The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

On frontline in Cold War

History: New book reveals north radar station’ s key role in keeping UK safe

- BY NEIL DRYSDALE

During the Cold War that once appeared to threaten the world with destructio­n, a windswept radar station played a key role in keeping the UK safe.

The Royal Air Force station Saxa Vord opened in 1957 on Unst, on Scotland’s northernmo­st extremity and sits at the same latitude as Anchorage in Alaska.

It was a testing posting for RAF personnel and was highlighte­d as a potential target for bombing had foreign powers pressed the nuclear button.

And as historian Trevor Royle’s new book, Facing The Bear reveals, the station played a key role

“It was an integral part of the country’s defences”

in protecting the UK.

Mr Royle, a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, was a member of the Scottish Government’s advisory panel for commemorat­ing the First World War.

His work highlighte­d how the threat of nuclear confrontat­ion with the Soviet Union was an everyday reality for millions of people across the world.

It explores Scotland’s involvemen­t in the Cold War, which lasted from the end of the Second World War to the disintegra­tion of the Eastern Bloc in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Had Britain come under attack, the first point of contact would have been at Saxa Vord, which was eventually mothballed in 2005, only to be reactivate­d in 2017 as an unmanned radar station to provide improved coverage of the airspace in the region.

It was hardly a dream posting for RAF staff, but it was vital as the station came into regular contact with enemy bombers.

The station’s activities are described in Mr Royle’s book, which references much recently declassifi­ed official informatio­n.

He said: “It was never populated by more than 200 service personnel, but RAF Saxa Vord was one of the service’s most challengin­g postings.

“RAF figures claim that between 1957 and 1987 the station controlled 442 separate sorties, resulting in the intercepti­on of more than 800 Soviet bombers and reconnaiss­ance aircraft. It was an integral part of the country’s defences in a period when Scotland was called upon to play a key role in Nato’s defence strategy.

“In the spring of 1989, just months before the collapse of the Warsaw Pact that presaged the end of the Cold War, Air ViceMarsha­l David Brook, the senior RAF commander in Scotland, described Scotland as the ‘forward base’ in the UK.”

Two decades earlier, the men on Unst were fulfilling a vital, but dangerous role.

Mr Royle added: “This was recognised in 1972 when a secret government report, listing possible targets in the event of a nuclear war, revealed Saxa Vord would probably be hit by a three-megaton bomb.

“It is a remarkable place. The former RAF station and its successor stands on the same latitude as Anchorage in Alaska and is further north than St Petersburg.

“From the hill above the Burra Firth, the visitor looks north across the grey waters of the Norwegian Sea and, ignoring Muckle Flugga and Out Stack, there is no other land mass before the Arctic polar cap and the North Pole. From that vantage, Saxa Vord is the end of all things.”

Facing The Bear will be published by Birlinn next month.

 ??  ?? KEEN LOOK-OUT: RAF Saxa Vord radar station on Unst guarded against intrusion by Soviet bombers
KEEN LOOK-OUT: RAF Saxa Vord radar station on Unst guarded against intrusion by Soviet bombers

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