From Entebbe to Gaza City
On June 27, 1976, Captain Michel Bacos was piloting Air France Flight 139 with 246 passengers from Athens to Paris. Minutes into the flight, two Palestinian Arabs and two German terrorists hijacked the flight that originated in Tel Aviv hours earlier. Bacos was forced at gunpoint to reroute the flight to Benghazi, Libya for refueling, and then to Entebbe, Uganda.
At Entebbe, the four terrorists were welcomed by Uganda's then-dictator, Idi Amin, along with Ugandan troops who were providing support for the terrorists. Two days later, the terrorists forced all Israeli and Jewish passengers into a separate room. Eventually, they released the 148 non-Jewish passengers.
Remarkably, Captain Bacos and his crew remained with the Jewish hostages. On July 4, the hostages were freed, following a bold Israeli commando raid known as Operation Entebbe. Captain Bacos took a two-week vacation and requested that his first flight back be to Israel.
I was thinking about the Entebbe hijacking and raid recently in the context of Hamas kidnapping and taking hostage more than 240 people during their October 7 assault and massacre on Israel.
Hamas is a different kind of Palestinian Arab terror group – an Islamist one – but the goals and tactics remain the same: The death and suffering of as many Israelis as possible toward the objective of Israel’s complete annihilation.
In 1976, terrorists held more than 100 hostages thousands of kilometers away. Today, terrorists hold some 240 hostages, much closer, but in harder-to-reach underground bunkers and likely not altogether. A rescue will be more difficult, but Israel is committed to bringing ALL the hostages home.
The hostages are citizens of at least 27 countries, including Israel. As Israel faces mounting pressure for a ceasefire, terrorists are playing the same game – trying to separate the non-Israeli and non-Jewish hostages, holding out as bait to release 2, 10, or maybe 15 of the non-Israelis.
The tactic of separating hostages based on their nationality or religion is the same, but must not be allowed to stand this time. ALL the hostages must be rescued. If Israel lets the world be played by the terrorists, in no time, the world will stop caring about the Israeli and Jewish hostages. How do we know? Because it’s already started. And sadly, despite the passage of time, the more time passes, the more things are really the same.
One should not be surprised that in the aftermath of the hostage rescue in Entebbe, then-UN Sec.-Gen. (and former Nazi) Kurt Waldheim said the raid was "a serious violation of the sovereignty of a member state of the United Nations."
Taking a page out of the antisemite UN secretary-general handbook, its current occupant, António Guterres, decried the recent violence saying it “does not come in a vacuum” but “grows out of a long-standing conflict, with a 56-year-long occupation and no political end in sight.” Basically, Guterres justified Hamas terror the same way Nazi-Waldheim criticized Israel for rescuing its hostages then.
In 1976, Captain Bacos received France’s National Order of the Legion of Honour, and his crew was also recognized for their heroism. Then, with little exception, the West widely supported Israel’s operation.
France, (West) Germany, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States offered significant praise.
Then-U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger did criticize Israel for using American hardware and weapons, but that was only revealed later.
Ironically, today, one of the top diplomats leading the pack in pressuring Israel for a ceasefire under any circumstances is French President Emmanuel Macron.
Macron flew to Israel in the days after Hamas’ massacre to show solidarity. But the French president has since changed his tune. Though he says France knows what terrorism means, he’s clearly playing to the vast terror base in his own backyard, something that France has allowed to fester to levels that are increasingly dangerous.
Macron pivoted from his early support of Israel in a recent BBC interview, claiming that there was “no justification” for the bombing, and pontificating that a ceasefire would benefit Israel.
“There is no other solution than first a humanitarian pause, going to a ceasefire, which will allow to protect … all civilians having nothing to do with terrorists. Today, civilians are bombed – de facto. These babies, these ladies, these old people are bombed and killed. So there is no reason for that and no legitimacy. So we do urge Israel to stop.”
I suspect that none of Macron’s predecessors ever criticized the Allies' bombing of Dresden and other German cities, without which Le France would be speaking German today.
France has a legacy of retreat, so maybe Macron can be excused. But, as pressure grows on Israel from liberated Europe, it’s also painful to see the U.S. heating up its rhetoric.
Most recently, current Secretary of State Antony Blinken, told reporters in India: “Far too many Palestinians have been killed; far too many have suffered these past weeks.”
It’s not yet the parroting of Kissinger’s criticism, but it’s a slippery slope, especially with the Hamas wing of his own party claiming that they won’t support President Joe Biden for re-election. Will Biden/Blinken heed the Hamas wing of their party to stop providing Israel with weapons to defend itself?
If comments like those of Blinken and Macron are not first pointed at Hamas – repeatedly and clearly without any qualifications for their October 7 massacre and using their own civilians as human shields – they are simply not credible. But being credible no longer matters when Pallywood mixes up its main characters (terrorists) with the extras (civilians), putting the latter at risk no matter the suffering.
In order to push back on the mounting pressure, an invisible but increasingly strong front against Israel from the West, the Genesis 123 Foundation, has launched an international petition to call upon the U.S., Red Cross, G7, and all countries whose citizens are hostages in Gaza, to end pressure for a ceasefire and make the first priority to bring home ALL the hostages.
It's time for all Jews and Christians – and all people of conscience everywhere – to stand with Israel to defeat Hamas and bring home the hostages. Pandering to terrorists through a ceasefire, ransom, or any other appeasement, will just mean more death and suffering. This will continue in Israel for sure, but is just a moment away from the violent protests against Jews in the West turning on their host countries, too.
Through the end of his life, Michel Bacos was recognized as a hero. In 2019, Israel’s national anthem was played at his funeral, where he was honored by the mayor of Nice, "Michel, bravely refusing to give in to anti-Semitism and barbarism, did honor to France. The love of France and the defense of liberties have marked his destiny."
Today is the world’s 'Bacos' moment. Will you stand with Israel to defend itself and bring home the hostages, or appease the terrorists and allow more death and suffering?
Jonathan Feldstein was born and educated in the U.S. and immigrated to Israel in 2004. He is married and the father of six. Throughout his life and career, he has become a respected bridge between Jews and Christians and serves as president of the Genesis 123 Foundation. He writes regularly on major Christian websites about Israel and shares experiences of living as an Orthodox Jew in Israel. He is host of the popular Inspiration from Zion podcast. He can be reached at [email protected].