Mysle, ze jesli polskie wladze zaczna wpuszczac na niebo nad Oswiecimiem samoloty 
wszystkich panstw, ktorych obywatele tam zgineli, to trzeba bedzie tam wybudowac 
specjalna wieze kontroli lotow, aby sie nie porozbijaly.

A mozeby tak wprowadzic obowiazek pozostawiania jednej maszyny na cele polskich sil 
powietrznych w formie zaplaty za udostepnienie polskiej przestrzeni powietrznej?

SB

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Waldemar Dworakowski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Multiple recipients of list prawica" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2003 2:55 PM
Subject: Re: Prawica: Nastepny krok w zadaniu odszkodowan...


http://www.auschwitz.org.pl/html/pl/aktualnosci/news.php

W dn. 22 sierpnia 2003 r. Jerusalem Post opublikował artykuł pt.
?Izraelskie Siły Zbrojne oddają w powietrzu honory ofiarom
Auschwitz". 

 Nawiązując zatem do treści artykułu Państwowe Muzeum
Auschwitz-Birkenau z ubolewaniem przyjęło przedstawiony w
artykule sposób demonstrowania w tym miejscu siły militarnej
Izraela. 

 W sprawie tej Muzeum przeprowadziło również ustne konsultacje z
przedstawicielami Międzynarodowej Rady Oświęcimskiej, którzy
podobnie jak my nie popierają takiego sposobu oddania honoru
ofiarom Auschwitz i z żalem przyjmują przedstawioną propozycję
zorganizowania ?LOTU PAMIĘCI" nad terenami byłego obozu
Auschwitz. 


> 
> Ponizsza drobna notka z Jerusalem Post (cytowana za
> FreeRepublic.Com) moze bedzie ciekawa dla Panstwa. Polecam
> szczegolnie fragment "Wracamy do narodu gdzie podjeto probe aby
> zniszczyc narod zydowski z pozycji sily. Nie dosc ze bedziemy
> pamietac 6 milinow zamordowanych w holokauscie ale ten lot
> bedzie bardzo istotny bo bedzie pokazem zywotnosci i potegi
> naszego lotnictwa". "Lot nasz ma pokazac dlugie ramie i zdolnosc
> do operowania na dalekich, nieznanych obszarach."
> Proponuje aby to pozostalo bez komentarza.
> WD
> 
> http://209.157.64.200/focus/f-news/972131/posts
> 
> IAF honors Auschwitz victims with flyover
> Jerusalem Post ^ | Aug. 28, 2003 | ARIEH O'SULLIVAN
> 
> Posted on 08/28/2003 10:03 AM PDT by yonif
> 
> Three F-15 fighter jets, some piloted by sons and grandsons of
> Holocaust survivors, take off Thursday for an historical booming
> fly past over the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland.
> 
> Proudly displaying the blue Star of David, the three jets, the
> most lethal aircraft in the IAF's arsenal, will swoop down low
> in next week's September skies and jet straight over the train
> platform where the Nazis held their infamous selections that
> sent hundreds of thousands of Jews to their deaths in gas
> chambers.
> 
> The feat will also demonstrate Israel's long-arm reach of its
> premier fighter jets which will fly the 1,600 nautical mile
> route.
> 
> "It gives me goose bumps just thinking about it. I have dreamt
> of this for 15 years. It will be very moving for me," Brig.-Gen.
> Amir Eshel told The Jerusalem Post.
> 
> Eshel, commander of the strategically crucial Tel Nof airbase.
> 
> Eshel will lead the fly past scheduled for September 4. While he
> exact time cannot be given for security purposes, Air Force
> officials said that it would take place "around midday," and
> noted that the event is open to all who may wish to visit the
> death camp on that day.
> 
> "We will fly past over Auschwitz and we will show the most
> powerful might of the IDF where the most awful tragedy happened
> to the Jewish people. This symbolizes so much where we came from
> and where we are going," said Eshel, whose mother's family was
> wiped out by the Nazis in Poland.
> 
> The idea for the fly past came about after the Polish air force
> invited the IAF to participate in their gala celebrations
> marking their 85th birthday. The IAF agreed and will be sending
> a large delegation and small fleet of aircraft to Poland next
> week. The IAF will be joining other air forces from around the
> world at the celebrations to be held at the Radom airbase some
> 250 kilometers from Warsaw. The trio of IAF F-15 jets will
> perform aero-acrobatics at the base.
> 
> Eshel said the invitation was the perfect time to stage the
> memorial fly past and asked the Poles what they thought of the
> idea. After initial foot dragging, they agreed and even gave
> enormous logistical support such as aerial photos of the camps
> and clear flight paths.
> 
> On the day of the event, the three war jets will fly toward the
> Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. They will slow to some
> 300 knots and fly as low as possible along the railroad tracks
> leading into the camp and crematoriums and then peel away.
> 
> "We will be flying slow and low so that everyone on the ground
> will be able to clearly see the IAF markings and the blue Star
> of David," said navigator Capt. Shai who helped planned the
> event and will also participate in the fly past.
> 
> This is not the first time the Israeli army will have come to
> the infamous concentration camp. In 1992, then chief of general
> staff Lt.-Gen. Ehud Barak led a delegation where he solemnly
> declared "We got here 50 years too late."
> 
> In the years since, the IDF has sent delegations of officers to
> Eastern Europe on a journey that led them to a number of death
> camps. This year's group, known as "Witnesses in Uniform," will
> be led by Brig.-Gen. Ido Nehushtan, head of Air Force ' Command,
> and will include 140 officers. They will form the Israeli
> delegation on the ground during the fly past.
> 
> Gen. Eshel chose the aircrews personally. Some were reservists
> who have participated in many of the IAF's battles. The
> grandparents of another pilot both survived Auschwitz and moved
> to Israel. Another pilot is the son of partisans who fought the
> Nazis.
> 
> But Capt. Shai, the F-15 navigator who will be in the lead jet,
> is the son of Moroccan and Iraqi parents.
> 
> "I am a member of the Jewish people and that serves as my
> connection to the Holocaust. This is also very important for me
> because it shows our might today," said Shai, 25, whose last
> name could not be revealed due to security regulations.
> 
> "We are returning to a nation where there was an attempt to
> vanquish the Jewish nation from a position of strength," Capt.
> Shai said. "Not only will we be remembering the six million
> murdered in the Holocaust, but this flight has great importance
> today since it shows the vitality, versatility and might of the
> Air Force."
> 
> "The IAF has recently been doing a lot of cooperation with many
> air forces and you can say that going to Poland with the F-15s
> shows our long arm and our ability to operate in far off,
> unknown lands," Capt. Shai.
> 
> "It is hard to tell what I will feel when I will be in the
> cockpit then," said Capt. Shai.
> 
> "But this is a camp where so many Jews were killed and for us to
> come back in an F-15, the greatest symbol of the Jewish nation's
> strength, will characterize the whole route our people have
> taken. I will feel very proud."
> 
> The jets will return to the Polish air force base after the fly
> past, refuel and head back to Israel.

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