Going back to a message you posted in January:
puddlepirate wrote:Source: The Times; Dec 9 1980; Page 6; Col E: (electronic and microfilm copies of The Times are available in almost all UK libraries so this can be verified)
Article headed: Polish crisis behind NATO decision to keep five-ship force together over Christmas holiday
"NATO's standing naval force in the north Atlantic is being kept in European waters instead of dispersing for Christmas, officials confirm here today......" the article goes on to say "...uncertainty over the outcome of the Polish crisis is the reason."
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STANAVFORLANT (Standing Naval Force Atlantic) comprised five ships. Amongst them were HMS Norfolk (UK) and USS Valdez (US) plus a Canadian ship HMCS Fraser. The Dutch and German ships which made up the remainder of the force sailed to their home ports but the British, US and Canadiian ships remained at Portsmouth, UK.
If the sitiuation was serious enough for STANAVFORLANT to remain in European waters then the situation was almost certainly serious enough for the two major USAF bases in the UK to be on alert.
I learnt recently that Dave Clarke had looked into this a while back. He has emailed me with what he found:
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On 5 July 2005 they [Royal Navy] sent me a copy of HMS Norfolk's logbook for 20-30 December 1980. For the entire Christmas week the ship was moored in dry dock in Portsmouth; no exercises, no sailings. Re my question for info on "any Royal navy exercises manouevres or operations that took place in the North Sea, English Channel or Thames Estuary, 20-30 December 1980" the answer was: "As you would expect the bulk of the non-deployed fleet was in port for Christmas leave. Exercise Teamwork 1980 included activity in the English Channel, but this took place in September."
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Make what you will of that reference to "non-deployed fleet".
Ian