Icelandic Coast Guard Explained

Agencyname:Icelandic Coast Guard
Nativename:Icelandic: Landhelgisgæsla Íslands
Commonname:Icelandic: Gæslan (The Guard)
Abbreviation:LHG
Logocaption:Icelandic Coast Guard insignia
Badge:File:Icelandic Coast Guard racing stripe.svg
Badgecaption:Racing stripe
Flag:File:Flag of Iceland (state).svg
Flagcaption:Ensign and roundel
Motto:Icelandic: Við erum til taks
Mottotranslated:Always Prepared
Formed:1 July 1926
Employees:200 officers
Country:Iceland
Constitution1:Icelandic Coast Guard Act[1]
Speciality1:coast
Chief1name:RADM Georg Kr. Lárusson
Chief1position:General Director
Chief2name:CDRE Ásgrímur L. Ásgrímsson
Chief2position:Chief of Operations
Chief3name:CAPT Auðunn F Kristinsson
Chief3position:Chief of Maritime Division
Chief4name:CDR sg Bjarni Á. Sigurðsson
Chief4position:Chief of Aeronautical Division
Chief5name:CAPT Jón B Guðnason
Chief5position:Chief of Defence Division
Aircraft1type:Patrol aircraft
Aircraft1:1 Bombardier DHC-8-Q314
Aircraft2type:Transport aircraft
Aircraft2:3 Airbus H225s
Boats1:2 x Patrol vessels
2 x Patrol/survey boat
Activity1name:Cod Wars

The Icelandic Coast Guard (Icelandic: Landhelgisgæslan or simply Icelandic: Gæslan) is the Icelandic defence service responsible for search and rescue, maritime safety and security surveillance, national defense,[2] and law enforcement.[3] The Coast Guard maintains the Iceland Air Defence System which conducts ground-based surveillance of Iceland's air space and operate the Keflavik airbase.[4] [5] It is also responsible for hydrographic surveying and nautical charting.[6]

History

Its origins can be traced to 1859, when the corvette Ørnen started patrolling Icelandic waters. In 1906, Iceland's first purposely built guard-ship, Islands Falk, began operation. Iceland's own defense of its territorial waters began around 1920 and the Icelandic Coast Guard was formally founded on 1 July 1926.[7] The first cannon was put on the trawler Þór in 1924 and on 23 June 1926 the first ship built for the Coast Guard, named Óðinn, arrived in Iceland. Three years later, on 14 July 1929 the coastal defence ship Ægir was added to the Coast Guard fleet.[8]

Cod Wars

The Icelandic Coast Guard played its largest role during the fishing rights dispute known as the Cod Wars, between 1972 and 1976, when the Coast Guard ships would cut the trawl wires of British and West German trawlers, resulting in confrontations with Royal Navy warships and tugs from the British Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (MAFF). The Icelandic Coast Guard goal was to enforce a disputed expansion of Iceland's exclusive economic zone. Engagements between Icelandic gunboats and British warships involving ramming became the tactic of choice during this conflict.[9] At least 15 British frigates, five Icelandic patrol boats and one British supply ship were damaged by ramming between 1975 and 1976.[10] In the end, Iceland achieved its overall ambition of expanding its exclusive fishery zone to 200nmi by June 1976.[11]

Operations

The Icelandic Coast Guard's (ICG) primary mission as stipulated in Section 1 of Act on Icelandic Coast Guard is conduct search and rescue, maritime safety and security surveillance, and law enforcement inside the 200nmi-wide economic zone.[1] The Coast Guard operates Joint Rescue and Coordination Centre (JRCC) Iceland which is responsible for search and rescue of vessels and aircraft in Iceland's search and rescue region (SRR) according to International Aeronautical and Maritime Search and Rescue (IAMSAR) Manual.[12] Additionally the ICG is in the charge of defusing naval mines, most of which were laid during the Second World War,[13] and monitoring fisheries in international waters outside of the Icelandic economic zone in order to blacklist any vessel partaking in unregulated fishing and thus bar them from receiving services from any member of the North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission[14] in order to make unregulated fishing unprofitable. The Icelandic Coast Guard also occasionally operates within Greenlandic and Faeroese waters, following a bilateral agreement with Denmark regarding mutual aid in security, rescue and defence matters.

