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Israel’s air force ready for anything over Iran

Creative methods are being used by the IDF to train combat-starved pilots

May 7, 2009 11:27
Combat pilot  training has  changed radically since the early years  of the Israeli air force

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

5 min read

From 8,000 feet, the houses of Gaza City seem peaceful, wreathed in low, wispy clouds, coming in from the sparkling blue Mediterranean. I bank right and begin spiralling downwards, aiming for the Hamas headquarters in the centre of town, where I will level out at 2,000 ft for my bombing run. Suddenly my vision is obstructed and the plane shakes and bucks. A pilot’s worst nightmare — bird strike! The single engine begins faltering. What do I do now? Carry on with the mission? Regain height? Bail out? How should I know, I am only a journalist.

I look behind me and Lieutenant Dana Tal, the 22-year old simulator instructor, smiles and signals that my 15-minute dream is over. It is time for me to climb out of the cockpit and stop pretending I am flying an F-16 fighter jet.

In the next room, stern-faced Captain M (combat personnel names are kept secret), one of the handful of female combat pilots in the Israeli Air Force, is already suited up and preparing for her training session. For her it is not going to be fun and games — each of her responses to the emergency situations on the simulator are recorded and the final assessment goes on her personal service file. Get the procedures wrong, and she could be grounded.

In a briefing after Operation Cast Lead, Air Force Commander Major General Ido Nehushtan summed up his pilots’ contribution with satisfaction. Twenty thousand flying hours, 2,000 combat missions including 300 bombings, a total of 1400 targets attacked. Wounded soldiers were removed by helicopters and hundreds of reconnaissance flights had provided invaluable information for the ground forces. Despite the fact that at times, over 100 aircraft were operating in the small corridor above the Gaza Strip, not one air-safety mishap occurred during the entire operation.