RFA Olna (A123)
Template:Short description Template:Other ships Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English
Template:Infobox ship imageTemplate:Infobox ship careerTemplate:Infobox ship characteristicsTemplate:Infobox service recordRFA Olna (A123) was the third and final of the three Template:Sclass2 "fast fleet tanker" of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA), the naval auxiliary fleet of the United Kingdom. When she entered service she was one of the largest and fastest ships in the RFA Fleet. Olna saw service in the Falklands War and the Gulf War.
Her design was a development of the later Tide-class ships of the early 1960s. She was entered service in 1966 and served in the Royal Fleet Auxiliary for 34 years. Olna was the third ship to bear the name.
Design and description
Olna had a normal complement consisting 88 Royal Fleet Auxiliary personnel with provision for 40 Royal Navy personnel and she was armed with two 20 mm guns and two Corvus chaff launchers. She was designed to achieve a speed of Template:Convert with a fully loaded displacement of Template:Convert.<ref name="Ol Class">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The ship had the capability to supply fuel and other liquid cargo to vessels using four pairs of replenishment rigs which were located between the forward and aft superstructures. She was able to carry four types of fuels: Furnace Fuel Oil, Diesel, Avcat and Mogas. Limited supplies of lubricating oils, fresh water and dry stores could also be carried. She could operate Westland Wessex or Westland Sea King helicopters, or other helicopters of similar size, from a hangar and flight deck at the stern.<ref name="Ol Class"/>
Operational history
Olna entered service as the UK was pulling back from its final large imperial garrisons. Much of the ship's early life was spent supporting routine deployments around the world.
On 19 June 1966, Olna rescued 26 survivors from the Greek liberty ship the SS Zaneta, which had sunk in the Arabian Sea.<ref name="historicalrfa_olna"/> On 27 August she deployed to HMNB Devonport and was present at Plymouth Navy Days 1966.<ref name="helis_olna"/><ref name='Historical RFA'>Template:Cite news</ref>
From 20 September until 13 October 1968, Olna was deployed participating in Exercise Coral Sands which took place in the Solomon Sea, the Coral Sea and Shoalwater Bay, together with RFAs Template:RFAux, Template:RFAux and Template:RFAux, alongside the Royal Navy’s Template:HMS, Template:HMS, Template:HMS, Template:HMS, Template:HMS and Template:HMS, the Royal Australian Navy’s Template:HMAS, Template:HMAS and Template:HMAS, and the Royal New Zealand Navy’s Template:HMNZS.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
On 19 May 1971 she was involved in a collision with Regent, which occurred during a replenishment at sea (RAS), off Portland. A Template:Convert hole was discovered once the RAS was completed which was serious enough for Olna to be ordered to discharge and tank clean in Portsmouth. She then sailed to Southampton for emergency dry dock, returning later to anchor off Portland. The following day the Standing Naval Force Atlantic (STANAVFORLANT) flotilla left HMNB Portland. Hovering above the ships a Fleet Air Arm Westland Wessex HAS.1 helicopter, XM875, which was carrying five press photographers, lost power and ditched. Three photographers were killed in the incident.<ref name="historicalrfa_olna"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In July 1974 Olna was part of the Task Force including: the Template:Sclass Template:HMS with, No. 41 (Royal Marine) Commando, and RFA’s Template:RFAux, Template:RFAux and Template:RFAux, she stood by in Akritori Bay, off Cyprus, supporting evacuations,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> following a Greek junta-sponsored Cypriot coup d'état attempt and the subsequent Turkish invasion of Cyprus.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
On 17 September 1974 along with RFA’s Template:RFAux and Template:RFAux she sailed as part of Task Group 317.2 for a Far East deployment, led by the Royal Navy’s helicopter cruiser Template:HMS with the Leander-class frigates Template:HMS, Template:HMS and the lead ship Template:HMS, along with the Template:Sclasss Template:HMS and Template:HMS. Between 14 and 21 October the Task Group visited the South African Navy’s base at Simon’s Town, near Cape Town, en route.<ref name="helis_olna"/> On 10 and 11 March 1975 Olna was deployed to provide humanitarian aid, under Operation Faldage, she stood by off Kompong Som, Cambodia along with the helicopter cruiser Blake to evacuate British nationals.<ref name="historicalrfa_olna"/>

In February 1982 Olna deployed to the Persian Gulf along with the Type 42 destroyer, Template:HMS, and the lead ship of her class, the frigate Template:HMS. Embarked in Olna was Westland Wessex HU.5 helicopter, XS507 of 772 Naval Air Squadron (coded 314 ON), named "buzby". The vessel needed to return to the UK to clean contaminated fuel tanks and on route she anchored off Gibraltar to wait for the converted hospital ship for Operation Corporate, Template:SS. Olna undertook refuelling at sea trials with Uganda and Westland Wessex HU.5 helicopter, XS507 carried out the first deck landing. Uganda then sailed to the South Atlantic and Olna returned to the UK, arriving during April.<ref name="helis_olna"/>
Falklands War
In 1982 Olna left for the South Atlantic as part of the second wave of ships to leave the UK during the Falklands War. That group was centred on the destroyer HMS Bristol. Once Olna reached theatre, her time was primarily spent fuelling the carrier battle group.<ref name='Historical RFA'/>

1983-2000
In 1990, another wartime deployment beckoned. As forces built up in the Persian Gulf, Olna joined the British task force on station. Olna arrived in August 1990, shortly after Iraq invaded Kuwait, and apart from a short maintenance period in Singapore was on station for the whole duration of the conflict. Olna operated further north than any other tanker as the US Navy was wary of mines after two ships had been severely damaged.
At the end of the 1990s, retirement was in sight. 1999 and 2000 were spent in mothballs at Gibraltar until the outbreak of a crisis in Sierra Leone called for Olna to make one last deployment. The ship did not proceed to Sierra Leone, but instead relieved other RFA vessels of participation in a major exercise off Scotland. Following this exercise, the ship returned to reserve and decommissioned soon thereafter.
Decommissioning
In February 2001 Olna was sold to Eckhardt Organisation, for scrap and on 9 March she was towed out from Portsmouth. However, in May it was revealed she had been banned from Turkish yards owing to the high quantity of asbestos aboard and was diverted to Greece. She was renamed Kos and sailed via the Suez Canal, arriving at Alang Ship Breaking Yard, India, on 20 June 2001.<ref name="historicalrfa_olna"/>
Battle honours
On 11 January 1985, RFA Olna was awarded her Falkland Islands 1982 Battle Honour, by Rear Admiral John C. Worsop, Template:Postnominals, RN, – Flag Officer, Portsmouth.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
References
Citations
Bibliography
External links
Template:Ol class tanker Template:Falklands War British ships