Portsmouth News

Navy officer’s Kabul role recognised by the Queen

- Hollie Busby hollie.busby@jpress.co.uk @hollie_busby_

A NAVY officer instrument­al in planning the evacuation from Kabul as the Taliban took control of Afghanista­n last summer has been awarded an accolade.

Lieutenant Commander Will Durbin, 35, found himself thrust into organising the dangerous operation to airlift thousands of British and Afghan civilians out of the country last August.

His efforts during Operation Pitting – the UK codename for the evacuation – earned him the Queen’s Commendati­on for Valuable Service in the latest Operationa­l Honours announced by the Ministry of Defence.

The naval officer, from Clanfield, was posted to Qatar as a liaison officer between the Royal Navy and RAF. He is now serving aboard Portsmouth-based destroyer HMS Duncan as the senior warfare officer.

He assisted with operations across a vast area from Cyprus to Afghanista­n.

The air base at Al Udeid is the hub of the Royal Air Force’s mission in the region – and Lt Cdr Durbin was expecting air operations to focus on Operation Shader, the destructio­n of ISIS forces in Syria and Iraq – including strikes from UK flagship HMS Queen Elizabeth passing through the region as part of her maiden deployment.

After a short time at the headquarte­rs, he found himself as the de facto Chief of Staff Operations planning – and conducting – the largest airborne evacuation in decades.

Although the 30-or-sostrong team had done some planning for a possible evacuation, it was never on the scale – or at the pace – that events on the ground in Afghanista­n panned out.

Lieutenant Commander Will Durbin said: ‘As the RN liaison officer, the pace of operations increased significan­tly from arriving in post starting with the Carrier Strike Group arriving in area, and culminatin­g in the

Non Combatant Evacuation Operation from Kabul.

‘At the height of the operation we were running twice the planned number of flights in and out of Kabul – eight to ten a day – which meant long days, returning to your bed in the early hours of the morning, up again to be ready for the next briefing a few hours later.’

He hails from a naval family – his father was in the Royal Navy and his mother in the US Navy.

During Will’s service, spanning more than 13 years, he has served around the UK on Fishery Protection and anti-submarine duties, in the Falklands on patrols with HMS Clyde, with assault ship HMS Albion on an amphibious deployment to the Baltics and Mediterran­ean, and taught navigation to trainees at HMS Collingwoo­d in Fareham.

The father of three found the demanding operationa­l tour last summer one of the most rewarding of his career in the Royal Navy.

He added: ‘To witness the relief and joy of those being evacuated from Kabul, particular­ly the children, brought home the importance of our efforts in the operation. To hear the laughter of children as they were able to take their minds off their recent ordeal was a poignant moment for us all.

‘I really enjoy being at sea, and the opportunit­ies and experience­s the navy has given me. Here we could see the immediate effects of our work and actions.’

 ?? ?? Lieutenant Commander Will Durbin in front of HMS Duncan
Lieutenant Commander Will Durbin in front of HMS Duncan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom