HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_027972.jpg

2.43 MB

Extraction Summary

5
People
3
Organizations
4
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book excerpt / narrative account (included in house oversight production)
File Size: 2.43 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a memoir or narrative account (likely by Ehud Barak) included in a House Oversight production. It details the tactical execution of the rescue of Sabena Flight 571 (1972), describing a deception plan involving fake mechanics and a prisoner release distraction. The text highlights a surreal moment where 'Bibi' (Benjamin Netanyahu) informs the narrator that the assault must be paused because 'Zur,' an air marshal, needs to use the bathroom.

People (5)

Name Role Context
Narrator ('I') Operation Leader
Leading the rescue operation, wearing overalls as a disguise.
Rifa'at Hijacker
Leaning out of co-pilot window with a pistol, inspecting the 'mechanics'.
Dayan Planner/Strategist
Created the 'misdirection plan'.
Bibi Soldier/Assault Team Member
Approaches narrator under the fuselage to relay a message about Zur.
Zur Air Marshal/Assault Team Member
Had a physiological emergency ('has to take a shit') right before the assault.

Organizations (3)

Name Type Context
Sabena
Airline of the hijacked jet.
House Oversight Committee
Indicated by the footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.
Tel Aviv hospitals
On alert for the operation.

Timeline (2 events)

During operation
Inspection by hijacker
Beside the Sabena jet generator
Narrator Rifa'at
Historical context: May 8-9, 1972
Sabena Flight 571 Rescue Operation (Operation Isotope)
Lod Airport (implied by Tel Aviv context)
Narrator Rifa'at Bibi Zur Dayan

Locations (4)

Location Context
Runway/Airport
Location of the hijacked plane and operation.
City where hospitals were on alert.
Theoretical destination for the Boeing carrying prisoners.
Mentioned regarding Zur's travel back.

Relationships (2)

Narrator Military Colleagues Bibi
Operating together on the assault team; communicating casually during high stress.
Narrator Subordinate/Superior Dayan
Narrator executing Dayan's misdirection plan.

Key Quotes (3)

"If our cover is broken, or if you hear gunfire, we all storm the plane."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_027972.jpg
Quote #1
"“He has to take a shit,” Bibi said."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_027972.jpg
Quote #2
"leading to the most surreal “operational” moment I would witness during all my years in the military."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_027972.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,724 characters)

what I do and do the same. Finally, if our cover is broken, or if you hear gunfire, we all storm the plane.
I felt as I always did as an operation was about to begin. Along with the tension, I had a keen awareness of everything happening around me, almost as if I was watching things in slow motion, in high resolution. When our motorcade approached the generator, Rifa’at leaned out from the co-pilot’s window. He was pointing a pistol at us. He seemed to be in his late 20s or early 30s. He had dark hair and a moustache and the hint of a stubbly beard. We stopped beside the generator. I got out and walked toward the cockpit, halting about 10 feet away. Looking up the hijacker, I made a conscious effort to appear curious rather than worried. His eyes seemed a mix of intense focus and tension. I opened the front of my overalls. Because of the heat, I was wearing nothing else on top. He nodded his head to signal he was satisfied. I refastened the overalls and moved off. One by one, the other men passed inspection. Then we went back and brought the two smaller ladders to the side of each wing, and the “mechanics” set down to work. I delayed bringing in the large ladders so as to minimize any risk of arousing the terrorists’ suspicions.
The fact that at least so far they seemed to suspect nothing was in large part down to Dayan’s misdirection plan. As we began working on the plane, the “Palestinian” prisoners were disembarking from buses about 300 yards away. As Rifa’at watched, several hundred men formed long rows. A few of them waved in his direction. The Boeing which was theoretically going to take them on to Cairo, to be followed by the Sabena jet minus the hostages, was being towed into position.
One by one, our assault teams were moving into place. All that remained was for me to give a short, sharp whistle and the attack would begin. Yet just as I was raising my fingers to my mouth, I saw Bibi coming toward me from under the fuselage. He motioned to me to wait. Zur, the last of our air marshals, had a problem. Having spent 10 hours in the air on the way back to Israel, before being immediately plugged into an assault team, he had something to attend to. “He has to take a shit,” Bibi said. Can’t it wait, I asked. No, was the answer. So I said OK, leading to the most surreal “operational” moment I would witness during all years in the military.
The “prisoner release” was now in full flow. Dozens of military vehicles, and a small army of fire engines and ambulances, had also pulled to the far end of the runway, out of sight of the hijackers, in case our attack on the Sabena jet went wrong. Tel Aviv hospitals were on alert. And Zur was crouching and
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