The Coast Guard accomplishes these tasks with the use of offshore patrol vessels (OPV), helicopters, surveillance aircraft, satellites and a network of land based surface scanning radar.

The Icelandic Coast Guard is also in charge of the Iceland Air Defence System, which operates four ground-based AN-FPS(V)5 air surveillance radars and a control and command centre.

In the 1990s the Coast Guard started hosting exercises such as "Northern Challenge" which had military units from Norway, Denmark, Sweden and the United Kingdom, among others, participating along with the Icelandic Coast Guard. The Coast Guard has also taken part in peacekeeping operations on behalf of the Icelandic Crisis Response Unit, although while usually using their own rank insignia, uniforms and weapons.

The fleet also takes part in Frontex operations, and in that role played a major part in the rescue of over 300 Syrian refugees in the eastern Mediterranean Sea in January 2015.[15]

Fleet

, the Icelandic Coast Guard fleet consists of two OPVs, one coastal hydrographic and patrol vessel and an independent fast rigid-hulled inflatable boat (RHIB), as well as numerous smaller boats assigned to the larger units. In 2011 the Coast Guard received ICGV Þór, built by the Asmar shipyard in Talcahuano, Chile.[16] [17]

ICGV Týr, an, the second youngest, built by Århus Flydedok a/s and launched in 1975., lead ship of the Ægir class, is ICGV Týrs sister ship, built by Ålborg Værft a/s and launched in 1968. Each ship is equipped with two or more RHIBs of various sizes and armed with a 40 mm Bofors cannon. Various kinds of small arms as well as other man-portable weapons are also carried on board each of the ships. Týr and Þór are also equipped with sonar systems and the Ægir-class vessels have flight decks and a hangar for a small helicopter. While the Coast Guard does not operate small enough helicopters to use the hangars, the flight decks are often used by the helicopters of the Aeronautical Division on various missions.

The coastguard has as well a 73-ton patrol and hydrographic survey vessel, named Baldur, built by Vélsmiðja Seyðisfjarðar shipyard in 1991. This vessel has no mounted weaponry but it has nonetheless been used for port security and fishery inspection.

The newest ship of the fleet,, was bought in September 2021[18] [19] to replace the 46-year old ICGV Týr.[20] It arrived for retrofit at Damen Shiprepair Rotterdam in Schiedam on 11 October and was formally delivered to the Coast Guard on 1 November 2021. She departed for Siglufjordur on 2 November.[21]

Aeronautical division

After World War II, the Coast Guard occasionally leased civilian aircraft for short term monitoring of shipping and fishing in the territorial waters, first in 1948 when a Grumman Goose was leased from Loftleiðir.[22] [23] On 10 December 1955, the Coast Guard acquired its first aircraft when a Consolidated PBY-6A Catalina flying boat was acquired from the Civil Aviation Administration. It was originally from the Iceland Defense Force but was damaged near Langanes in 1954. It was named Rán and registered as TF-RAN.[24] [25] [23]

In 1972, the ICG, along with the National Life-saving Association of Iceland, bought its first specialized search and rescue helicopter, a Sikorsky S-62 that was named Gná, from the United States Coast Guard.[26] [27] Three years later, Gná crashed in Skálafell, with no injuries, after a shaft in the tail propeller broke.[28] [29]

It took five years for another SAR helicopter to arrive but in 1980, the Coast Guard bought a new Sikorsky S-76 which was given the name Rán. The helicopter performed admirably, including in March 1983, when Rán, along with a French Aérospatiale SA 330 Puma, one of two temporarily deployed in the country,[30] rescued 11 people from Hafrún ÍS-400 after it ran aground at Stigahlíð in the Westfjords.[31] However, in November 1983, Rán crashed in Jökulfirðir in the Westfjords of Iceland during a training mission, killing its four man crew,[32] in what remains the deadliest accident in the ICG history. The loss of Rán and some of the Coast Guard's most experienced flight members nearly caused the shutdown of its helicopter program.[33] After some deliberation, the decision was made in 1984 to continue the program and buy a new Aérospatiale SA 365N Dauphin II and rent another until the new one would arrive.[34]

In 1985, the new Sif arrived and with it, several changes where made to the helicopter program, including to training, expanding crew rosters, addition of helicopter doctors and shift plans to expand its availability.[33] Sif went on to become one of the ICG most successful aircraft to date. During its 22-year career it took part in several high profile rescue operations around Iceland[35] and is credited to have been involved in the rescue of around 250 lives.[36]

