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British Forces Gibraltar

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.

British Forces Gibraltar
British Forces Tri-Service badge
Active1889–current
Country Gibraltar
Allegiance United Kingdom
BranchStrategic Command[1]
Part ofStrategic Command. Subordinate to Director of Overseas Bases.
HeadquartersDevil's Tower Camp
AnniversariesBattle of Trafalgar
Commanders
Commander of British Forces GibraltarCommodore Tom Guy
Commanding Officer, Royal Gibraltar RegimentLieutenant Colonel Matthew Moore
Commanding Officer, Gibraltar SquadronLieutenant Commander Simon Holden
Commanding RAF GibraltarWing Commander Jackson Brown MBE RAF

History edit

 
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.[2]

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]."[3]

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.[4]

HM Dockyard, Gibraltar edit

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.[5]

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)'.[1]

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 edit

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:[1]

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)[23]

Flag officer commanding edit

Senior Officer, Gibraltar edit

Post holders included:[25][26]

  • Captain Claude E. Buckle: August 1889 – February 1892
  • Captain Atwell P.M. Lake: February 1892 – January 1895
  • Captain James A.T. Bruce: January 1895 – January 1898
  • Captain Charles C. Drury: January 1898 – September 1899
  • Captain William H. Pigott: September 1899 – October 1902 (later V.Adm Sir William Harvey Pigott)

Flag Officer, Gibraltar edit

Post holders included:[25]

  • Vice-Admiral Sir William A. Dyke Acland, Bt.: October 1902 – July 1904
  • Rear-Admiral Sir Edward Chichester, Bt.: July 1904 – September 1906
  • Rear-Admiral Sir James E.C. Goodrich: September 1906 – September 1909
  • Vice-Admiral Frederick S. Pelham: September 1909 – October 1912
  • Vice-Admiral Frederic E.E.Brock: October 1912 – October 1915
  • Rear-Admiral Bernard Currey: October 1915 – July 1917 (and as Senior Naval Officer and in charge of all Naval Establishments, Gibraltar)
  • Rear-Admiral Sir Heathcoat S.Grant: July 1917 – July 1919
  • Rear-Admiral Sir Reginald Y.Tyrwhitt, Bt.: July 1919 – January 1921
  • Rear-Admiral Henry B.Pelly: January 1921 – January 1923 (also Admiral Superintendent, Gibraltar Yard)
  • Rear-Admiral Walter M. Ellerton: January 1923 – April 1925
  • Rear-Admiral Richard G.A.W.Stapleton-Cotton: April 1925 – April 1927 (also Admiral Superintendent of H.M. Dockyard, Gibraltar)
  • Rear-Admiral Cyril S. Townsend: April 1927 – April 1929 (also Admiral Superintendent of H.M. Dockyard, Gibraltar)
  • Rear-Admiral Berwick Curtis: April 1929 – April 1931
  • Rear-Admiral Thomas N. James: April 1931 – May 1933
  • Rear-Admiral Francis M. Austin: May 1933 – May 1935
  • Vice-Admiral Sir James M. Pipon: May 1935 – May 1937
  • Rear-Admiral Alfred E. Evans: May 1937 – May 1939, as Rear Admiral-in-Charge, and Admiral-Superintendent HM Dockyard Gibraltar[27]

Flag Officer, Gibraltar and North Atlantic edit

Flag Officer, Gibraltar and Mediterranean Approaches edit

Post holders included:

  • Vice-Admiral Sir Frederick Edward Collins : December 1942 - January 1943
  • Admiral Sir Frederick Edward Collins : January 1943 - August 1943
  • Vice-Admiral Sir Harold M. Burrough: September 1943 – January 1945[28]
  • Vice-Admiral Sir Victor A.C. Crutchley: January 1945 – December 1946[29]

Flag Officer, Gibraltar edit

Post holders included:[25]

