RAF Gaza


RAF Gaza was an RAF airfield on the southwest coast of Mandatory Palestine, in the present day Gaza Strip.

History

The airfield was one of the first to be built in Palestine. It was built in 1917 for military use by the Ottoman Empire, with German assistance.
RAF Gaza was used for passenger services by Imperial Airways and KLM as a stop en route to Baghdad and further to Karachi or Batavia, correspondingly. In the 1930s, an illustrated London magazine proclaimed that passengers overnighting at Gaza, hailed as "the gateway to the Holy Land", were staying where Samson had once removed the city gates.
During the Second World War RAF Gaza was used by a number of RAF squadrons, including 33, 45, 127, 208, 318 and 451 Squadrons. No.2 Air Crew Officers School was based on the airfield, and the Greek Training Flight was also based there in 1941–1942. The airfield was used as the Middle East ammunition depot from July to September 1942. RAF Gaza was on the site of present-day Karni crossing between the Gaza Strip and Israel. Although no remains of the airfield itself are visible today, the British concrete road linking the airfield with the ammunition storage areas is visible and in good shape.