Jalibah Southeast Air Base
Jalibah Southeast Air Base or Jalibah Air Base was a former military airport of the Iraqi Air Force. It is located around south east of Baghdad. According to a report by the RAF, it had a main runway and two parallel taxiways as well as hardened air shelters in each corner of the Airbase
History
Operation Desert Storm - Air War phase
During the early days of the war, the RAF identified Jalibah as a Main Operating Base for Iraqi MiG-23s and MiG-29s. On the morning 18 January 1991, eight RAF Tornados from Dhahran took off to attack Jalibah's Runways and HASs with JP233s, with USAF EF-111As and F-4G Wild Weasel aircraft providing SEAD support. Originally, these aircraft was supposed to attack a Scud missile site but the sortie was cancelled due to it being daylight. The No.4 Tornado had to turn back due to mechanical problems while remaining refuelled from a VC-10 tanker and approached to the target area. The attack occurred 5:00AM and 5:15AM, with no anti-aircraft fire being encountered until south from an ammunition dump. Two other aircraft failed to deliver their weapons, including the No.3 aircraft which accidentally dropped its bombs north of the air base although the rest of attack when as planned.A Muharraq-Bahrain based RAF Tornado strike occurred on the evening of 21 January. This strike was conducted at medium altitude with aircraft using each eight 1,000 pound bombs and was supported by four USAF F-4Gs and two F-15C Eagles. Several SAMs were launched although the RAF pilots concluded that the SAMs were most likely unguided. Several hours later, the first Dhahran RAF Tornado medium level strike occurred on Jalibah, each aircraft carrying five 1,000 pound bombs.