Ezer Weizman

Politician

Birthday June 15, 1924

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Tel Aviv, Mandatory Palestine

DEATH DATE 2005-4-24, Caesarea, Israel (80 years old)

Nationality Israel

#32754 Most Popular

1924

Ezer Weizman (עֵזֶר וַיצְמָן, ; 15 June 1924 – 24 April 2005) was the seventh President of Israel, first elected in 1993 and re-elected in 1998.

Before the presidency, Weizman was commander of the Israeli Air Force and Minister of Defense.

Ezer Weizman was born in Tel Aviv in the British Mandate of Palestine on 15 June 1924 to Yechiel and Yehudit Weizmann.

His father was an agronomist.

Weizman was a nephew of Israel's first president, Chaim Weizmann.

He grew up in Acre and Haifa, and attended the Hebrew Reali School.

He married Reuma Schwartz, sister of Ruth Dayan, wife of Moshe Dayan, and they had two children, Shaul and Michal.

Weizman was a combat pilot.

1942

He received his training in the British Army in which he enlisted in 1942 during World War II.

He served as a truck driver in the Western Desert campaigns in Egypt and Libya.

1943

In 1943, he joined the British Royal Air Force (RAF) and attended aviation school in Rhodesia.

1944

Between 1944 and 1946, he was a member of the Irgun underground in Mandatory Palestine.

1945

He served with the RAF in Egypt and then India until 1945.

Weizman ended his service in the RAF as a sergeant pilot.

1946

Between 1946 and 1947, he studied aeronautics in England.

1947

During 1947, in the midst of his studies, he became involved in a plot to assassinate General Evelyn Barker, commander of the British forces in Mandatory Palestine at the time.

He and another Irgun operative had planned to mine the road outside Barker's house in London, but after attracting the suspicions of Scotland Yard, he left England, ending the plot.

1948

After the establishment of the State of Israel, Weizman was a pilot for the Haganah in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.

He was the commander of the Negev Air Squadron near Nir-Am.

In May 1948, he learned to fly the Avia S-199 (Messerschmitt Bf 109) at the České Budějovice air base in Czechoslovakia (Operation Balak) and participated in Israel's first fighter mission (executed by its "first fighter squadron"), a ground attack on an Egyptian column advancing toward Ad Halom near the Arab town of Isdud south of Tel Aviv.

1949

In a battle between Israeli and British RAF aircraft on 7 January 1949, he flew one of four Israeli Spitfire fighters that attacked 19 British fighters, which were on a rescue mission in Egypt searching for four aircraft that had been destroyed in an earlier IAF attack.

An RAF Hawker Tempest was shot down by the IAF, resulting in the death of the pilot.

Due to a failure by ground crewmen, most of the RAF aircraft were not armed.

Weizman joined the Israel Defense Forces and served as the Chief of Operations on the General Staff.

1951

In 1951 he attended the RAF Staff College, Andover in England.

Upon his return he became commander of Ramat David.

1958

Weizman served as the commander of the Israeli Air Force between 1958 and 1966, and later served as deputy Chief of the General Staff.

1966

In 1966, he oversaw the defection of an Iraqi fighter pilot and his MiG fighter which gave Israel vital intelligence information.

Although he became the IDF's Deputy Chief of Staff in 1966, he retired from military service in 1969.

Upon retiring from the military, Weizman joined the right-wing Gahal party.

1967

In 1967, he directed the early morning surprise air attacks against the Egyptian air bases, which resulted in giving the Israelis total air superiority over the Sinai battlefields by totally destroying the Egyptian Air Force in 3 hours.

A total of 400 enemy planes were destroyed by the Israeli Air Force on the first day of the Six-Day War.

1970

He served as Minister of Transportation in Levi Eshkol's national unity government until Gahal left the coalition in 1970.

1972

Weizman quit Gahal in 1972, but returned in 1976, by which time it had become Likud.

1977

In 1977, he became Defense Minister under Menachem Begin.

During his term, Israel developed the IAI Lavi fighter and launched the Litani Operation against the PLO in south Lebanon.

After Donald Neff wrote an article for Time magazine reporting an incident at Beit Jala, where a school was surrounded, the doors shut and canisters of gas fired into it, Weizman had a commission investigate Palestinian claims that it was part of an Israeli army campaign against youths in the West Bank which resulted in numerous Palestinians having their arms and legs broken and their heads shaved.

When the commission confirmed that the Beit Jala story was true he fired the military governor of the West Bank, Brigadier General David Hagoel, for abusing Palestinians.

Over time, Weizman's views became more dovish.

After the visit to Jerusalem of Egypt's president Anwar Sadat in 1977, Weizman (who spoke Arabic ) developed a close friendship with him and the Egyptian negotiators Boutros Boutros-Ghali and Hosni Mubarak.