Operation Uvda In March 1949 – 8 km northwest to the current base – the temporary Abraham Airfield (Sde Avraham, ) was set up during
Operation Uvda to secure the southern Negev against
Jordan shortly before the end of the
First Arab–Israeli War. Ouvda-mars-1949 english.png|Map of
Operation Uvda in 1949 with a temporary airfield in the southern
Negev desert Sde Avraham.jpg|
Piper PA-11 Cub Special planes on temporary Abraham Airfield (Sde Avraham) during
Operation Uvda PikiWiki Israel 6325 golani 1949.jpg|The
IDF Golani Brigade during
Operation Uvda on 9 March 1949 Raising the Ink Flag at Umm Rashrash (Eilat).jpg|The
Ink Flag is raised at Umm Rashrash (
Eilat) on 10 March 1949, marking the end of the
First Arab–Israeli War Airbase and airport In 1981 Ovda (Uvda) was opened as a military airbase (together with
Nevatim and
Ramon Airbase) – a replacement for the
Etzion Airbase and three others on the
Sinai Peninsula in
Egypt, abandoned after the
Camp David Accords (see map below). Camp David, Menachem Begin, Anwar Sadat, 1978.jpg|The then presidents
Anwar Sadat,
Jimmy Carter and
Prime Minister Menachem Begin (left to right) at
Camp David (USA) in Sept. 1978 Sinai-Airbases.png|Abandoned
IAF bases on the
Sinai Peninsula (red) and newly established bases in southern Israel (blue) From 1982 onwards it was also used as
Ovda Airport for civil charter flights and from 1988 to 2019 for regular scheduled flights by holidaymakers from Europe who wanted to get to the seaside resort of
Eilat on the
Gulf of Aqaba. Ovda Airport.jpg|The first terminal of
Eilat-Ovda Airport in 2006 Ovda Terminal.jpg|The new terminal of
Ovda Airport, which was closed again on 31 March 2019 D68-082.jpg|On 19 September 1995 Iranian
Kish Air Flight 707 was hijacked by a steward and forced to land on Ovda On 31 March 2019, the civilian part was closed, because the new
Ramon Airport had now gone into operation, which is also much closer to Eilat. == Aggressor Squadron ==