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‘I Shot Down Drones Over Israel And Was Back In My Office Sending Emails By 4pm’

An Israeli reservist fighter pilot said it was like “Top Gun meets Star Wars” as he described how he shot down Iranian missiles and was back at work in his office before the end of the day.

The pilot, identified as “Major G”, said that taking to the skies to defend Israel from more than 350 missiles and drones was “the most complex mission of my life”.

“It really was a different thing with hundreds of those UAVs and missiles in the air getting intercepted around you, like Top Gun meets Star Wars, endless explosions and interceptions going on around you,” he told The Telegraph.

“It was the most complicated mission I’ve done in 20 years in the air force, knowing that if there is a missed target, maybe it blows up in Israel,” he said.

“We flew in an amazing coalition with the US, UK and other forces and on the one hand it was a very aggressive attack co-ordinated by Iran, one which maybe we haven’t seen in modern warfare, but you’re seeing absolute defence in action.”

The US, UK, France and Jordan all helped Israel thwart the onslaught, with RAF Typhoons shooting down several targets and helping allied pilots track others as they sped towards Israel.

Iran claims the barrage was a response to a suspected Israeli air strike earlier this month on the Iranian consulate in Damascus that killed a top Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander and several other officers. Israel has not claimed responsibility for the attack amidst a years-long shadow war between the two countries.

With more than 3,000 hours of flying time, Major G was well-prepared for night missions. But hunting low-flying cruise missiles puts pilots in serious danger.

“It’s always harder to find and take down these targets in the night. They’re flying really low and so you fly low too but you’re unable to see the ground,” he said.

“You rely on sensors, but at some points it’s really close. You’re seeing street lights or other things on the ground very close to you and it’s a very uncomfortable feeling. But we’re well trained for that and we’ve proven this time that we know how to get the job done.”

Major G was at home with his wife and children when the call came to scramble.

“They are already familiar with the situation when you get the call and grab the bag that’s always ready in the closet and you leave at a moment’s notice. It happens every now and then, but nothing as extreme as last Saturday.”

A lawyer by day, by 4pm Sunday, the reservist was back in the office “shooting off emails” as opposed to shooting down missiles. Like the others in his squadron, who are the likes of engineers and teachers, it is a complex double life they lead. “I took a shower, went to sleep for a few hours, woke up, had a great breakfast and went back to work,” he said, back at the office by 4pm.

“It’s a complicated transition but you learn how to do it as you go by. One minute you’re shooting down drones somewhere in the Middle East, risking your life, barely making it, with this huge responsibility on missions important for the entire country and people, then you go back to your day-to-day chores, you get the kids ready for school, take them to daycare, people harass you at work with their tasks which are important, but you have to get used to that diving in and out of that operational world,” he said.

In the last six months of war, triggered by Hamas’s attack on Israel on Oct 7, there have been many aerial missions but none as significant – or dangerous – as this.

“Here it was a whole battlefield, you see the ballistic missiles in the sky getting blown up, the fireballs as a target gets blown up, you’re flying low altitude at night, then when you fire your own missile blowing up that target right on your nose, that’s a pretty incredible frame to look at,” he recalled.

“It’s dark so you can’t see a lot but it’s in your radar lock. It’s very noisy as the missile flies out and you see it burn in the sky. It takes a second and a half until it hits and it’s like slow motion and you focus on making sure it hits the target. You see a huge fireball and you try to sidestep it so you don’t hit it.”

Major G and his wingman shot down two targets and in formation with his squadron shot a combination of drones and cruise missiles. CONTINUE READING