No. 140 Expeditionary Air Wing Explained

Unit Name:No. 140 Expeditionary Air Wing RAF
Previous units:
No. 140 Expeditionary Air Wing (Fighter) RAF
No. 140 (Bomber) Wing RAF
Dates:1 April 2006 -
12 May 1944 - 14 November 1947 [1]
Country:United Kingdom
Branch:Royal Air Force
Type:Expeditionary Air Wing
Size:Wing
Garrison:RAF Lossiemouth
Aircraft Fighter:Eurofighter Typhoon FGR.4
Aircraft Bomber:Lockheed Ventura
de Havilland Mosquito FB.VI

No. 140 Expeditionary Air Wing is a deployable Expeditionary Air Wing of the Royal Air Force based at RAF Lossiemouth, Moray, Scotland, UK.

The current wing was established on 1 April 2006 the wing has history dating back to May 1944:

Second World War

No. 140 Airfield RAF

The wing was originally No. 140 Airfield RAF.

No. 140 (Bomber) Wing RAF

No. 140 Wing RAF was a formation of the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. It comprised No. 21 Squadron RAF, No. 464 (RAAF) Squadron RAF and No. 487 (RNZAF) Squadron RAF. It carried out many notable low-level bombing operations, including Operation Jericho (Amiens prison) and Operation Carthage in Copenhagen.

No. 464 and No. 487 Squadrons were Article XV Squadrons, i.e. they were Commonwealth squadrons which operated under the operational control of the Royal Air Force, which also was responsible e.g. for their pay.

Current use

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. https://www.rafweb.org/Organsation/Wings3.htm "Wing Nos 111 - 192"
  2. Web site: Permanent Representatives to NATO visits Operation Azotize. RAF. 16 March 2024.