In 1995, the ICG received a second specialised SAR helicopter when it bought an Aérospatiale AS-332L1 Super Puma which was given the name Líf. The new helicopter continued on the success of Sif and gained national fame when it rescued 39 sailors in three separate incidents during a six-day period in March 1997.[37]

As a response to the withdrawal of the Iceland Defense Force in 2006, the Coast Guard expanded its helicopters to four in 2007. That number was later reduced to three and as of 2022, it operates three Airbus Helicopters H225 helicopters named Gná, Gróa and Eir.[38]

The Coast Guard also operates a single Bombardier DHC-8-Q314, registered as TF-SIF, modified for maritime surveillance and reconnaissance. This plane has been extensively modified by FIELD to carry a modern Mission Management System and suite of surveillance sensors, air operable door and communications/navigation equipment.[39] It is occasionally also used for surveillance of volcanic eruptions, such as the 2010 eruptions of Eyjafjallajökull.

Vehicles

All major vehicles of the Icelandic Coast Guard are named after beings from Norse mythology.

Vessels

VesselOriginTypeNotes
[40] South KoreaPatrol vesselNamed after the goddess Freyja
ChilePatrol vesselNamed after the god Thor
ICGV BaldurIcelandPatrol vesselNamed after the god Baldr, also performs hydrographic survey duties
ICGV Óðinn[41] IcelandSpecial operation

Decommissioned vessels

NameTypeFromToNotes
ICGV Þór (I)Armed trawler19261929The first ship own by the Icelandic Coast Guard. Originally a trawler and later a Danish research vessel named Thor, it was bought by Björgunarfélag Vestmannaeyja in 1920 to be used as a rescue ship. In 1926, the Icelandic government bought the ship for the Coast Guard. It stranded in Húnaflói in 1929.[42]
ICGV Óðinn (I)Patrol vessel19261936Arrived in 1926[43] and served until it was sold to Sweden in 1936.[44]
ICGV Ægir (I)Patrol vessel19291968Arrived new in July 1929.[45] Used for coastal patrol, rescue and research.[46] Sold for scrap in 1968.[47]
ICGV Þór (II)Patrol vessel19301939Built in Stettin, Germany, in 1922 as Senator Schäfer. Arrived in Iceland in 1930 and served with the Coast Guard until 1939. Used as a transport ship until sold to England in 1946. Stranded in Scotland in 1950.
ICGV GauturPatrol vessel19381964Built in 1938 in Akureyri.[48] Originally named Óðinn (II) but renamed when a new Óðinn (III) arrived, Gautur is one of Óðinn's pseudonyms. Put up for sale in 1963[49] and sold a year later.[50]
ICGV Baldur (I)Fast patrol boat19451946A fast patrol boat originally built for the Turkish Navy in 1943 but expropriated by the United Kingdom. Bought early in 1946 but used for less than a year and returned because of bad characteristics in rough seas.[51] [52]
ICGV NjörðurFast patrol boat19451946Named after Njörðr the god of wind, fertile land along the seacoast, as well as seamanship, sailing and fishing. A fast patrol boat originally built for the Turkish Navy in 1943 but expropriated by the United Kingdom. Bought early in 1946 but used for less than a year and returned because of bad characteristics in rough seas.
ICGV BragiFast patrol boat19451946Named after Bragi the god of poetry. A fast patrol boat originally built for the Turkish Navy in 1943 but expropriated by the United Kingdom. Bought early in 1946 but used for less than a year and returned because of bad characteristics in rough seas.
ICGV SæbjörgPatrol and rescue shipBuilt in 1947 to 1948. Owned by the National Life-saving Association of Iceland but operated by the ICG.[53] Decommissioned in the mid 1960s.
ICGV María JúlíaPatrol, research and rescue vessel19501969Named after one of those who financed her construction. Joint ownership by the ICG and the National Life-saving Association of Iceland. Operated by the ICG. Decommissioned in the late 1960s[54] and sold in 1969.[55]
ICGV Þór (III)Offshore patrol vessel19511982 Built in 1951 for the Coast Guard. The third coast guard ship to bear the name, she was the flagship of the fleet and served in all three Cod Wars conflicts between Iceland and the United Kingdom. Sold in 1982.[56]
ICGV AlbertPatrol and rescue vessel19561978Built in 1956 and jointly owned by the ICG and the National Life-saving Association of Iceland, now ICE-SAR. Operated by the ICG. Decommissioned and sold in 1978.[57]
(III)Offshore patrol vessel19602006An offshore Patrol Vessel named after Óðinn the all-seeing father of the gods. Decommissioned in 2006 and turned into a museum ship.[58]
(II)19682020Danish-built Ægir-class offshore patrol vessel named after Ægir, the king of the sea. It was the flagship of the ICG during the last two Cod Wars. It was decommissioned in 2020 and put up for sale.[59]
ICGV ÁrvakurLighthouse tender and patrol ship1969A lighthouse tender and patrol ship built in Holland in 1962 for the Department of Lighthouses and arrived in 1963. Transferred to the Coast Guard in 1969. Was put for sale in 1988.[60]
ICGV TýrArmed whaler19721973Armed whaler (Hvalur 9) borrowed during the second Cod War[61] It was nicknamed Hval-Týr by the Icelanders and Moby Dick by the British.[62]
(II)19742021Danish-built Ægir-class offshore patrol vessel named after Týr, the god of combat and heroism. It was decommissioned in 2021 and put up for sale.[63] [64] [65]
ICGV Baldur (II)Armed trawler19751977Named after the god Baldr, son of Óðinn. An armed trawler which served in the third Cod Wars conflict between Iceland and the United Kingdom. Due to its sharp stern, Baldur could inflict heavy damage on British ships colliding with its stern section and knocked out three frigates during the conflict.[66]
ICGV VerArmed trawler19761976Built in 1974 in Poland for Krossvík hf. in Akranes. Operated by the ICG in the last Cod War in 1975–1976.[67]
In addition the Coast Guard has rented or borrowed a number of civilian vessels and aircraft for shorter periods, which are not listed.

