MULTINATIONAL FORCE AND OBSERVERS


The 'Multinational Force and Observers' (MFO) is an international peacekeeping force overseeing the terms of the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel.

Contents
Background
Mission
Organization
States involved
Uniforms
Military
Civilian observers
Chronology
January 1982
April 1982
February 1984
March 1985
December 1985
April 1986
December 1989
March 1990
January 1993
August 1994
January 1995
September 1995
August 2005
February 2006
April 2006
May 2007
Sinai Peacekeeping Zones
Zone C
Images
External link
References

Background


On March 26 1979 the Camp David Accords were signed by Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat under the sponsorship of United States President Jimmy Carter.
Following the signing of the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty, the United Nations was asked to provide the peacekeeping forces for the Sinai Peninsula mandated in the treaty. The terms of the treaty required the presence of international peacekeepers to ensure that both Israel and Egypt kept to the provisions regarding military build-up along the border. [1]
Initially, the peacekeeping force was provided by the US Sinai Field Mission, while efforts were made to create a UN force.
On May 18 1981 the President of the UN Security Council indicated that the UN would be unable to provide the force, due to the threat of a veto of the motion by the USSR at the request of Syria.
As a result of the UN Security Council impasse, Egypt, Israel and the United States opened negotiations to set up a peacekeeping organization outside the framework of the UN. On August 3 1981, the Protocol to the Treaty of Peace was signed, establishing the Multinational Force and Observers. [1]

Mission


The mission of the MFO is:
"...to supervise the implementation of the security provisions of the Egyptian-Israeli Treaty of Peace and employ best efforts to prevent any violation of its terms." [3]

This is accomplished by carrying out four tasks:

★ Operating checkpoints, observation posts and conducting reconnaissance patrols on the international border as well as within Zone C,

★ Verification of the terms of the peace treaty not less than twice a month,

★ Verification of the terms of the peace treaty within 48 hours, upon the request of either party,

★ Ensuring freedom of international marine navigation in the Strait of Tiran and access to the Gulf of Aqaba
Over the three decades that the MFO has carried out its mission it has proven a highly successful force. The desire for peace on the part of both Egypt and Israel, combined with the effectiveness of the MFO, has resulted in a durable and lasting state of peace between these two nations.[4]

Organization


The MFO has its main headquarters in Rome, where it is headed by the 'Director-General'. It also has two regional offices, in Tel Aviv and Cairo, while the Force itself is based in Zone C on the Sinai Peninsula, under the command of the 'Force Commander'.
The Force Commander is responsible for the military elements of the MFO, which comprise:

★ Headquarters

★ Three infantry battalions

★ Support battalion

★ Coastal Patrol Unit

★ Rotary Wing Aviation Unit

★ Transport unit

★ Engineers unit

Military Police Unit

★ Flight Following (Air Traffic control) Unit
The Observer contingent of the MFO is made up of civilians seconded to the peacekeeping force. The observers are mostly retired US military and State Department personnel.

States involved


The personnel for these come from a total of eleven states:

★ - 25 personnel based at Force HQ (departing in 1986 and returning in 1993 replaced in the interim by a contingent from the United Kingdom) [5]

★ - 28 personnel based at Force HQ and Flight Following Unit [6]

★ - Infantry battalion (Colbatt)- 358 personnel

★ - Infantry battalion (Fijibatt)- 329 personnel

★ - 15 personnel based at Force HQ and with the fixed wing unit

★ - Military Police unit (41 personnel)

★ - Coastal patrol unit (75 personnel, 3 ships)

★ - 27 personnel divided between support battalion and Training and Advisory Team

★ - 3 personnel based at Force HQ

★ - The US contributes three units:


★ Force HQ - 27 personnel


★ Infantry Battalion (USbatt)- 425 personnel


★ Support Battalion - 235 personnel (Currently the 1st U.S. Army Support Battalion) consisting of:



★ Headquarters



★ Aviation Company



★ Medical Company



★ Explosive Ordnance Disposal Detachment

★ - 87 personnel with Transport and Engineering Unit

★ - Until 1995 provided Military Police and a Communications Squadron and were replaced by Hungary

Uniforms


Military

Military personnel serving with the MFO wear national military dress appropriate to the climactic conditions of the Sinai. All contingents wear national flags or crests to identify their country of origin.
MFO crests are sewn on uniforms to identify the wearer as a member of the force. All military members of the force wear a terracotta-colored beret or field service peaked cap. Some contingents, such as Colombia, also wear terracotta neck scarves.
The terracotta beret is unique to the MFO and was selected to show that the force is not a United Nations peacekeeping force. UN peacekeeping forces wear a distinctive light blue beret.
Civilian observers

The civilian observers employed by the MFO wear highly visible orange coveralls while carrying out their treaty verification duties.