  • Vice-Admiral Ernest R. Archer: December 1946 – June 1948
  • Vice-Admiral Patrick W.B. Brooking: June 1948 – June 1950
  • Vice-Admiral Lord Ashbourne: June 1950 – May 1952
  • Rear-Admiral St. John A. Micklethwait: May 1952 – October 1953
  • Rear-Admiral Harry P. Currey: October 1953 – May 1956
  • Rear-Admiral Roy S. Foster-Brown: May 1956 – February 1959[30]
  • Rear-Admiral Philip F. Powlett: February 1959 – March 1962
  • Rear-Admiral Erroll N. Sinclair: March 1962 – July 1964
  • Rear-Admiral Thomas W. Best: July 1964 – November 1966
  • Rear-Admiral Michael F. Fell: November 1966 – April 1968
  • Rear-Admiral Ian W. Jamieson: April 1968 – October 1969
  • Rear-Admiral A. Rodney B. Sturdee: October 1969 – January 1972
  • Rear-Admiral Hubert W.E. Hollins: January 1972 – May 1974
  • Rear-Admiral Sefton R. Sandford: May 1974 – September 1976
  • Rear-Admiral Michael L. Stacey: September 1976 – January 1979
  • Rear-Admiral Gwynedd Pritchard: January 1979 – January 1981
  • Rear-Admiral D. John Mackenzie: January 1981 – January 1983
  • Rear-Admiral George Vallings: January 1983 – March 1985
  • Rear-Admiral Peter G.V. Dingemans: March 1985 – September 1987
  • Rear-Admiral the Hon. Nicholas J. Hill-Norton: September 1987 – January 1990
  • Rear-Admiral Geoffrey Biggs (January 1990 – April 1992)[31]

Commander British Forces, Gibraltar edit

 
Commodores Tim Henry (left) and Steve Dainton

Post holders included:[32]