Aircraft

See main article: List of aircraft of the Icelandic Coast Guard.

AircraftOriginTypeVariantIn serviceNotes
Maritime patrol
Bombardier Dash 8CanadaMaritime patrol / SAR1
Helicopter
Eurocopter EC225FranceUtility / SAR3[68]

Retired

Previous notable aircraft operated consisted of the Consolidated PBY Catalina, Douglas C-54, Fokker F27, Bell 47J/G, MD 500C, Sikorsky S-62, Sikorsky S-76, Eurocopter AS365, Eurocopter AS350[69]

Radars

The Iceland Air Defense System monitors Iceland's airspace. Air Defense is provided by fighter jets from NATO allies, which rotate units for the Icelandic Air Policing mission to Keflavik Air Base.The Iceland Air Defense System's Control and Reporting Centre is at Keflavik Air Base and reports to NATO's Integrated Air Defense System CAOC Uedem in Germany.[5]

Weaponry

The Icelandic Coast Guard possesses over 200 firearms, with more than half of them in storage.[71] [72] [73] In 2014, the Coast Guard received 250 Heckler & Koch MP5 from the Norwegian Armed Forces.[74] The acquisition of the weapons caused an uproar in Iceland due to several facts, including that the mostly unarmed Icelandic Police was to receive 150 of them and conflicting statements from Icelandic and Norwegian officials on whether they were a gift or bought.[75] In June 2015, the weapons were returned to Norway.[76]

Currently in use

ModelCalibreTypeOriginQuantityDetails
AR-155.56mmSemi-automatic rifleUnited States6Model 2017. Bought the same year and first used during a peace keeping mission.[77]
Bofors 40 mm L/7040mmAutocannonSweden4Purchased from Norway and refurbished.[78]
Bofors 40 mm L/6040mmAutocannonSweden4Model 1936. Gift from Denmark.
Glock 179mmSemi-automatic pistolAustria20Models 1990, 2006 and 2012. Bought from a dealership in Reykjavík.
H&K MP5A2N9mmSubmachine gunGermany50Model 1990. Gift from Norway in 2011.[79]
Rheinmetall MG 37.62mmGeneral-purpose machine gunGermany10Model 1990. Gifted by Norway in 2013 along with 50 sets of body armour.