Chronology


January 1982

Approximately 160 soldiers from Fort Bragg, North Carolina were deployed to the Sinai. The mission of this augmented company size unit was to establish support facilities in preparation for the upcoming arrival of the infantry battalions to monitor the peace. This was not a typical US Army logistical company. Initially those who deployed were required to wear civilian clothing, due to the security threat. They arrived in the middle of the night and were bussed to Etam, Air Base, Israel. This Air Base would later be renamed El Gorah after the April 25, 1982 transfer of the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt. These soldiers were to prepare to assume the mission of the Sinai Field Mission. The goal was to establish a command structure, fixed and rotary aircraft support, parts support, water and petroleum supply, medical, logistics for the Multinational Force which would later assume the mission.
Upon arrival they were initially housed in several buildings which were in existence as part of Etam Airbase. It was several months before permanent buildings were in place.
April 1982

The MFO assumed its mandate on April 25 1982, the day Israel handed over sovereignty of the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt. In 1995 the United States experimented with a composite battalion consisting of National Guard soldiers from Virginia and Maryland, and Regular Army soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division and the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault). In April 2006, the Third Army Central Coalition Forces Land Component Command (CLFCC) assumed responsibility of the 1st Corps Support Command (1st COSCOM) from the XVIII Airborne Corps and re-designated it as the 1st Sustainment Command (Theater). Since January 2002, the United States has been supplying National Guard Infantry battalions.
February 1984

MFO Director-General Leamon Hunt is assassinated in Rome while sitting in his chauffeur-driven armored car, outside the gates of his private residence. The assassins poured automatic weapon fire into the reinforced rear window until they were able to penetrate the glass and strike the director-general in the head. Credit for the assassination was claimed by Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Faction the Red Brigade.
March 1985

Due to the imminent end of the four year Australian MFO commitment in April 1986, the governments of Israel, Egypt and the United States invited Canada to provide a contingent. Canada agreed to replace Australia in the MFO and to supply a helicopter squadron, staff officers and a flight following section of air traffic controllers totally 136 military personnel. The Canadian Contingent (CCMFO) was brought on strength of the Canadian Forces on Sepember 26 1985. [7]
December 1985

A chartered Arrow Air DC-8 with two hundred and forty eight returning members of the US 101st Airborne Division and eight flight crew crashed into the cold, damp landscape at the end of runway 22 at Gander International Airport in Gander, Newfoundland, with no survivors. The 101st was rotating home from a tour of duty with the MFO. The accepted theory is that the crash was caused by ice accumulation on the leading surfaces of the wings, but debate and speculation still rages that the crash may have resulted from some type of incendiary device placed on the plane.
April 1986

The Australian contingent, consisting of staff officers and a helicopter squadron who were members of the initial deployment, withdrew in the course of their government's reduction of its peacekeeping commitments. They were replaced by the CCMFO Canadian Rotary Wing Aviation Unit, equipped with nine CH135 Twin Hueys, staff officers and flight following. The CCMFO was operational at El Gorah on March 31 1986. Canadian tactical helicopter units rotated to El Gorah for six month tours of duty. The primary units proving military personnel were 408, 427 and 430 Tactical Helicopter Squadrons and 403 Helicopter Operational Training Squadron. [8]
December 1989

A Canadian CH135 helicopter on a maintenance test flight crashes one mile north of El Gorah. Both crew members are injured, one seriously.
March 1990

After four years with the MFO the Canadian helicopter squadron was withdrawn. This was due primarily to Canada accepting a new commitment to send a helicopter squadron to Central America with a UN peacekeeping force. This left 28 Canadian Staff Officers and Air Traffic Controllers in the flight following role with the MFO, a commitment which continues to the present day.
January 1993

The Australians, who had been replaced by a British contingent, returned to the mission, and the British contingent withdrew.
August 1994

Australian MFO members were involved in a hit-and-run accident that they failed to report. The incident came to light when one of the vehicle passengers reported it after he'd been returned to Australia.
January 1995

