RAF Akrotiri explained

RAF Akrotiri
Ensign:RAF Akrotiri flag.svg
Ensign Size:140
Location:Akrotiri
Country:Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia, Cyprus
Image2 Size:150px
Pushpin Map:Europe#Mediterranean#Cyprus
Pushpin Mapsize:300
Pushpin Relief:y
Pushpin Label:RAF Akrotiri
Pushpin Mark:RAF roundel.svg
Type:Permanent joint operating base
Ownership:Ministry of Defence
Operator:Royal Air Force
Controlledby:British Forces Cyprus
Condition:operational
Used:1955 – present
Current Commander:Group Captain Simon Cloke
Occupants:
Elevation:75.4feet
Iata:AKT
Icao:LCRA
Wmo:17601
R1-Number:10/28
R1-Length:2745mx45mm (9,006feetx148feetm)
R1-Surface:grooved blacktop asphalt concrete
Footnotes:Source: United Kingdom Military Aeronautical Information Publication[1]

Royal Air Force Akrotiri, commonly abbreviated RAF Akrotiri (;) is a large Royal Air Force (RAF) military airbase on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus.[2] It is located in the Western Sovereign Base Area, one of two areas which comprise Akrotiri and Dhekelia, a British Overseas Territory, administered as a Sovereign Base Area.

The station commander has a dual role, and is also the officer commanding the Akrotiri or Western Sovereign Base Area, reporting to the commander of British Forces Cyprus (BFC) who is also the Administrator.

History

RAF Akrotiri was first constructed in the mid-1950s to relieve pressure on the main RAF station in the centre of the island, RAF Nicosia.[3]

Suez Crisis

In late 1956, relations between the United Kingdom and Egypt had reached a crisis. The Suez Crisis saw a further increase in the strength of RAF forces in Cyprus. Akrotiri was mainly an airfield for fighter, photo reconnaissance, and ground attack aircraft. Its regular squadrons of Gloster Meteor night fighters, English Electric Canberra photo reconnaissance aircraft, and de Havilland Venom ground attack machines were reinforced by further Canberras which were ready for action if Egypt attacked Israel.[4]

1960s

After the Suez Crisis, the main emphasis of life on the airfield shifted to helping fight the EOKA revolt, and training missions. After the withdrawal from both Egypt and Iraq, and Suez Crisis, it was clear that a command centred on Cyprus could not control units stationed in the Arabian Peninsula, of which there were still many. Consequently, the Middle East Command was split; with that east of Suez being controlled from Aden, Yemen, and the remainder being renamed the Near East Command, controlled from Cyprus. From 1957 to 1969, four squadrons operating the Canberra (No. 6 Squadron, No. 32 Squadron, No. 73 Squadron, and No. 249 Squadron) provided first a conventional and then from November 1961, a nuclear striking capability as part of the Baghdad Pact, later the Central Treaty Organization (CENTO).[5]

Akrotiri, along with Nicosia, assumed a very important status, as virtually the sole means for projecting British airpower into the eastern Mediterranean, outside of aircraft carriers. In 1960, independence was granted to Cyprus, with the RAF maintaining both RAF Nicosia and RAF Akrotiri as airfields, controlled by the Near East Air Force (NEAF). However, Akrotiri assumed more importance as Nicosia was used for greater civil aviation traffic. After 1966, it was no longer possible to maintain RAF units at Nicosia due to pressures of space, and Akrotiri became the only RAF flying station left on the island.[6]

1970s

In August 1970, detachment 'G' of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) arrived at the airfield with Lockheed U-2 reconnaissance aircraft to monitor the Egypt / Israel Suez Canal fighting and cease-fire. Permanent monitoring of the Middle East Ceasefire was undertaken by the 100th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing after the 1973 Yom Kippur War, known as Operation 'OLIVE HARVEST'.[7]

