Aviem Sella returned from missions over Egypt three or four times a week, flying low over Haifa to let his lecturers know he would soon be attending their classes
The astonishing story of the Israeli Phantom’s first gun kill. The McDonnell Douglas F-4E Phantom II, which Israel purchased in 1969, immediately established itself as the mainstay of the Israeli Air Force (IAF) due to its payload, range, and bombing precision.
The 69 Squadron Hammers, which used its F-4s extensively for the first time in combat during the so-called Operation Blossom, a series of missions that targeted headquarters, logistical hubs, and training facilities throughout Egypt with the aim of convincing the nation to renounce the attrition war policy, was the second IAF unit to receive the Kurnass (as the Phantom was known by the Israeli Air Force).
When on February 8, 1970, after a strike against a logistical facility at Helwan, a pair of MiG-21s took off to pursue a pair of Kurnass piloted by Avihu Ben-Nun with Achikar Eyal and Aviem Sella with Shabtai Ben-Shoa, the 69 Squadron achieved its first-ever air-to-air kill.
It’s a fascinating story of how Aviem Sella managed to shoot down the first enemy fighter in the Hammers’ history by being in the right location at the right time. A narrative that starts prior to the IAF Phantom purchase, as recalled by Sella in the book Hammers Israel’s Long-Range Heavy Bomber Arm: The Tale of 69 Squadron by Shlomo Aloni & Zvi Avidror:
“Circa 1968 I was planned for conversion to the Mirage, but I already realized that flying was not enough. I initiated academic studies at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, immediately after the Six-Day War. The Mirage conversion course was at Ramat David, and the implication was that I would have had to discontinue my studies, so I turned down this offer. A fighter pilot turning down an offer for Mirage conversion was an unheard-of event, and I was summoned by the IAF Commander. The general attitude at the time was that a pilot did not need to study any further than he did during his flying training. I insisted upon studying, renounced the opportunity to fly the Mirage, and for this reason I was later assigned to 69 Squadron.”
The IAF acquired the Kurnass and reactivated the 69 Squadron while Aviem Sella was still pursuing his studies, which had the effect of allowing Sella to fly throughout the Attrition War while still attending his academic classes. Working as Deputy Commander, he returned from missions over Egypt three or four times every week, flying low over Haifa to notify his lecturers that he would soon be attending their classes. After landing in Ramat David, he traveled an hour to Haifa to attend class.
Sella completed his first Kurnass conversion course at Hatzor after which he was assigned to the 69 Squadron. On December 25, 1969, with a little over 30 flying hours under his belt, Sella launched an attack on a SAM battery.
When he shot down the first MiG in 69 Squadron history in February 1970, he only had 20 more hours left on the type: “In February 1970 I shot down my first MiG. I am not sure if I practiced air-to-air gunnery prior to that combat. I launched the first AAM – the wrong missile, as I confused the switches; instead of launching a heat-seeking missile, I launched a semi-active radar-homing missile. I launched the second missile beyond the effective range. I had only flown some 50 flying hours in the Kurnass until then and I hardly knew the cockpit, but luckily for me the Egyptian pilot had plenty of patience for me to do all possible errors until I shot him down.”
The Egyptian pilot actually flew slowly over the Nile Delta, and Sella was able to shoot him down with his seventh cannon burst after coming into cannon range. During that sortie, he finished his air-to-air training, and he undoubtedly created history when he achieved the first gun kill for an Israeli F-4 and the first air-to-air kill in the history of the 69 Squadron. Also, after the Attrition War was completed, Sella was granted nine months of leave to complete his studies.
Photo by Bukvoed via Wikipedia and Israeli Air Force