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U.S. pilots reunite with Israeli ‘brothers in arms’ from Yom Kippur War

Retired U.S. fighter pilot Roy "Bubba" Segars, left, and retired Israeli fighter pilot Jacob "Booby" Daube holding a photo they took together during the 1973 Yom Kippur War at the same Tel Nof air base in Israel, June 28, 2017. (Courtesy of IDF Spokesperson)

 

TEL AVIV (JTA) – The arrival of U.S. fighter jets in Israel, part of a monthlong arms drop, was critical to turning the tide of the Yom Kippur War in favor of the Jewish state.

Roy “Bubba” Segars, second from right, and Jacob “Booby” Daube, far right, pose during the 1973 Yom Kippur War at the Tel Nof air base in Israel, June 28, 2017. (Courtesy of IDF Spokesperson)

But for the American pilots who volunteered to deliver the aircraft, it was just another mission.

Alan Chesterman, part of a U.S. Navy squadron that flew a handful of the jets, said he had little knowledge of Israel or its security situation when he landed here in October 1973.

“We knew we were flying into a combat zone, but we didn’t know anything about it,” he said. “It was more like I’m young, adventurous and fearless – you might say young and stupid. I just lived to fly.”

Chesterman, 72, was one of two pilots who reunited last week with some of the Israelis to whom they handed the Douglas A-4 Skyhawks. Along with nine other American pilots and their wives, they took a VIP tour of Israel to see what has become of the country since they helped to fend off the surprise onslaught by its Arab neighbors 44 years ago.

Since landing June 24 at Ben Gurion Airport on commercial flights, the Americans have been traveling around the country and receiving briefings from top military officials.

An Israeli Douglas A-4 Skyhawk taxis in front of an American Skyhawk on the Tel Nof air base, Israel, October 1973. (Courtesy of IDF Spokesperson)

On June 28, they visited the Tel Nof air base, where they exchanged war stories with more than a dozen Israeli pilots who flew the American Skyhawks. They also re-created a photograph that several of them, including retired U.S. fighter pilot Roy “Bubba” Segars, 76, and former Israeli airman  Jacob “Booby” Daube, had taken together during the war.

The following day, the American pilots attended a flight course completion ceremony at the Hatzerim Air Force base, where they heard addresses from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Reuven Rivlin.

Rami Lothan, 65, an Israeli Air Force pilot who greeted the Americans in 1973 and flew one of the Skyhawks in the war, participated in a flight show at the event, flying a propeller-driven training plane. He helped organize and host the trip after meeting members of the group at flight shows in the United States.

Lothan said that in the midst of the Yom Kippur War — a coalition of Arab armies led by Egypt and Syria caught Israel unprepared on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar – the Israeli pilots had not been able to appreciate the arrival of the Americans, who at the time were still fighting the Vietnam War. This week’s visit, he said, has been an opportunity to reflect.

“I don’t think we had enough time to sit down and appreciate what was happening. Whatever we could fly, whatever could carry bombs, we flew it,” he said. “But seeing these guys; it’s like lost brothers. I can admire pilots who don’t have any connection to the Middle East, and they just completed tours in Vietnam, and they all volunteered to come here and help us out.”

Chesterman recalled that he was stationed at the naval air base in Southern California when the squadron skipper asked for volunteers for a dangerous and unspecified mission. Nearly all the pilots raised their hands. Over the course of two days they made their way to Israel, stopping several times along the way, including in Spain, the only European country that would have them en route to Israel.

Segars, the other pilot from the mission now in Israel, fired some rounds toward Libya on the way.

Although the Americans were only in Israel for a few hours, Chesterman gathered that the country was fully mobilized for war. He recalled seeing the wife and children of a soldier camped in a tent along the runway of the air base with their clothes drying on an air defense battery.

“That’s when it hit me: I think they’re not just fighting for territory. They’re literally fighting for their lives,” Chesterman said. “The whole family was basically called up for active duty and was there for the duration. We don’t have to do it that way in the United States.”

Chesterman said the Israelis welcomed the American pilots with a friendly meal on base, during which he and his fellow pilots “did our best to drink all their booze.” One of the Israeli pilots who had been drinking with them suddenly excused himself, saying he needed to return to the war. Only then did the Americans realize he had been drinking iced tea, not beer.

Segars – the pilot who “fired at Muammar Gaddafi,” as Chesterman put it – earnestly tried to convince the Israelis to let him join the battle. But the several beers he had just downed “disabused him of opportunity to go fight in someone else’s war,” Chesterman said.

Until recently, Chesterman had been afraid to return to Israel because he thought it was unsafe. But this was his second trip to the county in the past two years, and he said he has learned to take comfort in the fact that “the good guys have all the guns.”

Chesterman also has gained an appreciation for the role he played in helping Israel at a moment of profound crisis and what the country has become.

“I’m completely impressed by the way the Israelis conduct themselves,” he said. “They are proud of their country. It’s so young, with so many smart people and technology, but also has so much history. It’s an incredible place.

“If it weren’t for my kids and grandkids back in the States, Israel would be at the top of my list of places to live.”