On February 26, 1981, Afghan Air Force pilot Captain Jamal ud Din defected with his crew to Pakistan on board a
Mil Mi-8T helicopter numbered 285, during post-maintenance flight test from
Kandahar Air Base.[1]
On November 20, 1983, Captain Mohammed Nabi Korinzay defected to Pakistan with his
Sukhoi Su-7BM fighter-bomber. The aircraft broke up during a crash landing on the runway at
Dalbandin.[1]
On September 22, 1984, Colonel Haji Fakir, flying an
An-26 defected from Afghanistan to
Miranshah Air Base, Pakistan.[1]
On June 28, 1985, the crews of two
Mi-24 Hind-Ds defected from Afghanistan to Pakistan. The helicopters were later transferred to the United States for evaluation, they were later returned and one of them is now at display in Khalid Aviation Base Quetta (Pakistan).[1]
On December 8, 1988, Captain Asadullah flying a
MiG-21 defected from Afghanistan to
Miranshah Air Base, Pakistan.[1]
On July 3, 1989, Captain Mohammed Hamid flying a
Mi-25 defected from Afghanistan to Kica Air Base, Pakistan.[1]
On July 6, 1989, Afghan Air Force Captain Jan Pahrand defected to Pakistan with his
Sukhoi Su-22M-4K fighter-bomber.[1]
Algeria
An Algerian helicopter pilot, captain Alili Messaoud, flew his Mi-8 from Blida Air Force Base, southwest of Algeria, first to Formentera island and then to Ibiza, Spain, on June 17, 1998, getting away from the Algerian civil war (1992-2002). The helicopter was subsequently returned to Algeria while the pilot asked for political asylum that was not granted because of Algerian pressures, however he was granted a resident visa each year continuing to the present.[2]
On September 15, 1961,
PLAAF pilots Shao Xiyan and Gao Youzong flew an
Antonov An-2 from Ji'ao county,
Shandong to
Jeju-do and reached Taiwan on October 7, 1961. Both pilots were personally interviewed by
Chiang Kai-shek and rewarded 500
taels (approximately 25
kg) of
gold. Both pilots served in the
Republic of China Air Force and retired with ranks of colonel, and Shao eventually emigrated to the United States.
On March 3, 1962, Liu Chengsi, a PLANAF pilot of the 8th
squadron of the 3rd
wing of the 16th regiment flew a
Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15 from Luqiao air base in
Zhejiang to
Taoyuan County, Taiwan (now Taoyuan City). Liu was rewarded 1,000 taels (approximately 50 kg) of gold, and the position of deputy director of a Republic of China Air Force
radio station. He was honorably discharged with a rank of colonel.
On November 11, 1965, Li Xianbin, a PLAAF
captain of
Ilyushin Il-28 of the 8th
division flew his
bomber numbered 0195 from Jianqiao air base in
Hangzhou to
Taoyuan County, Taiwan (now Taoyuan City); this was the first fully operational Il-28 in western hands. The radio operator / tail gunner Lian Baosheng was found dead at the scene and the navigator Li Caiwang was captured alive after a
suicide attempt. Both survivors were honored and rewarded positions in the Republic of China Air Force. Li Xianbin was rewarded 2,000 taels (approximately 100 kg) of gold, while Li Caiwang was rewarded 1,000 taels (approximately 50 kg) of gold. Since Lian Baosheng was dead, his reward of 1,000 taels (approximately 50 kg) of gold was divided evenly among Li Xianbin and Li Caiwang.
