The emergence of new regiments of combat helicopters equipped with Mi-24A from 1973 on and then additional regiments flying the Mi-24D from the late
1970's did not fail to worry NATO. One of these new regiments arrived at Nohra in 1979 and it of course attracted the attention of the Western military liaison missions.
A French team consisting of an officer and two non-commissioned officers of the French Air Force (Armée de l'Air) belonging to the French Military Liaison Mission
(FMLM) from Potsdam was the victim of a "blocking" (1) near that airfield some months later.
Here's the story, compiled thanks to the research Christian Handwerck conducted
in the Stasi archives and with the testimony of one of those directly involved, then Warrant Officer Jean-Yves Prat.
(1)
The term "blocking" was used by the French to describe the neutralization of a FMLM vehicle by the Soviets.
As a matter of fact, their vehicle was then unable to escape, hence the term "blocking". (2)
The 336th Separate Combat Helicopter Regiment (OBVP) was formed on October 13, 1978 in Berdyansk, based on elements of the former
163rd Training Aviation Regiment (UAP) from the Navigation Higher School of Military Aviation (VVAUSh). The 336.OBVP was transferred to Nohra between
the 22nd and the 30th May 1979. In 1980, the following units were based at Nohra airfield:
- 336.OBVP (Mi-8 / Mi-24)
- 298.OVE BU (Mi-2 / Mi-8 / Mi-22)
- Other separate helicopter squadron? (Mi-2 / Mi-8) (3)
We remembered the detention of a French crew for several days and attempts at political exploitation by the GDR authorities after the death (real or fictional)
of an NVA NCO as a result of an accident with one of our vehicles. (4)
The mission restriction signs displayed a message written in English, French, Russian and German stating that passage of the "foreign military liaison missions" was forbidden.
They were placed by the Soviets and especially the Germans at locations that did not necessarily correspond to permanently restricted areas (PRA) or temporary restricted areas
(TRA). These signs were not recognized by the Allied missions. The only areas recognized as restricted were the PRAs and TRAs. Nearly 10,000 of these signs had been "planted" by
1980 and their number had reached about 30,000 when the Berlin Wall fell. About a hundred of them were destroyed by the three Allied missions each year. (5)
The akt was a statement aimed at trying to inform the mission crew that it had violated the rules related to the missions. It was out of the question for the crews
to sign such a statement. Most of the time, they were released after a few hours.