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1990 British Army Gazelle shootdown

1990 British Army Gazelle shootdown
Part of The Troubles and Operation Banner
File:Derrygorry 1990.jpg
British Army personnel inspecting the Gazelle's wreckage
1990 British Army Gazelle shootdown is located in Northern Ireland
1990 British Army Gazelle shootdown
Location between Augher and Derrygorry,
Republic of Ireland–United Kingdom border
Coordinates 54°24′48″N 7°03′30″W / 54.41333°N 7.05833°W / 54.41333; -7.05833Coordinates: 54°24′48″N 7°03′30″W / 54.41333°N 7.05833°W / 54.41333; -7.05833
Date 11 February 1990
16:30 (GMT)
Target British Army helicopter
Attack type
Shooting
Deaths 0
Non-fatal injuries
3 soldiers
Perpetrator Provisional IRA

On 11 February 1990, an active service unit of the Provisional IRA East Tyrone Brigade shot down a British Army Gazelle helicopter (serial number ZB687) along the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. It took place between Augher in County Tyrone and Derrygorry in County Monaghan. The helicopter was hit several times by heavy machine-gun fire and crash-landed on an open field, injuring three members of its crew of four.

Since early December 1989, the British Army had been on alert in and around County Tyrone after a credible threat was made by a suspected member of the IRA about an imminent attack. On 13 December, a major assault took place when an IRA team raided a permanent vehicle checkpoint manned by members of the King's Own Scottish Borderers (KOSB) regiment near Derryard, County Fermanagh, a few yards from the border with the Republic. Two soldiers were killed in an attack that involved the use of machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and a flamethrower. While British officials focused on members of the IRA from County Monaghan, in the Republic, supported by others from Clogher, County Tyrone, author Ed Moloney asserts that the culprit was a flying column made up of IRA volunteers from different brigades, commanded by the East Tyrone Brigade's Michael "Pete" Ryan, who himself was shot dead in 1991 in the Coagh ambush. The execution of hit-and-run raids by the IRA was "professional" and "calculating", according to British military sources.


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