How 2 Secret IDF Airbases in Iraq Were Exposed & Why IDF Practiced Greece Sorties
The explosive revelations published by The Wall Street
Journal and The New York Times few weeks back exposed one of the
most daring, highly classified, and politically explosive covert operations in
recent Middle Eastern history. The construction and defense of two secret
Israeli military bases inside Iraq’s western Al Anbar province is being
considered integral to US & Israel Vs Iran war. Note that distance between
Israel (Tel Aviv) and Iran (Tehran) is near about 1600 kms or 900+ miles. Operating
right under the nose of Baghdad, and directly tied to the escalating regional
wars with Iran; these 2 clandestine installations completely shocked Iraqi
politics and military.
1. How the 2 Airbases Were Exposed
The 2 airbases were exposed when an Iraqi man Awwad
al-Shammari (also spelled Awad al-Shammari), a local Bedouin
shepherd was searching for missing sheep. al-Shammari stumbled upon the hidden
outpost while traveling in the desert looking for missing sheep. He had seen a
couple of couple of helicopters flying in very low from Jordanian side into
Iraq. They were flying so low, he recognized Israeli markings.
After he reported his findings, an Israeli military
helicopter targeted and opened fire on his pickup truck to prevent the base's
location from being compromised. His family later discovered his burned vehicle
and body in the desert. When his family reported the death to Iraqi authorities
they came to investigate and were fired upon. That’s how the 2 bases were
exposed.
2. Where Were the Two Bases?
Rather than traditional, massive air force installations,
these 2 were highly specialized, austere makeshift Forward Operating Bases (FOBs)
and logistics hubs.
a.
The First Base (Nukhayb Desert):- Located in the Nukhayb desert region
of Al Anbar province, roughly 180 kms (112 miles) southwest of the holy city of
Karbala. Open-source intelligence (OSINT) analysts tracking satellite imagery
later identified a makeshift airstrip constructed directly onto a dry lakebed.
b. The Second Base:- Discovered shortly after the first, this outpost was located
deeper within Iraq’s vast western desert. While its exact geographic
coordinates remain classified, its infrastructure mirrored the first.
3. Purpose and Capabilities
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) designed these 2 outposts to
solve a massive geographical hurdle; the distance to Iran. The 2 bases
served several critical functions:
a. Search and Rescue (SAR): They housed Elite Israeli Air Force (IAF) special
forces and helicopters poised to rescue and provide immediate medical treatment
to downed Israeli pilots shot over enemy territory.
b. Logistical Reductions: By having fuel, advanced jamming equipment, and
surveillance systems stationed directly in western Iraq, Israel drastically cut
down flight times and refuelling friction for long-range strike missions into
Iran.
4. Timeline - When Did They Start Operating?
The lifespan of these 2 bases spans across multiple major
regional conflicts.
a. Inception & Construction - Late 2024
Amidst the growing 2024 Iran–Israel conflict, the IDF begins
clandestinely constructing the first makeshift base in the remote western
desert of Iraq.
b. Operation & The Twelve-Day War - June 2025
The bases become fully operational in 2025. They are heavily
utilized by the IAF to bolster long-range strike capabilities during the
Twelve-Day War in June 2025. By this time, the USA was fully aware of their
existence but chose to keep Baghdad in the dark.
c. The 2026 Iran War - February 2026
Following the formal outbreak of the US-Israeli war with Iran
on February 28, 2026, the bases are utilized heavily for logistics,
surveillance, and electronic jamming.
d. Fatal Discovery - March 3, 2026
The cover was blown when Awwad al-Shammari, a local Bedouin
shepherd, accidentally stumbled across the base. He alerts Iraqi local
authorities but is tragically spotted and killed by an Israeli helicopter to
preserve the base's secrecy.
e. The Clash & Exposure - March 4, 2026
The Iraqi Armed Forces dispatch three regiments from the
Karbala Operations Command to investigate. To protect the facility, Israeli
forces launched intense airstrikes against the approaching Iraqi troops,
killing one Iraqi soldier and wounding two forcing them to withdraw.
5. What Forced Closure
Following the armed clash with Iraqi forces in March 2026 and
the subsequent global media exposure in May 2026 by The Wall Street Journal
and The New York Times, the IDF completely dismantled and evacuated the
outposts.
