The facility was built between 1962 and 1966. As of 1989, it served
NATO as a pre-positioned wartime
ammunition depot, storing around 40,000 tons of
missiles,
depth charges, and conventional
shells. The depot lies in
Glen Douglas, a
glen through which the Douglas Water flows east to
Loch Lomond. The depot itself is near the glen's head, less than a mile from
Loch Long.
Arrochar is the nearest village. In the 1970s, a jetty was built at Glen Mallan on Loch Long, linked to the depot via a
Ministry of Defence (MoD) road. It was known as NATO Armament Depot Glen Douglas and was used for munitions storage by the
Royal Navy, the United States and the Netherlands. In 1993 the US withdrew from the site and the capacity was taken up by
Royal Air Force munitions which were previously based at
RAF Chilmark in Wiltshire, the RAF's last munitions depot prior to its closure in 1995. In January 2003, the
aircraft carrier docked at the Glen Mallan jetty to stock up on supplies ahead of the impending
invasion of Iraq. With the tacit backing of trade union
ASLEF,
Motherwell based
EWS drivers working on a MoD contract refused to transport munitions to the depot, in opposition to what they branded a "rush to war". The drivers' action was supported in an Early Day Motion in the
House of Commons signed by 25 MPs. ==Facilities==