Establishment The construction of the permanent camp in the south of the
port began in 1965. A temporary base was established in the port within a day. Lt. Col. Yekutiel Netz was appointed as the commander of the base.
Six Day War Amphibious warfare ships in preparation for the landing operation at
El Arish beach were stationed there. During the
Six Day War and after it, ships from the 914th Torpedo Squadron were attached to floats and received fuel and supplies from the base.
Inauguration The inauguration of the permanent camp of the Navy base in
Ashdod was held on 12 August 1968. The commander of the navy stated "the new base of the navy in Ashdod is a key to maintaining the ongoing security and sovereignty of Israel along the southern coasts from North Sinai to the entrances of Port Said".
Yom Kippur War The
Battle of Baltim was fought between the
Israeli Navy and the
Egyptian Navy on 8–9 October 1973, during the
Yom Kippur War between
Baltim and
Damietta. The Israeli warships that participated in the battle were stationed and co-ordinated from this base.
Relocation attempts In the early 1980s, Defense Minister
Ariel Sharon wanted to bring the Navy closer to Gaza to save sailing time by moving the base to the city of
Ashkelon. The mayor of Ashdod, Zvi Zilkar, strongly opposed this, partly and the plan was ultimately cancelled.
Disengagement from Gaza During the
Israeli disengagement from Gaza, the base served as a major evacuation and transport hub for the evacuation of
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) personnel from Gaza strip.
2006 Gaza–Israel conflict During the
Operation Summer Rains on 26 June, the Israeli Navy imposed a naval closure of the Gaza Strip, to prevent the hostage
Gilad Shalit being smuggled out by sea by the Palestinian militants. The navy increased patrols of naval vessels along the Gaza coastline, and prepared for an attempt to smuggle Shalit out by boat, sending instructions to captains. Palestinian fast boats were banned from operating in the area, and only small Palestinian fishing boats were allowed on the sea. These patrols were organised from this base.
Blockade of the Gaza Strip The
Blockade of the Gaza Strip starting in 2007 was organised from this base.
Operation Cast Lead During the
Gaza War (2008–2009) the Israeli Navy attacked
Hamas' rocket launchers and outposts, command and control centers, a Hamas patrol boat, and the office of Hamas Prime Minister
Ismail Haniyeh, using the
Typhoon Weapon System and
surface to surface missiles. The navy coordinated with other Israeli forces and used powerful shipboard sensors to acquire and shell targets on land. Records of the attacks published by the navy indicate that for the first time vessels were equipped with
Spike ER electro-optically guided anti-armor missiles. Videos of an attack showed precision hits from a Typhoon stabilizing gun despite a rolling sea. Versions of the Spike were also used by ground units and possibly by helicopters or
unmanned aerial vehicles.
Shayetet 13 naval
commandos were also deployed to attack targets on land, and reportedly attacked an Iranian ship loaded with arms for Hamas, which was docking in Sudan. On 28 December, Naval vessels shelled the
Port of Gaza. On 29 December, the
Free Gaza Movement relief boat
Dignity carrying volunteer doctors with 3.5 tons of medical supplies, human rights activists (Among them
Caoimhe Butterly and former
US Representative Cynthia McKinney), and a
CNN reporter was involved in an altercation with Israeli patrol boats. The captain of the Free Gaza vessel said that their vessel had been rammed intentionally and that there had been no warning before it had been rammed. An Israeli spokesman disputed this, and said the collision was caused by the
Dignity attempting to outmaneuver the patrol boats after disobeying Israeli orders to turn back. On 4 January the Israeli Navy extended its blockade of the Gaza Strip to . Naval squadrons during the
Operation Warm Winter were also coordinated from here. Throughout the war, the Israeli Navy employed s of the flotilla in addition to s which were coordinated from this base.