  • 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)[33]
  • Commodore Allan Adair (19 January 2005 – 1 May 2007)[34]
  • Commodore Matt Parr (1 May 2007 – February 2009)[35]
  • Commodore Adrian Bell (February 2009 – September 2010)[36]
  • Commodore Tom Karsten (September 2010 – November 2012)[37]
  • Commodore John Clink (November 2012 – August 2014)[38]
  • Commodore Ian McGhie (August 2014 – July 2016)[39]
  • Commodore Mike Walliker (July 2016 – September 2018)[40]
  • Commodore Timothy Henry (September 2018 – July 2020)[41]
  • Commodore Steve Dainton (July 2020 – present)[42]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "FOI(A) regarding British Forces Gibraltar" (PDF). What do they know?. 5 May 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  2. ^ "Memorandum from the Military Representatives Committee" (PDF). NATO. Retrieved 9 January 2016. and "Chronology and Organisation of Allied Command" (PDF). NATO. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
  3. ^ Peter Melson (2014). "NATO in Transition: Five Years in SHAPE 1989 to 1994". The Naval Review (UK): 161.
  4. ^ "The British Army in Gibraltar". Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
  5. ^ Horseman, Martin, ed. (March 1982). "RN Dockyard in Gibraltar to close". Armed Forces. Shepperton: Ian Allan. p. 44. ISSN 0142-4696.
  6. ^ "Gibraltar Squadron". Royal Navy. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  7. ^ "Two new vessels for GDP as part of £36m MoD contract". Gibraltar Chronicle. 17 June 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
  8. ^ Heappey, James (2 May 2023). "Gibraltar: Military Bases – Question for Ministry of Defence (UIN 182428)". UK Parliament. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  9. ^ "Some 14,000 British servicemen pass through Gibraltar each year". The Diplomat. 25 April 2023.
  10. ^ "Some 14,000 British servicemen pass through Gibraltar each year". The Diplomat. 25 April 2023.
  11. ^ "Some 14,000 British servicemen pass through Gibraltar each year". The Diplomat. 25 April 2023.
  12. ^ "QHM Gibraltar". GOV.UK. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
  13. ^ Channon, Max (1 August 2019). "The Royal Navy Gibraltar Squadron officially Rock!". PlymouthLive. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
  14. ^ "All change at the top for Gibraltar Squadron | Royal Navy". www.royalnavy.mod.uk. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
  15. ^ "FOI(A) regarding Forces overseas" (PDF). What do they know?. 23 November 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
  16. ^ "HMS Trent (P224) | Royal Navy". www.royalnavy.mod.uk. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  17. ^ HMS TRENT Heads To Gibraltar For LENGTHY DEPLOYMENT 🚢⚓, archived from the original on 13 December 2021, retrieved 31 March 2021
  18. ^ "Defence review will forge a growing Navy with expanding horizons". www.royalnavy.mod.uk. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  19. ^ "BMT completes successfully trials for High-Speed Patrol Craft HMS Cutlass". Navy Recognition.
  20. ^ "The second new @RNGibSqn patrol boat, HMS Dagger has been delivered to Gibraltar". Twitter. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
  21. ^ "Sixth and final support boat delivered to Royal Navy diving group". www.royalnavy.mod.uk. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  22. ^ "SEA Class Marine Craft". Atlas Elektronik. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  23. ^ "Some 14,000 British servicemen pass through Gibraltar each year". The Diplomat. 25 April 2023.
  24. ^ Ministry of Defence (13 May 2021). "British Forces Gibraltar explained". Voices Of The Armed Forces. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  25. ^ a b c Mackie, Colin. "Royal Navy Senior Appointments from 1865". gulabin.com. Colin Mackie. pp. 163–164. March 2018. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  26. ^ Harley, Simon; Lovell, Tony. "Gibraltar – The Dreadnought Project". dreadnoughtproject.org. Harley and Lovell, 26 November 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  27. ^ Svonavec, Stephen. "Royal Navy Flag Officers, December 1, 1937". Fleet Organization Web Site. Stephen Svonavec. Retrieved 6 July 2014.
  28. ^ Whitby, Michael (2011). Commanding Canadians: The Second World War Diaries of A.F.C. Layard. Vancouver, Canada: UBC Press. p. 362. ISBN 9780774840378.
  29. ^ "Naval Commands and Flag Officers (Hansard, 10 April 1946)". Hansard: vol 421 cc1897-9. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  30. ^ "Obituary: R. A. Foster-Brown". The Independent. 2 February 1999. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
  31. ^ page 125
  32. ^ Mackie. 2018.
  33. ^ "Body of Gibraltar commander found". BBC News. 9 January 2005. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  34. ^ . Gov.uk. Archived from the original on 5 May 2007. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  35. ^ "Military teams triumph in the Gibraltar Triathlon". News. 14 August 2008. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  36. ^ "Gibraltar: British could have fired on Spanish police launch". News Focus. 12 December 2009. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  37. ^ "CBF Gibraltar promotion to Rear-Admiral". Gibraltar Chronicle. 4 September 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  38. ^ . Gibraltar Chronicle. 17 October 2012. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  39. ^ "New CBF for Gibraltar as Commodore Clink Accepts Rear Admiral Promotion". Your Gibraltar. 3 June 2014. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  40. ^ GBC News (13 July 2016), CBF Retires, and Stays in Gibraltar, archived from the original on 13 December 2021, retrieved 14 July 2016
  41. ^ GBC News (31 August 2018), CFormer Gibraltar Squadron commander, Commodore Tim Henry, to take over as CBF on Tuesday, retrieved 2 September 2018
  42. ^ GBC NEWS (1 July 2020), Gibraltar's new Commander British Forces will be Commodore Steve Dainton

