Английская Википедия:British Forces Gibraltar

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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox military unit

British Forces Gibraltar is the British Armed Forces stationed in the British overseas territory of Gibraltar. Gibraltar is used primarily as a training area, thanks to its good climate and rocky terrain, and as a stopover for aircraft and ships en route to and from deployments East of Suez or in Africa.

History

Файл:HMS Rooke, British Forces Gibraltar.jpg
Entrance to HMS Rooke at Queensway, Gibraltar – headquarters of Gibraltar Defence Police.

British Armed Forces in Gibraltar had been predominantly naval-led since the 1890s. In the 1950s discussions about the creation of NATO's Allied Forces Mediterranean led to the Flag Officer Gibraltar being placed in command of NATO forces in the area.[1]

However, many years later, the British Royal Navy captain serving as Head of Sea Section in Operations Division, SHAPE, was to have to deal with the re-absorption of Spain into NATO in the early 1990s. Arranging the NATO-Spain-Gibraltar-UK linkages involved "delicate negotiations," but British plans, to Captain Peter Melson's knowledge "committed no forces to defence of the Strait, while Spain was willing to commit substantial elements of their ORBAT [order of battle, their armed forces]."[2]

The last UK based army battalion, 3rd Battalion Royal Green Jackets, left Gibraltar in 1991 and the Royal Gibraltar Regiment took charge of local defence under the new headquarters British Forces Gibraltar.[3]

HM Dockyard, Gibraltar

HM Dockyard, Gibraltar was active from 1895 to 1984. The dockyard was used extensively by the Royal Navy, docking many of the Navy's most prestigious ships. In the early 1980s a decision by the United Kingdom's Ministry of Defence to cut back the Royal Navy surface fleet meant that the dockyard was no longer financially viable.[4]

In 1984 the dockyard passed into the hands of the UK ship repair and conversion company, A&P Group. A government grant and a prospect of lucrative Royal Fleet Auxiliary refit contracts did not help A&P Group however and they passed the yard into the hands of the Government of Gibraltar.

The current dockyard is still used by the Royal Navy and is referred to as 'His Majesty's Naval Base Gibraltar (HMNB Gibraltar)'.[5]

The base is the permanent home to the Royal Navy's Gibraltar Squadron, equipped with two Cutlass-class patrol vessels and three Pacific 24 rigid inflatable boats.[6] They are supported by two patrol boats and rigid inflatable boats of the Gibraltar Defence Police, as well as diving platforms and harbour work boats. The base is also home to the offshore patrol vessel HMS Trent.[7] Gibraltar regularly hosts other British or allied warships and support vessels.[8]

Permanent units

Though Gibraltar's current garrison is much smaller than it had been before the end of the Cold War, a sizable force still exists, including:[5]

Ministry of Defence/HQ British Forces Gibraltar (145 military personnel as of 2023 plus 528 civilians under contract)[9]

Army

Navy (28 personnel as of 2023, plus additional personnel assigned to HMS Trent)[11]

Air Force (16 personnel as of 2023)[22]

Flag officer commanding

Senior Officer, Gibraltar

Post holders included:[24][25]

Flag Officer, Gibraltar

Post holders included:[24]

Flag Officer, Gibraltar and North Atlantic

Шаблон:Main

Flag Officer, Gibraltar and Mediterranean Approaches

Post holders included:

Flag Officer, Gibraltar

Post holders included:[24]

Commander British Forces, Gibraltar

Файл:Commander British Forces Gibraltar 2020.jpg
Commodores Tim Henry (left) and Steve Dainton

Post holders included:[31]

  • Rear Admiral Jeremy Sanders (April 1992 – December 1994)
  • Major-General Simon Pack (December 1994 – April 1997)
  • Commodore Alastair Taylor (April 1997 – June 1999)
  • Commodore Andrew Willmett (June 1999 – December 2001)
  • Commodore Richard Clapp (December 2001 – May 2004)
  • Commodore David White (May 2004 – 8 January 2005)[32]
  • Commodore Allan Adair (19 January 2005 – 1 May 2007)[33]
  • Commodore Matt Parr (1 May 2007 – February 2009)[34]
  • Commodore Adrian Bell (February 2009 – September 2010)[35]
  • Commodore Tom Karsten (September 2010 – November 2012)[36]
  • Commodore John Clink (November 2012 – August 2014)[37]
  • Commodore Ian McGhie (August 2014 – July 2016)[38]
  • Commodore Mike Walliker (July 2016 – September 2018)[39]
  • Commodore Timothy Henry (September 2018 – July 2020)[40]
  • Commodore Steve Dainton (July 2020 – present)[41]

See also

Notes

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:British Military Шаблон:British Forces deployments Шаблон:Navy Department (Ministry of Defence) Шаблон:Admiralty Department Шаблон:Gibraltar topics