May 2010 Gaza flotilla raid On 31 May 2010, the Israeli Navy seized an aid
convoy of six ships known as the "Gaza Freedom Flotilla". aiming to break through the blockade, carrying humanitarian aid and construction materials. The flotilla had declined an Israeli request to change course to the Ashdod base, where the Israeli government had said it would inspect the aid and deliver (or let humanitarian organizations deliver) Israeli-approved items to Gaza. Israeli Shayetet 13 naval commandos boarded the ships from speedboats and helicopters launched from three missile ships, while the flotilla was still in international waters. On the , the main ship of the convoy, passengers attacked and managed to capture three soldiers. Israeli soldiers responded with rubber bullets and live ammunition from soldiers in helicopters and on the ship. Several of the activists were shot in the head by Israeli forces, some from behind and at close range. Israel was accused of using disproportionate force. On other ships, soldiers were met with passive resistance which was easily suppressed with non-lethal techniques. Nine passengers were killed and dozens wounded. Nine soldiers were also injured, two of them seriously. All of the ships were seized and towed to
Ashdod, while passengers were imprisoned in Israel and then deported to their home countries. The , a seventh ship that had been delayed, set sail from
Malta on the same day of the flotilla's interception. Israeli naval vessels shadowed the
Rachel Corrie, and after it ignored three warnings, Israeli commandos boarded the ship from speedboats, arrested the crew, and forced it to sail to Ashdod.
Freedom Flotilla II Following the Gaza flotilla raid, a coalition of 22
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) assembled in July 2011 a flotilla of 10 vessels and 1,000 activists to breach the blockade. The vessels docked in Greece in preparation for the journey to Gaza. However, the Greek government announced that it would not allow the vessels to leave for Gaza, and the
Hellenic Coast Guard stopped three vessels attempting to evade the travel ban and leave port. On 7 July, most activists left for home, leaving only a few dozen to continue the initiative. On 16 July, the French yacht
Dignite Al Karama was allowed to leave port after informing Greek authorities that its destination was
Alexandria, Egypt. Instead, the yacht headed directly for Gaza. The Israeli Navy stopped the
Dignite Al Karama about off Gaza. After the boat was warned and refused to turn back, it was surrounded by three Israeli naval vessels and boarded by Shayetet 13 commandos, who took it over. The boat was then taken to Ashdod base. Ultimately, the Freedom Flotilla sailing did not take place.
Third Gaza Flotilla On 4 November 2011, the Israeli Navy intercepted two vessels heading towards Gaza in a private initiative to break the blockade. Shayetet 13 commandos boarded the vessels from speedboats and took them over with no resistance. The vessels were then taken to Ashdod base.
Operation Iron Law During the
Victoria Affair, the ship
Victoria was seized about from the Israeli coast, while on its way from Turkey to
El-Arish port in Egypt (other sources give the destination as Alexandria, Egypt). According to the IDF, the ship picked up the cargo in the
Port of Latakia in Syria and sailed to
Mersin, Turkey. The ship was intercepted by Israeli Navy missile ships, which radioed the captain and questioned him about his point of origin and planned destination, then informed him that his ship was suspected of carrying illegal cargo, and requested permission to board for an inspection. The captain agreed, and ordered the vessel stopped. Several minutes later, speedboats carrying commandos from Israel's elite naval unit, Shayetet 13, pulled alongside the ship. A ladder was dropped for them to climb aboard. The commandos boarded with their weapons at the ready out of concern that there could be Iranian or Hamas operatives on board. The commandos ordered the crew to assemble on the bridge, and then began inspecting the cargo.
Operation Protective Edge During the
2014 Gaza War,
Shayetet 3 off-shore fleet fired 3,494 naval shells, into the Gaza Strip which was coordinated from this base.
Gaza war During the
Gaza war, an estimated 35 fighters of Hamas'
Nukhba unit were observed crossing into Israeli waters from the
Gaza fishing zone during the
Zikim attack. Col. Eitan Paz, commander of the Ashdod naval base, having been forewarned of the invasion by
Gaza Division commander
Avi Rosenfeld earlier in the morning, immediately ordered the forces under his command to defend the Israeli maritime border and prevent raids on the coast. ==Shayetet 11==