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RAF Geilenkirchen | |||||||
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Geilenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia in Germany | |||||||
Coordinates | 50°57′36.7″N 6°2′32.6″E / 50.960194°N 6.042389°E | ||||||
Type | Royal Air Force station | ||||||
Site information | |||||||
Owner | Ministry of Defence | ||||||
Operator | Royal Air Force | ||||||
Controlled by | RAF Second Tactical Air Force Royal Air Force Germany | ||||||
Site history | |||||||
Built | 1952 | /3||||||
In use | May 1953 – 28 January 1968 | ||||||
Airfield information | |||||||
Identifiers | IATA: GKE, ICAO: ETNG | ||||||
Elevation | 90 metres (295 ft) AMSL | ||||||
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Motto | Celer Respondere |
Royal Air Force Geilenkirchen more commonly known as RAF Geilenkirchen is a former Royal Air Force station in the North Rhine-Westphalia region of Germany, built by the British who used the facility mainly as an airfield for RAF fighter squadrons from May 1953 until 21 January 1968.
The RAF handed over the station to the West German Luftwaffe in March 1968. The Germans used the airfield as home for a surface-to-surface missile wing equipped with Pershing missiles with support from the United States Army.
In 1980, the station became NATO Air Base Geilenkirchen, the main operating base for NATO's Airborne Early Warning and Control force, operating 14 Boeing E-3A Sentry aircraft.