As secrecy of the locations operated by Israeli Air Force
was compromised, Baghdad began heavily monitoring the vast Anbar desert. Also, due
to political pressure from Iran-backed militias and politicians in Iraq,
the positions became logistically and diplomatically untenable for Israel to
hold.
6. The Geopolitical Fallout
The revelation of these 2 air bases triggered a massive
political earthquake in the Middle East, primarily cantered around three main angles:
-
a. The Sovereignty Scandal in Baghdad
Iraq has no diplomatic relations with Israel; in fact, Iraqi
law criminalizes any promotion of Zionism with the death penalty. The fact that a foreign adversary-built
bases, operated military aircraft, and killed Iraqi soldiers on Iraqi soil
caused immense outrage. Iraqi lawmakers slammed the event as a "blatant
disregard for Iraqi sovereignty," leaving Caretaker Prime Minister
Muhammad Shia' Al-Sudani fighting for his political survival amid accusations
of incompetence or collusion.
b. The U.S. Complicity
Perhaps the most damaging revelation for Washington-Baghdad
relations is that the USA knew fully well about these bases since at least
mid-2025. Standard bilateral protocols dictated that the USA must inform
Iraq of foreign military activities on its soil. Instead, U.S. forces
reportedly went as far as persuading Iraq to temporarily disable its regional
radar systems under the guise of "protecting U.S. aircraft," which
effectively blinded Iraq's air defenses to the ongoing Israeli construction.
c. A New Era of Covert Warfare
The 2 Anbar province outposts represented a terrifyingly high
level of operational audacity by Israel. They prove that in modern,
fast-moving regional conflicts, nations are willing to breach the physical
borders of neutral third-party states to construct temporary,
"pop-up" military infrastructure directly on the doorstep of their
primary targets.
The 2 Airbases Detailed
Public records and investigative reporting from The Wall
Street Journal and Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) groups highlight how
the layout and spatial footprint of these clandestine sites were structured. Rather
than standard concrete-poured military complexes, these were ultra-minimalist,
high-utility tactical footprints hidden inside natural geographic depressions.
1. Map of Location & Environment
The primary base was established on a remote, completely flat
dry lakebed (sabkha) in the Al Anbar desert, roughly 155 miles southwest of
Baghdad and near the town of Al-Nukhayb.
2. Structural Specifications & Size
Investigative reports and satellite analysis estimated that
the footprint of the main Nukhayb site was deliberately kept narrow to ensure
low visibility from high-altitude commercial tracking.
|
Component |
Dimensions / Capacity |
Engineering Details |
|
Main Airstrip |
~1,800 to 2,100 meters long |
The unpaved hard-packed, naturally flat clay of dry lakebed
was graded just enough to allow rugged C-130 Hercules transport aircraft, CH-53
heavy-lift helicopters to land without kicking up huge debris. |
|
Tactical Perimeter |
Roughly 1.5 square kilometres |
Active military zone where personnel set up operations. Lacked
hard walls, fence, concrete barriers to avoid casting any shadow on satellite
passes. |
|
The "Ghost" Hub |
~6 to 8 heavy tactical tents |
Camouflaged shelter networks used for housing Israeli Air
Force (IAF) special forces, mobile field hospitals, and advanced satellite
communication units. |
3. Operational Layout (Functional Diagram)
As the 2 bases were built for "pop-up" logistical
assistance for long-range strike windows against Iran, so they were organized
strictly by tactical sections rather than permanent barracks: -
4. Key Layout Features
- Decentralization:
- Storage
bladders for aviation fuel and staging areas for Combat Search and Rescue
(CSAR) helicopters were kept 00s of meters away from the primary tents. If
an accidental cook-off or an artillery strike hit the fuel, the rest of
the outpost would remain intact.
- Zero
Permanent Footprint: - No asphalt was ever laid, and no concrete foundations were poured.
When the IDF completely evacuated the sites after 2026 expose, the
military tents and equipment were packed up in under 72 hours, leaving
behind only vehicle tracks on the clay.
Why Israeli Air Force Flew 900 kms Sorties to Greece
Conceptually, doctrinally, and operationally, the 900 km
sorties flown by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to Greece served as the
exact "familiarization moves" required to execute deep-strike
campaigns like the ones supported by the 2 secret bases in Iraq’s Anbar
Province. The connection boils down to geography, distance, and muscle
memory.
