ROMSO Cyprus Knowledge Base

"by Moses"

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Moshe Sasimi (born December 5, 1935) is an IDF officer in reserve rank. He served as a fighter pilot, commanded two fighter squadrons in the war of the plant and served as a wing commander in the Israeli Air Force during the Yom Kippur War.

biography

Saar was born in the town of Radziwiłłów and Ukrainian Радивилів in Poland (now Ukraine) named Moshe Simjan, and survived the Holocaust as a child. After the war and his father’s Patty, Simjan, was greeted with his family (Mother of the Queen, his stepfather Moshe and his son) to the land of Israel in the fairy tales of “Homeland.” The ship was captured by the British and they were exiled to the detention camps in Cyprus (camp 67). In July 1948, Cyprus immigrated to Israel in the ship "Independence".
In the Land of Brandeis, from which he was transferred to the neighborhood of Wadi Jamal in Haifa. There, the family lived for a year, and after it moved to an apartment in an upbringinging in a lifetime where he attended a professional school. After graduation, he worked in the morning at the Magifer factory and completed his high school exams in the "Elances" in Haifa. His stepfather, Moshe Pitkowitz, worked in repressive work and a carpenter at the Haifa Shipping Company. His mother, Queen of Pittsburgh, worked as a kitchen cooker in school.

Saar joined the IDF in 1955 and 1957 completed the Flight No. 23 course as an outstanding apprentice and established an advanced training course in the 113th Squadron. He then went to serve at the 109 Squadron (Mister Squadron at the David Level) and later made a demonstration for the Wrotor aircraft and served at a 110 Squadron, among other things as the Samt A and the High School of Flight.

In 1966, he graduated from his albums and was positioned as head of a firefighter at the Air Force headquarters in an emergency pilot serving as a combat pilot in the 110th Squadron. With the outbreak of the Six-Day War, the focus of the first attack structure of the Sufa base in Upper Egypt led by Ali Waiter. The bomb was destroyed by eight Topol Tu-16 bombers, about a quarter of the Egyptian Air Force’s strategic bombers. In his next flight that day he led an attack structure to the Damir airport in Syria, when Otto is Uri Talmore. In addition, a building led to the second attack of the H-3 airport in Iraq.

After the Six-Day War, in December 1967 he was appointed commander of the 116 Squadron, the Mister Aircraft Squadron. In December 1969, he was appointed commander of the 102 Squadron, whose former commander Nissi Ashkenazi was captured in Egypt. Saar made a call to Skiak and commanded the squadron until December 1970. During this period, the pilot led many operations in the War of the Arrest. He later served as a commander of an airport pilot and deputy commander of a court base.

In May 1973, he was appointed commander of the wing of 15 and the Yom Kippur War flew by an emergency in the 102 Squadron. In September 1974, he founded the Quality Control and Safety Director at the Air Force headquarters and served for four years and was released from the UN General Assembly in 1982.

After his release, he joined the Director of the Lavaya Project in the Air Industry, completed a Bachelor of Social Science at Bar-Ilan University and continues to graduate degree studies and currently works as an advisor to business organizations in the field of quality security systems.

Simy is married to Safara Saar and they have two children.

Another reading.
Danny Peace, Calm on a Clear Day, Operation "Moked" - The Arab Air Force was destroyed during the Six-Day War, in the air - airports, 2002, pp. 345-353, 498-500, 572-575
Danny Peace, a ghost over Cairo Part A – the Israeli Air Force in the War of the Shah (1967-1970), air – airports, pp. 133, 368, 556

External links

Base commanders Dov
Alfi-Moder in the Air Force
IDF soldiers in the Six Day War
Israeli Air Force Pilots
July of the detention camps in Cyprus
Israelis born in Poland
Graduates of the Elias School (Previously)
graduates of universities