Up until 1974, RAF Akrotiri had a balanced force of aircraft assigned to it, including No. 9 Squadron and No. 35 Squadron, both flying Avro Vulcan strategic bombers. The Vulcans provided a bomber force for CENTO, one of the three main anti-Communist mutual defence pacts signed in the early days of the Cold War.[8] However, during that year, Turkish forces invaded Cyprus in connection with a Greek-sponsored coup. The UK then evacuated most of the RAF from Akrotiri as the CENTO treaty had degenerated to the point of uselessness. The two Vulcan squadrons left for UK stations in 1975. What was left at the airfield was the flying unit that is permanently assigned to the station to this day; No. 84 Squadron, a helicopter search and rescue unit.[9] In addition, the role of No. 34 Squadron RAF Regiment provided support.[10]

In September 1976, the US U-2 operations were reassigned to the 9th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing (9th SRW), but the U-2 operation at RAF Akrotiri continued to be called Operating Location (OLIVE HARVEST) OH until September 1980. Thereafter, it became Detachment 3 of the 9th SRW, although the name OLIVE HARVEST continues. Two U-2s are stationed at RAF Akrotiri, and they are still monitoring the ceasefire agreement between the Egypt and Israel, although the present operations in the US Central Command area requires further missions. U-2s also transit through RAF Akrotiri either on going into the Central Command theatre, or returning to Beale AFB, California.[11]

1980s

Due to the station's relative proximity to the Middle East, it was used for the reception of American casualties after the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing.[12]

Between April 1983 and September 1984, RAF Boeing Chinook helicopters deployed to Akrotiri in support of British United Nations forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL).

In the mid-1980s, the US launched retaliatory attacks against Libya after the country's leader, Muammar al-Gaddafi, was implicated in the bombing of a West Berlin discotheque. Although the bombing operations were staged out of the UK, Akrotiri was employed in the role of an alternate in case of emergency, and was used as such by at least one aircraft. This led to retaliatory action against the British base.[13]

2000s–2010s

In July 2006, RAF Akrotiri played a major role as a transit point for personnel evacuations out of Lebanon during the 2006 Lebanon War (see international reactions to the 2006 Lebanon War and Joint Task Force Lebanon).[14]

Akrotiri was the location of the main transmitter of the well known numbers station, the Lincolnshire Poacher, although transmissions ceased in 2008.[15]

In March 2011, the station was used as a staging base for support aircraft involved in Operation Ellamy, the UK's contribution to the NATO-led military intervention in Libya. Tanker support and logistical units were based here to support aerial operations over the country.[16]

In August 2013, six RAF Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft were deployed to Akrotiri to defend the base, "to ensure the protection of UK interests and the defence of our sovereign base areas at a time of heightened tension in the wider region". Earlier, two RAF TriStar aerial refuelling aircraft and a Sentry AEW1 had been deployed to Akrotiri.[17] [18]

The station hosted the main hospital for British Forces Cyprus, The Princess Mary's Hospital (TPMH), located on Cape Zevgari. This closed in October 2012, and cases too serious to be dealt with at the base health clinic are sent to the private Ygia Polyclinic in Limassol.[1] [19]

In August 2014, six RAF Panavia Tornado fighter-bombers were deployed to Akrotiri to carry out reconnaissance missions over Iraq, following the rise of Islamic State (ISIS) in Iraq and Syria. On 26 September 2014, Members of Parliament voted in favour of the RAF carrying out air strikes on ISIS in Iraq, and on 27 September the first two Tornado jets took off from Akrotiri loaded with laser-guided bombs and missiles. On 30 September 2014, two British Tornados successfully intercepted and attacked ISIS targets of a heavily armed truck, at the request of Iraqi Kurdish fighters.[20] [21]

The station was used to support the 2018 missile strikes against Syria.[22]

In June 2019, the station launched the RAF's first F-35 Lightning II operational sortie. Six aircraft were deployed to take part in operations against Islamic State.[23]