Currently in storage

ModelCalibreTypeOriginQuantityDetails
Browning M2.50 BMGHeavy machine gunUnited States3Model 1939. Came with a seaplane which the ICG had in operation.
H&K G37.62mmBattle rifleGermany20Model 1959. Gift from Denmark 2006.
Cannon 37 mm37mmCannon3Model 1898. Gift from Denmark.
Cannon 47 mm47mmCannon3Model 1909. Gift from Denmark.
Cannon 57 mm57mmCannon5Model 1892. Gift from Denmark.
M1 carbine30 CarbineCarbineUnited States30Model 1940. Lent to the Reykjavík Police 1986.[80]
M2 carbine30 CarbineCarbineUnited States20Model 1940. Lent to the Reykjavík Police 1986.
QF 3-pounder Hotchkiss47mmCannonFrance1Model 1912. At a museum in Ísafjörður.
Remington Model 87012-gaugePump action shotgunUnited States4Model 2000. Bought from a dealership in Reykjavík.
SMLE Lee-Enfield.303Bolt-action Repeating rifleUnited Kingdom10Model 1910. Unknown origin.
S&W .38 Police Special.38 SpecialRevolverUnited States12Model 1940. Marshall aid.
Steyr SSG 697.62mmSniper rifleAustria8Model 1989. Bought from a dealership in Reykjavík.

