| PRANG | A crash, or bombing-attack in RAF slang (5) |
| MILKTRAIN | In RAF slang, an early-morning flight or patrol (4,5) |
| RHINOCEROS | Land mammal known collectively as a crash; or, play by Eugene Ionesco (10) |
| BOMBARDMENT | A strong and continuous attack of gunfire or bombing (11) |
| AREA | Word with code or bombing |
| SPROG | From either "frogspawn", dialect for "lively young man" or a confused word for "cog", RAF slang for a recruit; or, an informal term for a child (5) |
| KITES | Crafts piloted from the ground on breezy days; RAF slang for aircraft; or, raptors with forked tails (5) |
| BLITZ | Sustained bombing attack (5) |
| MOVIE | Sandra Bullock's "Gravity," "Crash" or "Miss Congeniality" |
| TALLYHO | A hunter's view-halloo to the hounds on sighting a fox; RAF slang, adopted from said tantivy, to mean "target sighted"; or, another name for a coach-and-four (5-2) |
| CYMBAL | Crash or ride in a drum kit |
| OPOSSUM | Crash or Eddie, in the "Ice Age" films |
| ANGELS | Unexplainable radar echoes; financial backers of theatrical ventures; or, RAF slang for altitudes given in thousands of feet (6) |
| ERK | RAF slang for an aircraftman; or, an interjection of trepidation (3) |
| AIRRAID | A bombing attack (7) |
| WAREFFORT | Fellow in RAF wrote about what he took part in? (3,6) |
| FINALCURTAIN | Symbolic end as lunatic in RAF crashes (5,7) |
| AFRAID | Worried leader's gone missing in RAF attack |
| KINGFISHER | Queen's husband, number three in RAF, is her flyer in blue |
| INFORMATIVE | It tells a lot about motive in RAF formation (11) |