Marshal of the Royal Air ForceSir Peter Robin Harding, GCB (2 December 1933 – 19 August 2021) was a Royal Air Force officer who served as a bomber pilot in the 1950s, a helicopter squadron commander in the 1960s and a station commander in the 1970s. He became Chief of the Air Staff in 1988 and served in that role during the Gulf War in 1991. He became Chief of the Defence Staff in December 1992 but resigned after his affair with Lady (Bienvenida) Buck, the wife of Conservative MP Antony Buck, became public.
Early life and education
Harding was born on 2 December 1933 in Lambeth, London, to Elizabeth (née Clear) and Peter Harding. He was educated at Chingford High School.[1][2]
RAF career
Harding was commissioned into the Royal Air Force as an acting pilot officer on national service on 3 September 1952[3] and given a permanent commission in the same rank on 15 October 1952.[4] He was promoted to the substantive rank of pilot officer on 12 August 1953[5] and posted to No. 12 Squadron flying Canberra bombers in 1954.[1]
In addition to security concerns, and although Harding was a serving officer rather than a politician, the story was embarrassing to the government as it coincided with a string of "Back to Basics" scandals.[30] Unlike other Marshals of the Royal Air Force who only relinquished their appointments, Harding resigned his commission on 14 June 1994[31] and consequently ceased to be listed in the Air Force List;[32] however, he was subsequently returned to the list.[33]
Later career
After leaving the RAF, Harding was deputy chairman of GEC-Marconi from 1995 to 1998.[1] He was also chairman and chief executive of Merlyn International Associates from 1997 to 2006 and chairman of Thorlock International from 1999 to 2000.[1]