2020s

Flight logs indicated that UK military transport aircraft made numerous flights from Akrotiri to Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport during the 2023 Israel-Hamas war. The reasons for the flights were unknown.[24]

Four Typhoons based in Akrotiri struck Houthi targets in Yemen on 12 January 2024.[25]

The RAF reportedly assisted Israel during the Iranian strikes on Israeli territory from jets that had taken of from RAF Akrotiri and were flying over Iraq.[26] [27]

Controversy

Radar

In 2007, a large over-the-horizon radar antenna was erected within the base. Several demonstrations and protests took place, with the most memorable incident being the act of MP (MEP since 2004) Marios Matsakis chaining himself to the antenna. Matsakis stated "It is outrageous that in the 21st century there are Cypriot villages living under British military rule, neither under their own government's jurisdiction nor under the protection of the EU treaties".[28]

US surveillance flights

In 2010, U-2s from the United States Air Force's 9th Reconnaissance Wing were used in Operation Cedar Sweep to fly surveillance over Lebanon, relaying information about Hezbollah militants to Lebanese authorities, and in Operation Highland Warrior to fly surveillance over Turkey and northern Iraq to relay information to Turkish authorities. These flights were the topic of acrimonious leaked diplomatic cables between British officials and the American embassy, with David Miliband saying that "policymakers needed to get control of the military". The British were concerned that the flights over Lebanon were authorised by the Lebanese Ministry of Defence, rather than the entire cabinet, and that the intelligence so gained could lead to the UK being complicit in the unlawful torture of detainees. After warnings that these issues "could jeopardise future use of British territory", John Rood, a senior Bush administration official, and Mariot Leslie, the Foreign Office's director general for defence and intelligence, became involved. Leslie said that the U.S. was not actually expected to check on detained terrorists, but that future spy missions would require full written applications.[29]

Based units

Units based at RAF Akrotiri.[30] [31]