External links edit

  • British Army – Gibraltar
  • RAF Gibraltar

british, forces, gibraltar, british, armed, forces, stationed, british, overseas, territory, gibraltar, gibraltar, used, primarily, training, area, thanks, good, climate, rocky, terrain, stopover, aircraft, ships, route, from, deployments, east, suez, africa, . 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 British Forces GibraltarBritish Forces Tri Service badgeActive1889 currentCountry GibraltarAllegiance United KingdomBranchStrategic Command 1 Part ofStrategic Command Subordinate to Director of Overseas Bases HeadquartersDevil s Tower CampAnniversariesBattle of TrafalgarCommandersCommander of British Forces GibraltarCommodore Tom GuyCommanding Officer Royal Gibraltar RegimentLieutenant Colonel Matthew MooreCommanding Officer Gibraltar SquadronLieutenant Commander Simon HoldenCommanding RAF GibraltarWing Commander Jackson Brown MBE RAF Contents 1 History 2 HM Dockyard Gibraltar 3 Permanent units 4 Flag officer commanding 4 1 Senior Officer Gibraltar 4 2 Flag Officer Gibraltar 4 3 Flag Officer Gibraltar and North Atlantic 4 4 Flag Officer Gibraltar and Mediterranean Approaches 4 5 Flag Officer Gibraltar 4 6 Commander British Forces Gibraltar 5 See also 6 Notes 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp 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 2 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 3 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 4 HM Dockyard Gibraltar editHM 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 5 In 1984 the dockyard passed into the hands of the UK ship repair and conversion company A amp P Group A government grant and a prospect of lucrative Royal Fleet Auxiliary refit contracts did not help A amp 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 1 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 editThough Gibraltar s current garrison is much smaller than it had been before the end of the Cold War a sizable force still exists including 1 Ministry of Defence HQ British Forces Gibraltar 145 military personnel as of 2023 plus 528 civilians under contract 9 Armaments Depot Gibraltar 1 Defence Equipment and Support Kings lines oil fuel depot Oil and Pipelines AgencyArmy Royal Gibraltar Regiment Hybrid at Devil s Tower Camp Mixed infantry focused unit 235 personnel reported as of 2023 10 Buffadero Training CentreNavy 28 personnel as of 2023 plus additional personnel assigned to HMS Trent 11 Windmill Hill Signal Station 1 His Majesty s Naval Base Gibraltar 1 Gibraltar Squadron at His Majesty s Naval Base Gibraltar 1 12 13 14 15 River class offshore patrol vessel HMS Trent 16 permanently deployed at Gibraltar since April 2021 17 18 Cutlass class patrol vessels replaced previous Archer class boats 2021 22 19 HMS Cutlass arrived in Gibraltar November 2021 HMS Dagger arrived in Gibraltar March 2022 20 x3 Pacific 24 Rigid hulled inflatable boats x1 Sea class 15m diving support boat 21 22 Air Force 16 personnel as of 2023 23 RAF Gibraltar the Royal Air Force s military aerodrome in Gibraltar also doubles up as the territory s civilian airport 24 Flag officer commanding editSenior Officer Gibraltar edit Post holders included 25 26 Captain Claude E Buckle August 1889 February 1892 Captain Atwell P M Lake February 1892 January 1895 Captain James A T Bruce January 1895 January 1898 Captain Charles C Drury January 1898 September 1899 Captain William H Pigott September 1899 October 1902 later V Adm Sir William Harvey Pigott Flag Officer Gibraltar edit Post holders included 25 Vice Admiral Sir William A Dyke Acland Bt October 1902 July 1904 Rear Admiral Sir Edward Chichester Bt July 1904 September 1906 Rear Admiral Sir James E C Goodrich September 1906 September 1909 Vice Admiral Frederick S Pelham September 1909 October 1912 Vice Admiral Frederic E E Brock October 1912 October 1915 Rear Admiral Bernard Currey October 1915 July 1917 and as Senior Naval Officer and in charge of all Naval