Become a Member
Life

Michel Bacos: the Air France hero of Entebbe

Brave pilot recalls how he defied the terrorists to stay with his Jewish passengers in the notorious 1970s hostage crisis

June 15, 2012 12:56
Captain Michel Bacos

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

4 min read

On July 27 1976, an Air France Airbus A300 flying out of Athens and carrying 248 passengers and 12 crew ended up not at its intended destination of Paris but at Entebbe airport in Uganda. The plane had been hijacked by pro-Palestinian terrorists and its captain Michel Bacos found himself facing a moral dilemma of life and death proportions.

What happened next — the dramatic rescue mission by Israeli commandos who had to take on not only the terrorists but also the Ugandan soldiers who were aiding them — captured the world’s imagination. Three movies have been made about the assault on the airport, one of which, Raid on Entebbe, was recently re-released on DVD.

Now aged 87 and long retired, Bacos recounts his story so vividly that you could be excused for thinking that it had happened just a few weeks ago. One thing particularly stands out in his mind. Indeed, it has come to define his life. It was the moment when the hijackers — two Palestinians from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and two Germans from the German Revolutionary Cells — divided the hostages into two groups — Israeli nationals and Jews to one side, non-Jews to the other.

“I knew precisely what this meant,” says Baros. “I joined de Gaulle’s free French forces in June 1943. I was 51-years-old at the time of Entebbe and I had been through the war. So I knew precisely what fascism was all about. I knew perfectly well what separation meant and what it would lead to. I was a three-striped navy officer with a pilot’s education. I wasn’t going to run off and leave my passengers to their fate, even though I was told I could leave.”