Difference between revisions of "RAF Welford"

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| coordinates  =  
 
| coordinates  =  
 
| status = Functioning ammunition dump
 
| status = Functioning ammunition dump
| type        = Munitions storage and support facility
+
| type        = Munitions storage and support facility - '2nd largest munitions storage facility' in Europe.<ref>https://www.501csw.usafe.af.mil/Units/422d-ABG/420th-MUNS/</ref>
 
| founded        = 1943
 
| founded        = 1943
 
| used        = 1943–1948 (RAF/USAAF); 1955–present (USAF munitions depot)
 
| used        = 1943–1948 (RAF/USAAF); 1955–present (USAF munitions depot)

Revision as of 11:47, 16 May 2026

Royal Air Force station and USAF munitions depot in Berkshire, England



RAF Welford
Type Munitions storage and support facility - '2nd largest munitions storage facility' in Europe.[1]
Logo RAF Welford.jpg
Photo Welford-may44.jpg
Caption RAF Welford in May 1944.
Founded 1943
Location Near Newbury, Berkshire, England
Command 501st Combat Support Wing (United States Air Force)
Battles Operation Epic Fury, 2026
Status Functioning ammunition dump
Headquarters
Area served
Military units Royal Air Force / US Air Force
Operator
Website rafwelfordhistoricalsociety.org 501csw.usafe.af.mil
Remarks

RAF Welford is a Royal Air Force station in Berkshire, England, located approximately six miles north-west of Newbury.[2]

The anonymous 'Works Unit Only' sign on the M4 leading to RAF Welford
Aerial shot of the base from Google Maps

Although nominally an RAF station, it has been operated by the United States Air Force since 1955 as one of the largest conventional munitions storage facilities in Western Europe, primarily supporting bomber operations from RAF Fairford.[2][3]

History

RAF Welford opened in 1943 as a World War II airfield for the United States Army Air Forces Ninth Air Force, operating C-47 and C-53 troop carrier aircraft.[3]

It closed after the war and was placed on care and maintenance before reopening in September 1955 as a USAF munitions depot under the 7531st Ammunition Squadron during the Cold War.[3]

The site has remained a key USAF munitions storage facility since, with brief periods of RAF administrative control in the 1990s before full return to USAF operation under the 420th Munitions Squadron.[3]

Current status

RAF Welford is home to the 420th Munitions Squadron (420 MUNS), part of the 501st Combat Support Wing headquartered at RAF Fairford.[2]

It functions as the second-largest conventional munitions storage area in Europe and one of the largest heavy-munitions compounds for the United States Air Forces in Europe – Air Forces Africa (USAFE-AFAFRICA).[2][4]

The base provides rapid war-reserve materiel (WRM) munitions movement, stockpile maintenance and support for global strike operations.[2]

Ammunition storage and role

The facility stores large quantities of conventional heavy munitions, including general-purpose bombs (Mk 82, Mk 84), precision-guided munitions and associated ordnance for bomber aircraft.[5]

It serves as a forward NATO war stock and rapid-response depot. In May 2019 the USAF moved 450,000 pounds (200 tonnes) of explosives to the site.[6]

Munitions are stored in secure underground bunkers and moved as required to support deployed operations.[4]

Link to RAF Fairford

RAF Welford is directly linked to RAF Fairford, the USAF's primary bomber forward operating location in Europe.[2]

The 420th Munitions Squadron at Welford supplies munitions to bombers (including B-1, B-2 and B-52) deployed at Fairford, enabling heavy bombing missions.[2][3]

The two sites operate as a paired logistical system under the same wing, with Welford providing the ammunition storage and rapid-movement capability for Fairford's strike aircraft.[2]

Operational use in conflicts

Munitions stored at or supplied from RAF Welford have supported USAF bomber operations from RAF Fairford in multiple conflicts, including:

  • Recent operations against Iranian targets in 2026, with bunker-busting and precision-guided bombs loaded for B-1B missions launched from Fairford.[7][8]

Similar support has occurred for operations in Afghanistan, Syria and elsewhere when bombers have deployed to Fairford.[3]

Protests

No major public protests have been recorded specifically at RAF Welford itself, which is a secure, low-profile munitions storage site.[9]

Protests against US operations using UK bases have instead focused on the more visible bomber operations at RAF Fairford, including during the 2003 Iraq War and 2026 Iran-related strikes.[10]

See also

External links

RAF Fairford & Welford (US Air Force)

Notes

  1. https://www.501csw.usafe.af.mil/Units/422d-ABG/420th-MUNS/
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 501st Combat Support Wing, RAF Fairford-Welford US Air Force, accessed 15 May 2026.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Greenham Common Control Tower, RAF Welford - A History 1941-Today Greenham Common, accessed 15 May 2026.
  4. 4.0 4.1 The Menwith Hill Accountability Campaign, Welford The MHAC, accessed 15 May 2026.
  5. Key.Aero Forum, RAF Welford - USAFE weapons storage Key.Aero, 1 October 2020.
  6. Note: Wikipedia entry cross-referenced only for public domain facts; primary sourcing from USAF and independent reports.
  7. Al Jazeera, Bunker-busting bombs loaded onto US planes at UK airbase amid Iran war Al Jazeera, 12 March 2026.
  8. BBC News, Why is RAF Fairford being used in Iran conflict? BBC News, 20 March 2026.
  9. No verified reports of demonstrations at the Welford site in available public sources.
  10. BBC News, Protest at RAF base being used in Iran conflict BBC News, 25 April 2026.