1. The 900+ Kilometre Link (The Math of a Strike)
The distance from central Israel to Athens or Crete is
roughly 900 to 1,100 kilometres. Coincidentally, the distance from Israel,
through Jordanian or Syrian airspace, deep into western Iraq is roughly 700 kms.
Onward to the Iranian border up to Tehran it is also roughly another 800
to 1,000 kilometres.
When the Israeli Air Force (IAF) heavily drills around 900 km
flights over the Mediterranean to Greece, they practiced what they called
"long-range operational models." As Israel lacks
"strategic depth"—meaning it’s too small to practice long-distance
flying without just doing loops—they use the long flight path to Greece
to simulate a real, straight-line deep-penetration mission into hostile Middle
Eastern airspace.
2. What the Greece Sorties Familiarize Pilots With
During the joint drills with the Hellenic Air Force, the IAF
explicitly trains for the exact factors that made the 2 Anbar airbases
necessary.
a. Aerial Refuelling at Distance: - The Greece sorties relied heavily on
Boeing KC-707 and KC-130 tankers refuelling F-15s and F-16s over
deep waters. If a tanker fails or an aircraft takes damage, having a
"pop-up" runway like the ones built in the Anbar desert
provides a critical emergency diversion point.
b. Low-Altitude Navigation & Live Fire: - In Greece, IAF pilots practiced
flying at ultra-low altitudes through challenging mountain terrain and weather
to avoid radar, the exact flight profiles used to slip into western Iraq
undetected.
c. Mental and Physical Fatigue: - Flying a fighter jet for hours,
maintaining radio silence, managing fuel to the exact pound, and immediately
engaging a target requires immense mental endurance. The Greece sorties were
used to build that specific endurance.
3. The Tactical Blueprint
In short, Greece is where Israel practiced the flight;
Anbar is where they placed the safety net.
a. Spatial Flight Route Diagram
The distance from central Israeli airbases (such as Tel Nof
or Hatzerim) to the Greek island of Crete or the mainland near Athens spans
roughly 900 to 1,100 kilometres entirely over open water.
4. Geographic Corridor Breakdown
The training route was specifically chosen to mirror the
exact logistics of the Anbar corridor.
a. The Maritime Transit: Departing Israeli fighter jets immediately hit open
airspace over the Mediterranean. This mimicked the vast, empty stretches of the
western Iraqi desert where ground-based navigation landmarks are sparse,
forcing pilots to rely strictly on instruments and long-range radar.
b. The Distance Equivalent: Slicing ~1,000 km across the sea to Greece required
almost the exact same flight profile, time and fuel consumption as flying
~1,000 km across Jordan and Iraq before flying towards the Iranian border.
c. Refuelling Stage: - Just like the secret bases in Anbar served as a logistical
safety net, these sorties over Mediterranean Sea required heavy aerial
refuelling coordination with Boeing tankers midway through the flight, training
pilots to handle low-fuel environments over extreme distances.
d. Rescue and Evacuation
If an Israeli fighter jet or helicopter suffered a mechanical
failure or ran dangerously low on fuel while returning from a strike on Iran,
it could not make the full journey back to Israel. The 900 km familiarization
drills taught the pilots how to manage deep theatre operations, while the
clandestine Anbar outposts provided the physical infrastructure—the fuel
bladders, the makeshift runways, and the Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR)
teams—to catch them if something went wrong.
5. Spatial Route Diagram
The total direct flight distance from Tel Aviv to Tehran
is roughly 1,550 kilometres (965 miles). By placing forward operating
bases in the western desert of Anbar, Iraq; the IDF sliced that distance by nearly
half, creating a staging area right in the middle of the corridor.
6. Geographic Route Breakdown
The typical operational flight path mapped across three
distinct sovereign airspaces: -
a. The Western Leg (Israel to Iraq): - IAF aircraft depart military
airbases in central or southern Israel, transiting directly eastward. They
cross Jordan or southernmost Syria to slip into the vast,
sparsely unmonitored desert of western Iraq.
b. The Midpoint Anchor (Anbar Province): - Located roughly 600–700 km out from
Israel, the Nukhayb desert site sits near the intersection points of the
Iraqi, Saudi, and Jordanian borders. This site acted as the tactical safety
net—providing emergency fuel bladders and special forces combat
search-and-rescue teams.
c. The Eastern Leg (Iraq to Iran): From the Anbar staging grounds, it
is an additional 850–950 km flight northeast over the Zagros Mountains
directly into the Iranian heartland and toward Tehran.
