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By

Uri Dromi

Analysis

How Entebbe changed Israel

June 30, 2016 11:42
Freed hostages arrive back in Israel after the daring raid
3 min read

Forty years ago, Israel amazed the world with the daring Entebbe Raid. On June 27, 1976, Air France Flight 139 from Tel Aviv, with 248 passengers on board, was hijacked by members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and two German terrorists. The hijackers demanded the release of Palestinians prisoners held by Israel and of terrorists imprisoned in Europe. After stopovers in Athens and Benghazi, the plane landed in Entebbe, where the Ugandan dictator, Idi Amin, welcomed the hijackers warmly. The Israelis and non-Israeli Jews were separated from the others and held in an old terminal knowing they could die at any time.

Israel had its own plan. On July 3, at 11pm, four Israeli C-130 Hercules transport aircraft landed in Entebbe Airport and fighters from the elite units stormed the terminal and freed the hostages. Lt. Col. Jonathan (Yoni) Netanyahu, commander of the elite unit (Sayeret Matkal) was killed in action, and sometimes the raid is named after him, Operation Jonathan, rather than the original Operation Thunderbolt.

Entebbe gave rise to many myths. Yitzhak Rabin, Prime Minister at the time, was hailed as the father of this success, although he had been sceptical about it and even prepared a letter of resignation in case it failed. It was actually Shimon Peres, then Defence Minister, who pushed fervently for the operation. The mission commander was not Netanyahu, but rather Gen. Dan Shomron, later to become the Chief-of-Staff of the IDF. Netanyahu's performance in the operation was controversial, and became a source of bitter feud between the Netanyahu family and Colonel Muky Betser, Netanyahu's deputy, with each side fighting ruthlessly for the lion's share of public memory, as if there was not enough glory to go round.

For Benjamin Netanyahu, the Entebbe raid was a momentous event. Apart from the obvious personal grief, the loss of his elder brother contributed to his positioning as a potential future leader of Israel. Not only did he know first-hand the consequences of government decision-making, but when he started establishing himself as a world expert on terror, the aura of his brother, the dead hero of Entebbe, contributed to his success.

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