Establishments Gibraltar Rear Admiral Sir Heathcoat S Grant July 1917 July 1919 Rear Admiral Sir Reginald Y Tyrwhitt Bt July 1919 January 1921 Rear Admiral Henry B Pelly January 1921 January 1923 also Admiral Superintendent Gibraltar Yard Rear Admiral Walter M Ellerton January 1923 April 1925 Rear Admiral Richard G A W Stapleton Cotton April 1925 April 1927 also Admiral Superintendent of H M Dockyard Gibraltar Rear Admiral Cyril S Townsend April 1927 April 1929 also Admiral Superintendent of H M Dockyard Gibraltar Rear Admiral Berwick Curtis April 1929 April 1931 Rear Admiral Thomas N James April 1931 May 1933 Rear Admiral Francis M Austin May 1933 May 1935 Vice Admiral Sir James M Pipon May 1935 May 1937 Rear Admiral Alfred E Evans May 1937 May 1939 as Rear Admiral in Charge and Admiral Superintendent HM Dockyard Gibraltar 27 Flag Officer Gibraltar and North Atlantic edit Main article Commander in Chief North Atlantic Rear Admiral Norman A Wodehouse May November 1939 Admiral Sir Dudley B N North November 1939 December 1940 Vice Admiral Sir G Frederick B Edward Collins December 1940 December 1942Flag Officer Gibraltar and Mediterranean Approaches edit Post holders included Vice Admiral Sir Frederick Edward Collins December 1942 January 1943 Admiral Sir Frederick Edward Collins January 1943 August 1943 Vice Admiral Sir Harold M Burrough September 1943 January 1945 28 Vice Admiral Sir Victor A C Crutchley January 1945 December 1946 29 Flag Officer Gibraltar edit Post holders included 25 Vice Admiral Ernest R Archer December 1946 June 1948 Vice Admiral Patrick W B Brooking June 1948 June 1950 Vice Admiral Lord Ashbourne June 1950 May 1952 Rear Admiral St John A Micklethwait May 1952 October 1953 Rear Admiral Harry P Currey October 1953 May 1956 Rear Admiral Roy S Foster Brown May 1956 February 1959 30 Rear Admiral Philip F Powlett February 1959 March 1962 Rear Admiral Erroll N Sinclair March 1962 July 1964 Rear Admiral Thomas W Best July 1964 November 1966 Rear Admiral Michael F Fell November 1966 April 1968 Rear Admiral Ian W Jamieson April 1968 October 1969 Rear Admiral A Rodney B Sturdee October 1969 January 1972 Rear Admiral Hubert W E Hollins January 1972 May 1974 Rear Admiral Sefton R Sandford May 1974 September 1976 Rear Admiral Michael L Stacey September 1976 January 1979 Rear Admiral Gwynedd Pritchard January 1979 January 1981 Rear Admiral D John Mackenzie January 1981 January 1983 Rear Admiral George Vallings January 1983 March 1985 Rear Admiral Peter G V Dingemans March 1985 September 1987 Rear Admiral the Hon Nicholas J Hill Norton September 1987 January 1990 Rear Admiral Geoffrey Biggs January 1990 April 1992 31 Commander British Forces Gibraltar edit nbsp Commodores Tim Henry left and Steve DaintonPost holders included 32 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 33 Commodore Allan Adair 19 January 2005 1 May 2007 34 Commodore Matt Parr 1 May 2007 February 2009 35 Commodore Adrian Bell February 2009 September 2010 36 Commodore Tom Karsten September 2010 November 2012 37 Commodore John Clink November 2012 August 2014 38 Commodore Ian McGhie August 2014 July 2016 39 Commodore Mike Walliker July 2016 September 2018 40 Commodore Timothy Henry September 2018 July 2020 41 Commodore Steve Dainton July 2020 present 42 See also editList of British Army installationsNotes edit a b c d e f g FOI A regarding British Forces Gibraltar PDF What do they know 5 May 2021 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Memorandum from the Military Representatives Committee PDF NATO Retrieved 9 January 2016 and Chronology and Organisation of Allied Command PDF NATO Retrieved 9 January 2016 Peter Melson 2014 NATO in Transition Five Years in SHAPE 1989 to 1994 The Naval Review UK 161 The British Army in Gibraltar Ministry of Defence Retrieved 7 June 2015 Horseman Martin ed March 1982 RN Dockyard in Gibraltar to close Armed Forces Shepperton Ian Allan p 44 ISSN 0142 4696 Gibraltar Squadron Royal Navy Retrieved 11 May 2023 Two