- CFB Baden-Soellingen
__NOTOC__Infobox Airport
name = CFB Baden-Soelligen
nativename = Flughafen Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden
nativename-a =
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IATA = FKB
ICAO = EDSB
type = Military
owner =
operator = Canadian Forces
city-served =
location = Baden-Baden, Germany
elevation-f = 408
elevation-m = 124
coordinates = Coord|48|46|45.7|N|08|04|49.8|E|type:airport_region:DE
website =
metric-elev =
metric-rwy =
r1-number = 03/21
r1-length-f = 10,800
r1-length-m = 3,300
r1-surface =Asphalt
stat-year =
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footnotes =Canadian Forces Base Baden-Soellingen or CFB Baden-Soellingen was a
Canadian Forces Base located near the farming community ofRheinmünster-Söllingen in the West German state ofBaden-Württemberg . It is now a commercial area calledBaden Airpark , which also includes the regionalairport "Flughafen Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden" (Code FKB).History
To meet
NATO 's air defence commitments during theCold War , No. 1 Air Division was established in Europe in the early 1950s with fourRoyal Canadian Air Force bases or wings inFrance andWest Germany . These includedRCAF Station Marville ("No. 1 Wing") andRCAF Station Grostenquin ("No. 2 Wing") in France andRCAF Station Zweibrücken ("No. 3 Wing") and RCAF Station Baden-Soellingen (No. 4 Wing) in West Germany. These wings consisted of three fighter squadrons each.Construction of the airfield at Baden-Soellingen began in December 1951 at a location between the
Black Forest and theRhine River under the supervision of France'sArmée de l'Air (AA). The runway and associated facilities were completed by June 1952 and were intended to accommodate a brigade of the AA which arrived in August for the first operational use of the base. At that point, support buildings were under advanced construction.RCAF Station Baden-Soellingen
In early 1953,
NATO headquarters determined that the base under construction atPferdsfeld , which was originally planned to accommodate No. 4 Wing, would not be ready for arriving squadrons and personnel later that summer. It was decided that France's units would transfer to another base to temporarily vacate their airfield at Baden-Soellingen since this base was almost complete. Sixty-two RCAF "F-86 Sabres" of 414, 422, and 444 squadrons arrived at Baden onSeptember 4 ,1953 . Several months after the RCAF units arrived, NATO headquarters made the RCAF move to Baden permanent and the facility was named RCAF Station Baden-Soellingen. Dependents followed beginning in the spring of 1954.Personnel at RCAF Station Baden-Soellingen worked quickly to make the base fully operational and integrate into RCAF operations within NATO for the defence of Western Europe.
NATO identified a shortage in all-weather fighter/interceptor aircraft in 1955 and the RCAF responded by providing the Air Division with four squadrons equipped with the "
CF-100 Canuck " to supplement existing squadrons equipped with the "F-86 Sabre". At Baden, 414 Squadron (Sabres) was replaced by 419 Squadron flying CF-100s. Air Division "Sabre" squadrons were converted to the "CF-104 Starfighter " beginning in 1962. The "Canuck" squadrons were disbanded byDecember 31 of that year. The "Starfighter" units changed the RCAF's original mission from fighter/interceptor to nuclear strike/reconnaissance.In 1963 the Government of France announced that all nuclear weapons located on French soil (NATO or French) would be controlled by France itself. This was unacceptable to the RCAF (and other NATO units stationed in France), so the nuclear-capable 421 Squadron at 2 Wing was hastily moved in the fall of 1963 to Baden and the similarly equipped 430 Squadron at 2 Wing moved to Zweibrücken. Remaining non-nuclear armed units in France were repositioned to RCAF Station Marville.
