourselves.
"It was a decision we were happy with to come back," he said.
Reports of Serb atrocities
The RAF commanding officer said reports of Serb atrocities in Kosovo are injecting a great sense of urgency among the RAF pilots.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/305000/images/_305795_harrier150.jpg)
All the British pilots at Nato's Gioia del Colle air base in southern Italy were following events very closely and were keen to do their bit to end the Serb offensive, he said.
The pilots themselves described the raids as "anxious", "tense" and "busy" - but elating.
One told of a bomb he had dropped on an ammunition storage site. "There was a huge explosion," he said, "with red-hot somethings going thousands of feet in the air.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/305000/images/_305795_raf150.jpg)
"At times like that you think: 'Yes - we've done it'."
Another pilot said: "We are all human beings and it has an effect on all of us.
"Wanting to do something is a natural thing for all of us, but we go against the targets we are given."
Number One Squadron has launched planes three times in three days, but the RAF pilots said their biggest test is still to come.
"We still feel the biggest threat is from their surface-to-air missiles," the commanding officer said.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/305000/images/_305795_bomb150.jpg)
"They have been quiet up to now - that is known - but they are well prepared. We still pay those much respect."
As well as the risk of dying in action, the pilots said they have to cope with the fear of being captured.
"We do think about that and we are trained in that sort of scenario, and I am sure that preys on all of our minds and that is covered in our daily briefings," the commanding officer said.
Air strikes in pictures
(26 Mar 99 | Europe)
RAF videos show Serbia bombings
(26 Mar 99 | UK)
Frontline squadron's proud history
(25 Mar 99 | UK)
UK jets safe after strikes
(25 Mar 99 | UK)
RAF Kosovo News
Ministry of Defence
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