RAF H1 H-1 was established by the
Royal Air Force as a landing ground as "RAF H1" in the 1930s. It was named for the nearby H1 pumping station on the
Mosul–Haifa oil pipeline. H1 one of several airfields established as part of the
British Mandate of Iraq. Iraq was created at the close of
World War I from the former
Ottoman Empire as part of the 1919
Treaty of Versailles. It was used until the 1940s by
No. 84 Squadron RAF. During the early days World War II, the airfield was abandoned as the RAF moved its units to
RAF Habbaniya during the
1941 Iraqi coup d'état and subsequent
Anglo-Iraqi War. It may have been used by some German
Luftwaffe units that had moved in from
Vichy French controlled Syria, during an attempted coups by German-leaning Iraqi Generals who had engineered a coup in Iraq on 31 March 1941. However, the British moved in both land reinforcements from
British Palestine and flew in some
Vickers Wellington and
Bristol Blenheim bombers to RAF Habbaniya. The coup crumbled in disorder, with the pro-Nazi forces in Iraq surrendering on 30 May. The Luftwaffe units stranded in Iraq retreated back to Syria.
Iraqi Air Force The airfield remained under British control until 1958 when, as a result of the
14 July 1958 Iraqi Revolution when
Hashemite monarchy established by King
Faisal I of Iraq in 1921 under the auspices of the British was overthrown. Subsequently, it was turned over to the
Iraqi Air Force. During the 1970s, it was one of several Iraqi airfields upgraded under project "Super-Base" in response to the experiences from Arab-Israeli wars in 1967 and 1973. The Iraqi 2nd Air Defence Sector, also known as the Western Air Defence Sector, had an IOCs at H-1 Airfield.
2003 Iraq War The H-1,
H-2 and
H-3 airfields in Western Iraq were used as operating hubs for Iraqi mobile
Scud units deployed to bombard Israel during the
1991 Gulf War. Securing the area was seen to be vital to deny Iraq the opportunity to launch WMD-loaded Scuds into Israel once the invasion began, while also permitting coalition control of road traffic to and from Syria and Jordan. On 28 March 2003 A Company, 3rd Battalion,
75th Ranger Regiment, reinforced with engineers and USAF combat controllers, was loaded onto a
Boeing C-17 transport aircraft and jumped onto H1 Airfield ("Objective Serpent"), the northernmost of the Iraqi airfields. Just ten days after operations began,
Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force - West (CJSOTF-W), based upon the
5th Special Forces Group, had captured the western third of Iraq. American Colonel
John Mulholland, the task force commander, then quickly moved the headquarters of CJSOTF-W to H1 Airfield and began to consider new targets for his command. The British
Special Air Service (SAS) and a squadron of Australian
Special Air Service Regiment (SASR) had seized the nearby Iraqi
H-2 and
H-3 Air Bases on 21 March. In early 2003, it was reported that the United States was planning to develop H-1 as a permanent base in Iraq. Those plans never materialised and today current aerial imagery shows that the operational structures around the airfield appear to have been demolished and removed. Today the concrete runway and series of taxiways remain exposed and deteriorating to the elements, being reclaimed by the Iraqi desert. ==References==