The 4-505 PIR assume duties as USBATT. This battalion is composed of Reservists and National Guardsmen in addition to active duty soldiers. The US Army used this group as a test to see if reservists could take over the mission in the future.
September 1995

A Hungarian contingent arrived to serve as the Force Military Police Unit. The Hungarians replaced the Dutch contingent, and as well as military police include two members of the Force staff, a doctor and a liaison officer.
August 2005

An MFO vehicle carrying two members of the Canadian contingent was badly damaged, the results of an IED attack. The Canadians were only slightly injured.
February 2006

MFO U.S. Aviation Contingent assisted Egyptian authorities in the rescue and recovery efforts of survivors of the al-Salam Boccaccio 98, a ferry that sank near Safaga, Egypt, in the Red Sea. The ferry was enroute to Safaga from Duba, Saudi Arabia.
April 2006

A suicide bomber attacked an MFO vehicle as it was returning to the North Camp base at El Gorah from the Rafah border crossing. Inside the vehicle was a Norwegian and a New Zealander, MFO members, and two Egyptian officials. The vehicle was damaged, but there were no casualties besides the bomber himself. Half an hour later, a second bomber attacked an Egyptian police vehicle in the same area, with similar results.
May 2007

A DeHavilland DHC-6 Twin Otter aircraft crashed in the middle of the peninsula, 80km South of the town of Nakhl. Eight French and one Canadian passengers and crew were killed. The aircraft reported trouble with one engine and was attempting an emergency landing on a highway when it struck a truck. It crashed and exploded moments later. The driver of the truck escaped unharmed.
The aircraft was operated by the French air force as their contribution to the MFO. It made regular flights between the two main MFO bases at El Gorah and Sharm el-Sheik, as well as conducting observation missions as part of the MFO's mandate.

Sinai Peacekeeping Zones


The Sinai Peninsula

Article 2 of Annex I of the Peace Treaty called for the Sinai Peninsula to be divided into zones. Within these zones, Egypt and Israel were permitted varying degrees of military build-up:

★ Zone A: Between the Suez Canal and 'Line A'. Egypt is permitted a mechanized infantry division with a total of 22,000 troops in Zone A.

★ Zone B: Between 'Line A' and 'Line B'. Egypt is permitted four border security battalions to support the civilian police in Zone B.

★ Zone C: Between 'Line B' and the Egypt-Israel border. Only the MFO and the Egyptian civilian police are permitted within Zone C.

★ Zone D: Between the Egypt-Israel border and 'Line D'. Israel is permitted four infantry battalions in Zone D.
Within Zone C there are two main installations:

★ North Camp is at El Gorah, 37 km south east of El Arish, and is the location of the military Force HQ.

★ South Camp is located between the towns of Sharm el Sheikh and Naama Bay.
In addition there are thirty smaller sites at various points within Zone C. One remote observation post (OP 3-11) is located offshore on Tiran Island, which is part of Saudi Arabia, requiring resupply by air or by sea.
Zone C

Zone C is subdivided into sectors, each controlled by a Sector Control Center. The sectors are numbered from north to south and assigned:

★ Sectors 1 and 2 - Fijibatt

★ Sectors 2 and 4 - Colbatt

★ Sectors 5, 6 and 7 - USbatt.[9]

Images



External link



MFO official site

References


1. Canadian Contingent Multinational Force and Observers Handbook, 10 Tactical Air Group, July 1987 (unclassified) pg A-1
2. Canadian Contingent Multinational Force and Observers Handbook, 10 Tactical Air Group, July 1987 (unclassified) pg A-1
3. Multinational Force and Observers Website accessed 30 August 2007
4. Canadian Contingent Multinational Force and Observers Handbook, 10 Tactical Air Group, July 1987 (unclassified) pg D-1
5. Australian Government Defence Website
6. Op Calumet Canadian DND Webpage
7. Canadian Contingent Multinational Force and Observers Handbook, 10 Tactical Air Group, July 1987 (unclassified) pg 1
8. Canadian Contingent Multinational Force and Observers Handbook, 10 Tactical Air Group, July 1987 (unclassified) pg 1 and A-4
9. Canadian Contingent Multinational Force and Observers Handbook, 10 Tactical Air Group, July 1987 (unclassified) A-4 and A-5


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