At 10:30 a.m. on 21 February 1973, Libyan Arab Airlines
Flight 114 took off on its regularly-scheduled flight
from Tripoli to Cairo.
The plane, a Boeing 727, was being piloted by a French
crew under a contractual arrangement between Air France
and the Libyan national airline. After a brief stop at
the city of Ben Ghazi in eastern Libya, Flight 114
continued en route to Cairo with 113 persons
on board.
As the airliner passed over northern Egypt on its
approach to Cairo, it suddenly encountered a blinding
sandstorm which forced the crew to switch to instrument
control because the geographic features which
ordinarily served as landmarks could not be discerned
in the swirling tempest. A short time later, the pilot
discovered that he had made a navigational error because
of a compass malfunction: The plane had missed an air
traffic beacon, and he could not ascertain its current
location. He radioed the Cairo air control tower with
an urgent plea for assistance. The Egyptian flight
controllers radioed back, giving him the information
necessary to correct the plane's course and warning
him that it appeared that the plane might have strayed over
the Sinai peninsula, which at that time was occupied by
Israeli forces.
The pilot immediately corrected the course, and LN 114
was heading back to Cairo when the crew noticed two
military jets approaching. The crew members expressed
relief, for they believed that the jets were Egyptian
fighters sent to escort their plane to safety at the
Cairo airport. Such, however, proved not to be the case:
The two jets were in fact Israeli Phantoms, and, before the
pilot of LN 114 had been able to make out the "Star of
David" markings on their wings, they had directed three
bursts of cannon fire into the Boeing 727, blasting it
from the sky.
Flight 114 smashed into the Sinai desert near Isma'iliya,
Egypt, only one minute's flying time from Egyptian-controlled
territory, killing 108 men, women and children aboard.
At first, Israel attempted to deny its culpability for
the tragedy. However, after the Boeing's "black box"
which had recorded the pilot's
conversations with the Cairo control tower was
recovered intact on 24 February, such denial was no
longer possible. The Israeli government then did
a volte-face and announced that LN 114 had been
shot down with the personal authorization of Dado
Elazar, the Israeli Chief of Staff.
Commenting on the decision to blow up the
civilian airliner, Golda Meir, then Prime Minister of
Israel, showered Elazar with praise, and exulted, "I
want to tell you that I don't just appreciate you -- I
admire you!"
The United Nations failed to take any action against
Israel for its destruction of the Libyan passenger
plane, and, when the 30 member nations of the
International Civil Aviation Organization voted to
censure Israel for the attack, the U.S. abstained.
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