Having an operational footprint in Anbar meant that any
aircraft that sustained mechanical damage or running critically low on fuel on
the return journey from Tehran did not have to risk the hazardous 1,500+ km
flight all the way back to Israeli soil; they had a secure landing strip just
past the Jordanian border.
Because these bases were highly classified and built for
fast, temporary logistical use, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) intentionally
avoided pouring concrete foundations or constructing permanent barracks. Doing
so would create hard structural shadows visible on commercial satellite passes.
Instead, the accommodation consisted strictly of a dispersed, heavy-duty
network of tactical military tents.
7. How OSINT Analysts Used Satellite Data to Find Lakebed Airstrip
When The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times
first broke the story in May 2026, they relied heavily on open-source
intelligence (OSINT) analysts who had cracked the case using commercial
satellite data. Because the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) intentionally avoided
pouring concrete or building permanent structures to hide their tactical
footprint, finding the bases required detecting minute anomalies in the
landscape. OSINT investigators uncovered the primary Nukhayb desert airstrip by
focusing on specific satellite methodologies: -
a. Spotting Linear Geometry of a "Ghost" Runway
In a vast, rugged expanse like Iraq’s western desert, nature
rarely moves in perfectly straight lines. Independent OSINT analysts began
scanning high-resolution imagery provided by commercial vendors like Maxar and
Planet Labs around the coordinate coordinates 31.66697°N, 42.44864°E
(roughly 70 kilometres from the Saudi border).
What caught their attention was an unpaved dirt strip
stretching exactly 1.7 kilometres (approx. 5,500 feet). While it was
made entirely of hard-packed desert soil rather than asphalt, the edges were
perfectly graded and parallel—the exact specifications required to safely land
a heavy-lift C-130 Hercules transport aircraft or CH-53 helicopter without
tipping over.
b. Temporal Imagery (The "Before and After" Trick)
OSINT analysts used a technique called temporal analysis,
comparing historical satellite archives of the specific dry lakebed (sabkha)
over a multi-year period.
- The
Baseline:
Archives from 2022 and 2023 showed an empty, untouched desert floor.
- The
Anomaly: In
late 2024, sudden changes appeared. The natural crusted surface of the
lakebed had been scraped clear. The timing lined up directly with the
onset of the late 2024 Iran–Israel cross-border escalation, indicating a
sudden, urgent military necessity.
c. Detecting Vehicle Scars and Thermal Tracking
Even if troops take down tents and pack away equipment,
vehicles leave permanent scars on desert soil by breaking the top layer of
sun-baked crust. Satellite imagery revealed distinct tactical tracks: -
- The
"Yugo" Shelter Comparison: - Unlike sprawling Iraqi bases like Al-Asad
Airbase, which feature massive concrete "Yugo" shelters visible
from orbit, this site had zero permanent buildings.
- Heavy
Vehicle Tracking: - Analysts identified distinct turning loops at both ends of the dirt
strip, characteristic of large aircraft executing a turnaround after
landing.
- Dispersed
Clusters: - Off
to the sides of the runway, ground scarring indicated where heavy tactical
fuel bladders and communications tents had been pitched in highly
decentralized clusters to prevent a single drone strike from wiping out
the entire position.
d. Cross-Referencing the "March 4" Armed Clash
The final piece of the puzzle fell into place when OSINT
groups cross-referenced regional news reports. On March 4, 2026, local Iraqi
channels reported an "unidentified airstrip" and a firefight between
the Karbala Operations Command and an unknown force in the Nukhayb
desert.
By pinpointing the exact patrol sector where the Iraqi
regiments were pushed back by airstrikes, satellite hunters focused their
lenses on that specific quadrant of the Al Anbar Province of Iraq. Within days,
the exact coordinates of the graded lakebed runway were mapped, catalogued, and
published globally. It ultimately compromised the facility, completely exposed
USA and Jordan; and ultimately forcing the IDF to completely dismantle and
scrub the site clean. It seems IDF has lost major toehold in its attempt to
subjugate Iran, the sole obstacle in its dream of ‘Greater Israel’ as it
lost the 2 clandestine airbases in Iraq.
How 2 Secret IDF Airbases in Iraq Were Exposed & Why IDF Practiced Greece Sorties
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