new vessels for GDP as part of 36m MoD contract Gibraltar Chronicle 17 June 2021 Retrieved 14 September 2023 Heappey James 2 May 2023 Gibraltar Military Bases Question for Ministry of Defence UIN 182428 UK Parliament Retrieved 11 May 2023 Some 14 000 British servicemen pass through Gibraltar each year The Diplomat 25 April 2023 Some 14 000 British servicemen pass through Gibraltar each year The Diplomat 25 April 2023 Some 14 000 British servicemen pass through Gibraltar each year The Diplomat 25 April 2023 QHM Gibraltar GOV UK Retrieved 23 April 2021 Channon Max 1 August 2019 The Royal Navy Gibraltar Squadron officially Rock PlymouthLive Retrieved 13 April 2021 All change at the top for Gibraltar Squadron Royal Navy www royalnavy mod uk Retrieved 13 April 2021 FOI A regarding Forces overseas PDF What do they know 23 November 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2021 HMS Trent P224 Royal Navy www royalnavy mod uk Retrieved 1 April 2021 HMS TRENT Heads To Gibraltar For LENGTHY DEPLOYMENT archived from the original on 13 December 2021 retrieved 31 March 2021 Defence review will forge a growing Navy with expanding horizons www royalnavy mod uk Retrieved 31 March 2021 BMT completes successfully trials for High Speed Patrol Craft HMS Cutlass Navy Recognition The second new RNGibSqn patrol boat HMS Dagger has been delivered to Gibraltar Twitter Retrieved 31 March 2022 Sixth and final support boat delivered to Royal Navy diving group www royalnavy mod uk Retrieved 25 February 2023 SEA Class Marine Craft Atlas Elektronik Retrieved 25 February 2023 Some 14 000 British servicemen pass through Gibraltar each year The Diplomat 25 April 2023 Ministry of Defence 13 May 2021 British Forces Gibraltar explained Voices Of The Armed Forces Retrieved 14 March 2022 a b c Mackie Colin Royal Navy Senior Appointments from 1865 gulabin com Colin Mackie pp 163 164 March 2018 Retrieved 10 March 2018 Harley Simon Lovell Tony Gibraltar The Dreadnought Project dreadnoughtproject org Harley and Lovell 26 November 2017 Retrieved 10 March 2018 Svonavec Stephen Royal Navy Flag Officers December 1 1937 Fleet Organization Web Site Stephen Svonavec Retrieved 6 July 2014 Whitby Michael 2011 Commanding Canadians The Second World War Diaries of A F C Layard Vancouver Canada UBC Press p 362 ISBN 9780774840378 Naval Commands and Flag Officers Hansard 10 April 1946 Hansard vol 421 cc1897 9 Retrieved 4 July 2020 Obituary R A Foster Brown The Independent 2 February 1999 Retrieved 9 January 2016 page 125 Mackie 2018 Body of Gibraltar commander found BBC News 9 January 2005 Retrieved 16 August 2014 The Permanent Joint Headquarters Gov uk Archived from the original on 5 May 2007 Retrieved 16 August 2014 Military teams triumph in the Gibraltar Triathlon News 14 August 2008 Retrieved 16 August 2014 Gibraltar British could have fired on Spanish police launch News Focus 12 December 2009 Retrieved 16 August 2014 CBF Gibraltar promotion to Rear Admiral Gibraltar Chronicle 4 September 2012 Retrieved 16 August 2014 Commodore John Clink is new CPF Gibraltar Chronicle 17 October 2012 Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 16 August 2014 New CBF for Gibraltar as Commodore Clink Accepts Rear Admiral Promotion Your Gibraltar 3 June 2014 Retrieved 16 August 2014 GBC News 13 July 2016 CBF Retires and Stays in Gibraltar archived from the original on 13 December 2021 retrieved 14 July 2016 GBC News 31 August 2018 CFormer Gibraltar Squadron commander Commodore Tim Henry to take over as CBF on Tuesday retrieved 2 September 2018 GBC NEWS 1 July 2020 Gibraltar s new Commander British Forces will be Commodore Steve DaintonExternal links editBritish Forces Gibraltar Community Site British Army Gibraltar RAF Gibraltar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British Forces Gibraltar amp oldid 1177007294 Flag Officer Gibraltar and Mediterranean Approaches, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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