The geography of the US-British military relationship is, by any measure, remarkable. American forces maintain a significant presence across a range of British military facilities, reflecting decades of cooperation and a shared strategic outlook that has shaped the security landscape of the post-war world. The Iran conflict brought that geography into sharp and sometimes uncomfortable focus.
Fairford in Gloucestershire is perhaps the most significant American-capable base on the British mainland. Designed to accommodate large strategic bombers, it has been used by American aircraft on numerous previous occasions — for operations over the Balkans in the 1990s, for missions related to the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, and now, more controversially, for operations linked to Iran.
Diego Garcia, the British overseas territory in the Indian Ocean, occupies a different strategic register. Its remote location, combined with its proximity to both the Middle East and South Asia, makes it one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in the global military geography. American forces have operated from there for decades, and its role in the Iran conflict was significant.
Britain’s initial refusal to grant access to both facilities was therefore a meaningful act of non-cooperation — one that had genuine operational implications for the American campaign. The eventual reversal allowed operations to proceed, but not before the diplomatic damage had been done and publicly aired.
The episode drew attention to the complex architecture of US-British military cooperation — and to the degree to which that cooperation depends not just on the hardware of bases and aircraft, but on the software of political will and mutual trust.