Ranks

Officers

Enlisted

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. 52 . 14 June 2006 . Legislative Assembly . Lög um Landhelgisgæslu Íslands . Act on Icelandic Coast Guard .
  2. Web site: Security and Defense . lhg.is . Icelandic Coast Guard . 3 May 2023.
  3. Web site: Welcome to the Icelandic Coast Guard. 2021-11-24. Icelandic Coast Guard.
  4. Web site: Security and Defence. 2021-11-26. Icelandic Coast Guard.
  5. Web site: Iceland's Role In Nato Integrated Air And Missile Defence System. HQ AIRCOM Public Affairs. 2021-11-26.
  6. Web site: Hydrographic surveying and nautical charting. 2021-11-24. Icelandic Coast Guard.
  7. Web site: The Icelandic Coast Guard "Always Prepared" . 18 May 2020.
  8. News: Strandvarnaskipið "Ægir" . 11 June 2022 . Ársrit Vélstjórafélags Íslands . 1929 . 86–89 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  9. Book: Evans, Andrew. Iceland: The Bradt Travel Guide. Bradt Travel Guides. 2008. 9781841622156. 25.
  10. Book: Jones, Robert. 2009. Safeguarding the Nation: The Story of the Modern Royal Navy. Seaforth Publishing. 119. 978-1848320437.
  11. Bakaki. Zorzeta. 2016-01-01. Deconstructing Mediation: A Case Study of the Cod Wars. Negotiation Journal. en. 32. 1. 63–78. 10.1111/nejo.12147. 1571-9979.
  12. Web site: RCC Iceland- Rescue Centre for mariners and . 2021-11-26. Icelandic Coast Guard.
  13. Web site: Coast Guard Unearths World War 2 Era Explosive. 2021-11-26. 2020-06-05. Sam. O'Donnell. The Reykjavík Grapevine.
  14. Web site: North-East Atlantic Fisheries Commission Managing Fisheries in the North-East Atlantic . neafc.org . 14 December 2014.
  15. USA Today-Arizona RepublicJan 4, 2015, Section B page2
  16. Web site: Til hamingju með daginn! Þór kominn til Íslands. 14 December 2014.
  17. Web site: Nýtt varðskip Þór. 14 December 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20120307201720/http://www.lhg.is/starfsemi/adgerdasvid/nyttvardskipthor/. 7 March 2012. dead.
  18. News: Varðskipið Freyja verður gert út frá Siglufirði . 29 October 2021 . Icelandic Coast Guard . 21 September 2021 . Icelandic.
  19. News: Samúel Karl Ólason . Gera Freyju út frá Siglufirði . 29 October 2021 . . 21 September 2021 . Icelandic.
  20. News: Kristín Sigurðardóttir . Nýtt varðskip verði fyrst til að bera nafn ásynju . 29 October 2021 . . 5 March 2021 . Icelandic.
  21. News: Samúel Karl Ólason . Undirbúa heimsiglinguna frá Rotterdam . 30 October 2021 . . 30 October 2021 . Icelandic.
  22. News: Sex togbátar teknir í landhelgi . 26 June 2022 . . 2 April 1948 . 12 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  23. Book: Guðjón Arngrímsson . Helgi Hallvarðsson . Stefán Melsted . María Sólbergsdóttir . Landhelgisgæsla Íslands 1926-1996 : svipmyndir úr 70 ára sögu . 1996 . Landhelgisgæsla Íslands . Reykjavík . 9979602775 . Icelandic.
  24. News: Catalina. 5 May 2021. Æskan. 1 February 1972. Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  25. News: Togveiðiskip óttast gæzluflugvélina og sækja minna í landhelgi en áður . 26 June 2022 . . 26 March 1957 . 1–2 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  26. News: Gunnar, Nikulás, Alfreð . 3 July 2022 . . 26 August 1972 . 1, 15 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  27. News: Nýr liðsstyrkur gæzlunnar gæti líka komið Bretum í góðar þarfir . 3 July 2022 . . 29 August 1972 . 6–7 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  28. News: Þakka reynslu flugmannsins og snarræði að við erum hér til frásagnar . 3 July 2022 . . 4 October 1975 . 24, 3 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  29. News: Sikorsky entist í 3 ár . 5 May 2021 . . 19 November 1980 . 15 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  30. News: Tvær franskar þyrlur lánaðar til Íslands í einn mánuð . 13 June 2022 . . 20 February 1983 . 20 . Icelandic.
  31. News: . Hvað er glóðarauga á milli vina . 13 June 2022 . SunnudagsMogginn . . 14 February 2010 . 28–29 . Icelandic.
  32. News: Minnast áhafnar þyrlunnar TF-RAN sem fórst fyrir þrjátíu árum. 23 March 2021. Landhelgisgæsla Íslands. 8 November 2013. Icelandic.
  33. News: Sæmundur Guðvinsson . Minnistæðustu flugferðirnar eru þær sem aldrei voru farnar . 24 June 2022 . Sjómannablaðið Víkingur . 1 June 1997 . 26–33 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  34. News: Gunnar Þorsteinsson . Sif - Kona þrumuguðsins . 20 June 2022 . . 14 April 1985 . 18B–19B . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  35. News: Sigtryggur Ari Jóhannsson . Fyllist lotningu við hvininn frá þyrlunni . 21 March 2021 . . 20 July 2007 . 1, 11–17 . Icelandic.
  36. Web site: TF-SIF Aerospatiale SA.365N Dauphin 2 . flugsafn.is . . 21 March 2021 . Icelandic.
  37. News: Frækileg björgun á reginhafi . 22 March 2021 . . 29 September 2016 . 34 . Icelandic.
  38. Web site: Icelandic Coast Guard Receives Third Helicopter. Iceland Monitor . 6 May 2021. Vala Hafstað.