In March 1966 the Government of France announced that it would be withdrawing its military forces from NATO and that current NATO units based in France must leave or fall under French military command. This forced the RCAF to look for a home in Western Europe for 1 Wing and 1 Air Division Headquarters. They settled on Base Aérienne 139 Lahr-Hugsweier which the Armée de l'Air was vacating as per the French government's announced withdrawal from NATO military integrated organisation. RCAF personnel, aircraft and equipment were transferred to the new
RCAF Station Lahr by March 1967 with dependents to follow later.CFB Baden-Soellingen
On
February 1 ,1968 the RCAF merged with theRoyal Canadian Navy (RCN) andCanadian Army to form the unifiedCanadian Forces . RCAF Station Baden-Soellingen was renamed Canadian Forces Base Baden-Soellingen, or CFB Baden-Soellingen. As part of an effort to remove duplication and cut the defence budget following unification of the services, Zweibrücken was closed with its units consolidating at Lahr and Baden.Further defence cuts and consolidation saw the Canadian Army (then renamed to Force Mobile Command) units of
4 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group based inSoest area of northern West Germany moved toCFB Lahr . However, amechanised infantry battalion was stationed alongside the fighter squadrons at Baden-Soellingen:
*1970-1977: 3rd Mechanized Commando,The Canadian Airborne Regiment
*1977-1984: 3rd Battalion,The Royal Canadian Regiment
*1984-1988: 2nd Battalion,Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry
*1988-1993: 3rd Battalion, The Royal Canadian RegimentIn addition, there was also a communications squadron, and after 1987, an air defence battery. A multi-force airfield repair unit formed in the late 80s to fix the runways if needed.
The cuts resulted in a drawback of the air force from 6 squadrons to 3 which were reorganized under the new 1 Canadian Air Group banner.
The ramp-up in defence spending during renewed
Cold War tensions in the late 1970s and 1980s saw CFB Baden-Soellingen receive much-needed new infrastructure, including updated quarters for its personnel and their dependents. The year 1984 saw squadrons at CFB Baden-Soellingen begin to re-equip from the "CF-104 Starfighter " to the "CF-18 Hornet " with 1986 being the close-out year for the "Starfighter" on base.In October 1989 the
Berlin Wall came down and by the end of the year Germany had reunited, thawing Cold War tensions and removing the role for Canada's active units stationed in Western Europe under NATO command.Gulf War deployment
In September 1990 it was announced that an augmented 409 Squadron, and an infantry company from the 3rd Battalion,
The Royal Canadian Regiment , would deploy from CFB Baden-Soellingen to a base inQatar as part of Operation Desert Shield along with some airfield security personnel. In December it was announced that 439 Squadron would deploy from Baden Soellingen to replace 409 in Qatar. Aircraft from 439 Squadron were involved in air patrols and air-to-ground missions duringOperation Desert Storm in January-February 1991, firing the first war shots by a Canadian military aircraft since theKorean War .UNPROFOR deployment
The last major deployment from CFB Baden Soellingen occurred in April 1992, when infantry soldiers from November Company of
The Royal Canadian Regiment were deployed to aUnited Nations peacekeeping mission in the disintegrating country ofYugoslavia . November Company's deployment was the first of many that the Canadian Forces would undertake to the nation under the banner ofUNPROFOR (United Nations Protection Force). On the first night inSirac ,Croatia , November Company came under direct mortar fire and was hit by 10-25 shells. In June 1992, the company was re-located to SectorSarajevo , and fell under the command ofGeneral MacKenzie . November Company was ordered to break through to and seizeSarajevo Airport for UNPROFOR to use for transporting food and supplies to civilians in the city.The post-
Cold War defence cuts of the early 1990s identified both CFB Baden-Soellingen and CFB Lahr for closure by 1994. The airfield at CFB Baden Soellingen closed onMarch 31 ,1993 and several of its squadrons were disbanded with the aircraftmothballed in Canada. By summer 1993 most personnel had vacated CFB Baden-Soellingen with the base becoming a detachment of CFB Lahr, whose personnel had also largely vacated byAugust 31 ,1993 . During the final months, Baden-Soellingen operated largely as a detachment of CFB Lahr and was permanently closed onDecember 31 ,1993 . CFB Lahr would continue on until being officially closed 9 months later onAugust 31 ,1994 .Notes
All Canadian military
veterans who served in Germany were bestowed theSpecial Service Medal with theNATO Bar . The Government of Canada has designated this as aWar Medal .A Canadian housing area near the base was named Kleinkanada in German, or "Little Canada".
Notable natives
*
Douglas Coupland , Canadian writer (b. 1961)
*Ann-Marie MacDonald , Canadian writer (b. 1958)
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