The Jerusalem Post

Matan Vilnai: Landing was trickiest part of July 1976 Entebbe rescue

Passenger recounts week in captivity during Hebrew U. conference

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

The July 4, 1976, Entebbe rescue and the October 18, 1977 Mogadishu raid against terrorist plane hijackers by Israeli and German commandos respective­ly are two of the most dramatic kidnapping rescues in modern history. But for Matan Vilnai – former minister, ambassador, and IDF general who was the deputy commander of the Entebbe rescue – the most tense moment of all was trying to land the commando force without authorizat­ion in Uganda, thousands of miles from Israel.

“The first critical moment was when we needed to land a group of heavy airplanes, which was already suspicious, because usually groups of airplanes do not fly together… and there was no GPS like today,” Vilnai told The Jerusalem Post on Monday during a two-day Hebrew University of Jerusalem conference marking four decades since the two rescues.

He credited the operation’s commander and sole IDF casualty, Lt.-Col. Yoni Netanyahu, for giving critical orders as they got off the Hercules transport – orders which he said likely led to Netanyahu’s death from a sniper who likely noted his hand signals, which distinguis­hed him as the senior officer.

The entire operation took only 51 minutes from landing to take off with the rescued hostages. Vilnai gave huge credit to the Mossad, Entebbe planner Dan Shomron (then a brigadier-general and future chief of staff) and to former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin, who decided on the daring raid. It included not only taking out several Palestinia­n and German terrorists, but also Ugandan soldiers and Ugandan MiG aircraft so that no one could pursue them.

The Mogadishu operation was presented by the German deputy commander of its GSG9 Counterter­ror Unit, Dieter Fox. He saw difference­s and similariti­es between his team’s successful rescuing of hijacked passengers in Mogadishu, Somalia, and the Entebbe operation, adding that his unit had learned a lot from Israel’s May 9, 1972 rescue of a hijacked Sabena airliner at the then Lod Airport by the General Staff Reconnaiss­ance Unit, led by future prime minister Ehud Barak and including future PM Benjamin Netanyahu.

Fox told the Post that the planning of his operation was very complicate­d, having to follow the hijackers from Turkey to Cyprus to Dubai to Jeddah to Yemen, and only then to the eventual Mogadishu rescue site. Each time they gathered intelligen­ce about the right moment to strike, said Fox, speaking German through an interprete­r.

He said Somalia was more flexible than the other countries, agreeing to provide cover fire for the then West Germans and allowing the GSG9 to perform the actual rescue.

Describing the moment his unit went into action, he said, “at such a time…all of the tension is released after waiting for such a long time… training and rehearsing for five years since [the 1972 Olympics terrorist attack in] Munich,” adding that they had practiced boarding more than 80 different kinds of airplanes. “We approached the airplane from the back, took positions under the plane…opened the doors, tossed in flash blanks to achieve a distractio­n, and opened fire on the terrorists, while simultaneo­usly calling out in German to the passengers to keep their heads down.”

The fighting lasted about three minutes and the whole operation about eight, with Fox and his comrades feeling they had truly turned around West Germany’s counterter­rorist operations following the failed rescue in Munich.

Benny Davidson was only 13 at the time of the Entebbe operation and was leaving his native Israel for the first time with his family to the US to drive cross-country as a bar mitzva present. He told the Post that the “highs and lows of that week were a microcosm of the highs and lows of our lives.”

Davidson said that, a few minutes after the Air France plane took off from Athens, “suddenly we hear a highpitche­d scream. My mom immediatel­y grabbed my father’s hand and said ‘we’ve been hijacked.’ My father said ‘get over your anxieties, someone just isn’t feeling well.”

But “after a few seconds, we saw the stewardess with her hands up and the German female terrorist holding a gun to her head in one hand and a grenade in another hand,” recalled Davidson.

“There was tremendous noise and all hell broke loose. Then two Palestinia­ns ran forward from behind us to the front of the airplane, each with a gun and a grenade, yelling in Arabic and English...My father quietly told all of us to lean down and slide our backsides forward so we would be lower in the seats and not get hit by a stray bullet,” he said.

Debates had broken out among the passengers during the week of their captivity about whether they would be rescued, but when the operation started around 11 p.m. he recalled his mother lying on top of him on a bathroom floor to protect him and trying to recite the Shema prayer.

His senses were overwhelme­d with the gunfire and explosions around him, until an Israeli soldier calmly approached them and said in Hebrew, “Hello, we came to bring you home. We brought a Hercules airplane.”

Davidson added that some of the shock finally started to break on the flight home, when the pilot embraced them warmly after realizing that he and Davidson’s father had been in the same pilot’s course years before.

Besides these individual experience­s, the conference also explored a number of important issues regarding Palestinia­n terrorism in Germany at the time and the place of the Entebbe and Mogadishu operations in Israel’s and Germany’s national memories.

 ?? (GPO) ?? POLISH PRESIDENT Andrzei Duda lays a wreath yesterday at the grave of Lt.-Col. Yoni Netanyahu, as the Entebbe rescuer’s brother, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, looks on.
(GPO) POLISH PRESIDENT Andrzei Duda lays a wreath yesterday at the grave of Lt.-Col. Yoni Netanyahu, as the Entebbe rescuer’s brother, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, looks on.

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