  39. Web site: Icelandic Coast Guard to the Rescue in the Gulf of Mexico. 2010-07-15. 2021-11-26. Field Aviation.
  40. News: Freyja er mjög öflugt varðskip . 29 October 2021 . . 23 September 2021 . Icelandic.
  41. Web site: Óðinn . lhg.is . Icelandic Coast Guard . 31 October 2021 . Icelandic.
  42. News: Þór kominn til Vestmannaeyja . 23 March 2021 . . 26 October 2011 . Icelandic.
  43. News: Nýja varðskipið . 23 March 2021 . Dagblaðið . 27 June 1926 . 4 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  44. News: Undir erlendum fána . 23 March 2021 . . 27 February 1936 . 2 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  45. News: Ægir . 11 June 2022 . . 20 July 1929 . 162 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  46. News: Svend-Aage Malmberg . Hugleiðing um minjar í borg og bæ, íslenzkt sjómannasafn og varðskipið Ægi . 24 July 2022 . . 20 March 1968 . 11 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  47. News: Ægir rifinn í Blyth . 24 July 2022 . . 8 August 1968 . 24 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  48. News: Nýi varðbáturinn Óðinn . 11 June 2022 . . 18 February 1938 . 3 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  49. News: Vill fá sem flestar milljónir fyrir Gaut . 11 June 2022 . . 24 January 1963 . 2 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  50. News: ´Gautur í áætlunarferðir milli Vestmannaeyja og Þorlákshafnar . 11 June 2022 . . 11 January 1964 . 4 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  51. News: Ingólfur Viktorsson . Hraðbátum Gæslunnar skilað . 23 March 2021 . Gæslutíðindi . December 2001 . 8 . Icelandic.
  52. News: Hvorki nothæfir til björgunarstarfa nje landhelgisgæslu . 30 June 2022 . . 12 March 1946 . 5, 13 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  53. News: Björgunarstarf og landhelgisgæzla. 35 ára þróun. . 13 June 2022 . Fylkir . 23 December 1955 . 4–7 . Icelandic.
  54. News: Reyna að koma Maríu Júlíu í slopp á Húsavík . 11 June 2022 . . 19 September 2020 . 8 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  55. News: María Júlía til Patreksfjarðar . 11 June 2022 . . 19 January 1969 . 2 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  56. News: Söguleg verðmæti fóru forgörðum við eyðingu skipsins . 11 June 2022 . Reykjavík . 10 August 2013 . 8–9 . Icelandic . Tímarit.is.
  57. News: Fyrrverandi björgunar- og varðskipið Albert fannst í Seattle . 11 June 2022 . lhg.is . Icelandic Coast Guard . 9 January 2012 . Icelandic.
  58. News: Hallur Már . Óðinn sigldi á ný . 11 June 2022 . . 11 May 2020 . is.
  59. News: Ævar Örn Jósepsson . Varðskipið Ægir auglýst til sölu . 7 November 2021 . . 3 November 2020 . Icelandic.
  60. News: Vitaskipið Árvakur auglýst til sölu: Ekki ákveðið að selja skipið segir forstöðumaður vita hjá Vitamálastofnun . 11 June 2022 . . 10 January 1988 . Icelandic.
  61. News: Týr skal hann heita . 17 September 2020 . . 12 October 1972 . 32 . is . Tímarit.is.
  62. News: Stríðshetjan í helgan stein . 17 September 2020 . . 3 January 1999 . 12B . is . Tímarit.is.
  63. News: Ólöf Rún Skúladóttir . Varðskipið Týr komið úr síðustu sjóferð fyrir Gæsluna . 11 June 2022 . . 15 November 2021 . Icelandic.
  64. News: Varðskipið Týr lauk sinni síðustu ferð í dag . 11 June 2022 . . 15 November 2021 . Icelandic.
  65. News: Sigtryggur Sigtryggsson . Fallið var frá kauptilboðinu í Ægi og Tý . 11 June 2022 . . 2 June 2022 . Icelandic.
  66. News: Ágúst Ingi Jónsson . Beittur Baldur fer í brotajárn . 11 June 2022 . . 8 September 2020 . is.
  67. News: Ver til gæzlustarfa í dag . 13 June 2022 . . 6 April 1976 . 2 . Icelandic.
  68. Web site: Icelandic Coast Guard aircraft . www.lhg.is . 2022 . 26 May 2022.
  69. Web site: The Coast Guard is in flight . www.lhg.is . 26 May 2022.
  70. Web site: Iceland Air Defense System. Icelandic Coast Guard. 25 May 2018. is.
  71. Web site: Landhelgisgæslan á 212 vopn - Vísir.
  72. Web site: 869/144 svar: vopnaöflun og vopnaeign Landhelgisgæslunnar. Alþingi.
  73. Web site: Fallbyssur á Sæbraut: Vegfarendur ráku upp stór augu - DV. https://web.archive.org/web/20180102054213/http://www.dv.is/frettir/2017/12/4/fallbyssur-saebraut-sidast-beitt-i-thorskastridunum-attunda-aratugnum/. dead. 2018-01-02.
  74. News: Ægir Þór Eysteinsson . LHG keypti 250 vélbyssur af norska hernum fyrir 11,5 milljónir . 11 June 2022 . . 23 October 2014 . Icelandic.
  75. News: Arnar Páll Hauksson . Byssurnar með farþegaflugvél til Noregs . 11 June 2022 . . 24 June 2015 . Icelandic.
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  77. News: Jóhannes Stefánsson . Tíu af byssunum eru alsjálfvirkar . 11 June 2022 . . 27 October 2014 . Icelandic.
  78. News: Heimir Hannesson . MP-5, Glock, AR-15 og fallbyssur – Sjáðu vopnalista Landhelgisgæslunnar í heild sinni . 11 June 2022 . . 16 September 2020 . Icelandic.
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