Royal Air Force

No. 2 Group (Air Combat Support) RAF

No. 83 Expeditionary Air Group RAF

Joint service units

United States Air Force

See also

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: United Kingdom Military Aeronautical Information Publication AD 2 - LCRA – Akrotiri. AIDU.MoD.uk. Ministry of Defence. 11 August 2022. 23 August 2023.
  2. Web site: RAF Akrotiri - The Station. Royal Air Force. 30 August 2023.
  3. Web site: Journal 30. RAFMuseum.org.uk. 9. Royal Air Force Historical Society. 2007. 23 August 2023. 1361-4231.
  4. Book: Varble, Derek. 2003. The Suez Crisis. 51. Osprey. 978-1841764184.
  5. Lee, 1989, 172-176.
  6. Book: Proctor, Ian. 2014. The Royal Air Force in the Cold War 1950-1970. Pen and Sword. 978-1783831890.
  7. RAF Akrotiri. 174. UK Parliament. House of Commons. 380W. 15 June 1990. 19 August 2013. Defence.
  8. Book: Lee, Sir David. David Lee (RAF officer). 1989. Wings in the Sun: A History of the Royal Air Force in the Mediterranean 1945-1986. Great Britain. RAF Air Historical Branch, HMSO Books.
  9. Web site: 84 Squadron. RAF.MoD.uk. Royal Air Force. https://web.archive.org/web/20080901211854/http://www.raf.mod.uk/organisation/84squadron.cfm. 1 September 2008. dead. 19 November 2017.
  10. News: Pike. Mike. Gunners target Daesh terror with Cyprus Return. RAF News. 1,453. 19 October 2018. 13. 0035-8614.
  11. Web site: UK overruled on Lebanon spy flights from Cyprus, WikiLeaks cables reveal. The Guardian. 2 December 2010. 10 May 2020.
  12. Web site: Report of the DoD Commission on Beirut Int'l Airport terrorist act, October 23, 1983 – part eight. 3 December 2015.
  13. Web site: British base on Cyprus attacked: two wounded. The New York Times. 5 August 1986. 10 May 2020.
  14. Web site: News in English. HRI.org. Cyprus News Agency. 6 July 2017. 10 May 2020.
  15. Web site: Mason. Simon. 30 October 2009. E3 Lincolnshire Poacher. 2 May 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20190202060629/http://www.simonmason.karoo.net/page14.html. 2 February 2019. dead.
  16. Web site: Second UK strike against Libyan defence assets. MoD.uk. Ministry of Defence. 3 December 2015.
  17. News: Rankin. Ben. 29 August 2013. Syria: RAF Typhoon jets sent to Cyprus. Mirror.co.uk. Daily Mirror. 3 December 2015.
  18. Web site: Typhoons deploying to Cyprus. GOV.UK. HM Government. 3 December 2015.
  19. Book: Vassallo, David. 2017. A history of the Princess Mary Hospital; Royal Air Force Akrotiri 1963-2013. Vassallo. 9780992798017. 22.
  20. News: RAF planes bomb Islamic State targets in Iraq for the first time. The Guardian. 30 September 2014.
  21. News: RAF jets sent on Iraqi combat mission. BBC.co.uk. BBC News.
  22. Web site: Syria air strikes: UK confident strikes were successful, says PM. BBC.co.uk. BBC News. 14 April 2018. 20 April 2018.
  23. News: UK stealth fighter jets join fight against Islamic State. BBC.co.uk. BBC News. 25 June 2019.
  24. Web site: UK reportedly using Akrotiri for military flights to Tel Aviv since Gaza war . in-cyprus.philenews.com . 12 December 2023 . 12 December 2023.
  25. Web site: US, British militaries launch massive retaliatory strike against Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen . news.yahoo.com . 12 January 2024 . 12 January 2024.
  26. Web site: 2024-04-14 . British fighter jets dispatched from Akrotiri after Iran launches attack against Israel . 2024-04-14 . cyprus-mail.com . en-GB.
  27. Web site: 2024-01-13 . Η βάση της RAF στο Ακρωτήρι επανήλθε στην προσοχή για τον ρόλο της στη σύγκρουση στη Λωρίδα της Γάζας: Η στρατηγική σημασία της βρετανικής εγκατάστασης στην Κύπρο . 2024-04-14 . Hellasjournal.com . en-US.
  28. Web site: MEP arrested at UK base in Cyprus. News.BBC.co.uk. BBC News. 12 April 2007. 10 May 2020.
  29. Web site: Norton-Taylor. Richard. Leigh. David. 1 December 2010. UK overruled on Lebanon spy flights from Cyprus, WikiLeaks cables reveal. The Guardian.
  30. Web site: RAF Akrotiri. RAF.MoD.uk. Royal Air Force. 5 April 2021.
  31. 2021. U-2S/TU-2S 'Dragon Lady'. United States Air Force Air Power Yearbook 2021. Key Publishing. 113.
  32. Web site: RAF Akrotiri helicopter capability transfers from Griffin to Puma. RAF.MoD.uk. Royal Air Force. 4 April 2023.
  33. Book: Air Forces Monthly. January 2016. Key Publishing Ltd. Stamford, Lincolnshire, England. 4.
  34. Web site: Royal Air Force and US attacks on Houthi rebels in Yemen: What we know so far. Forces Net . 12 January 2024 . 26 January 2024.
  35. Web site: RAF Typhoons destroyed all Houthi rebel targets during second wave of strikes, PM says . Forces Net . 23 January 2024 . 26 January 2024.
  36. Web site: UK deploys Reaper to the Middle East. GOV.UK. HM Government. 16 October 2014. 25 July 2023.
  37. Web site: RAF Rivet Joint on first operational deployment over Iraq. FlightGlobal.com. Flight Global. 21 August 2014. 25 July 2023.
  38. Web site: RAF Shadow R1. Milavreachout.org. 27 February 2022. 25 July 2023.
  39. News: Sheridan . Danielle . Royal Navy to send ships and aircraft to support Israel . 12 October 2023.