Li Xianbin made headlines in Taiwan years later when he demanded all of the rewards because of what he claimed was his unfair treatment by Taiwan. Li Xianbin claimed that he was the sole defector, and the other two were actually captured due to his defection, a fact that was later agreed by both Taiwan and the navigator Li Caiwang himself. Li Xianbin claimed that for the purpose of political propaganda, all the crew were honored as defectors, which was far from the truth, but he was not successful in getting all of the gold reward. After he was honorably discharged as colonel from the Republic of China Air Force, Li Xianbin obtained
Canadian residency. He made headlines again in 1992 when he returned to China via Canada after he learned that his mother was about to die. After his return to
Qingdao in October 1992, he was eventually arrested by the local Public Security Bureau when he was on his way to the airport for his return trip to Canada. Li Xianbin was first sentenced to 15 years but this was later reduced to 10, and the sentence was further reduced drastically because it was discovered that he had
stomach cancer that was in its terminal stage. He was released early and died shortly after his release. Many elements of the
Chinese democracy movement first accused the Chinese government of inhumanity for not allowing Li Xianbin to go back to China to visit his dying mother, and then accused the Chinese government of trying to repatriate him to either Taiwan or Canada because the regime did not want to foot the bill for his treatment, since he did not have his assets transferred to China. The Chinese government countered that, knowing he would die soon, Li Xianbin did not want to leave China because he wanted to be buried with his mother.[citation needed]
Li Caiwang, the navigator of the
Il-28, was seriously wounded by Li Xianbin during the latter's defection and was forced to accept his fate after his suicide attempt failed. During his stay in the hospital for the gunshot he received in the shoulder, the nurse who took care of him fell in love with him and told him that she was also responsible to perform surveillance on him, under the order of the
Republic of China government. The two eventually married and moved into the nurse's home, but were still under constant surveillance: a
major general of the Republic of China military had a son who was going to a school near the couple's home, so he rented a room at their residence for years to keep Li Caiwang under surveillance. Although the major general and his son finally moved out, Li Caiwang had no intention of staying in Taiwan, and since the wife's sister was married to an American, Li Caiwang and his wife immigrated to the United States in 1972 after his honorable discharge from the Republic of China Air Force as a colonel. The couple became naturalized citizens of the United States in 1979. In 1982, Chinese diplomats contacted Li Caiwang in the United States and got his side of the story, and after a prolonged investigation, the Chinese government rehabilitated him in 1984. After several visits to China in the 1990s, Li Caiwang eventually resettled in China in 1998.[citation needed]
On July 7, 1977, Fan Yuanye, a PLAAF pilot flew his
Shenyang J-6 numbered 3171 from
Jinjiang to an air base in
Tainan, and was rewarded a rank of
lieutenant colonel in the Republic of China Air Force. After his honorable discharge from the Republic of China Air Force, Fan joined an investment firm with his money and obtained
American green card, but he stayed primarily in Taiwan to handle his investments.
On April 15, 1979, Yan Wenchang, a distinguished PLAAF pilot who earned numerous awards for his excellent performance in support of the
Sino-Vietnamese War, was extremely bitter after learning that the promotion for the deputy
squadroncommissar was given to somebody else instead of him. Yan felt he was the better candidate and should get the promotion and he was under appreciated, and as a result, he decided to defect to
Vietnam after learning that the opportunity would be gone because his unit would soon be redeployed to
Hunan, and the only thing he left was a note to his wife that read:I'll be gone, good-bye forever!'. However, Vietnam did not react at all to his attempts for contacts after his
Shenyang J-6 entered Vietnam from
Guangxi, and as result, Yan was killed after directly crashing into a 1,000 metre high mountains cliff approximately 80 km south of
Haiphong. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs told Vietnam the next day that the incident was a navigational error and asked for the return of the remains of the pilot and the jet, but Vietnam refused, and instead, asked Soviet investigators to inspect the wreckage.
KGB aviation experts discovered that the avionics of Yan's J-6 was extremely rudimentary even by Soviet standard, and was indeed lacking any effective navigational avionics. Furthermore, the communication on the J-6 was not encrypted, and it could be intercepted by advanced civilian radios on the market. Since Yan was a regular pilot that patrolled the airspace within the 10
km of the Sino-Vietnamese border (sometimes as frequent as 4 times a day), his defection was not detected until his crash.
On August 7, 1983, Sun Tianqin, a former PLANAF pilot who had just transferred to PLAAF several months ago to become a
test pilot, flew a
J-7II numbered 045 from
Dalian to
Seoul Air Base in South Korea. Sun was rewarded a rank of colonel in the Republic of China Air Force and 7,000 taels (approximately 350 kg) of gold, the highest ever recorded. In January 1985, Sun married Li Tianhui, a Chinese musician who also defected to Taiwan, and the pair eventually immigrated to Canada after Sun's honorable discharge from the Republic of China Air Force.
On November 14, 1983, Wang Xuecheng, a 25-year-old PLANAF
squadron commander of the 2nd
wing of the 18th regiment of the 6th
division flew a
Shenyang J-5 numbered 83065 from Daishan,
Zhejiang to Taiwan, and under the escort of two
F-5E's, successfully landed at
Chiang Kai-shek International Airport. Wang was rewarded a rank of major in Republic of China Air Force and 3,000 taels (approximately 150 kg) of gold. After a divorce, Wang married a local Taiwanese woman and fathered two daughters and a son. Wang still talks to his family members in
Henan via telephone, and refuses to immigrate abroad like most other Chinese defectors did.
On August 25, 1985, a PLAAF deputy
wing commander Xiao Tianrun, flew an
Ilyushin Il-28 from Ji'ao county,
Shandong to Iri (now
Iksan), and during emergency landing in the field, the navigator Sun Wuchun was killed, along with a South Korean citizen on the ground. The radio operator / tail gunner Liu Shuyi refused to defect and
South Korea returned him to China along with the ashes of Sun Wuchun. On September 20, 1985, Xiao reached Taiwan and was awarded 3,000 taels (approximately 150 kg) of gold and a rank of
colonel in the Republic of China Air Force. Xiao Tianrun left two copies of his declaration against communism in China and requested one of the copies to be sent to
Deng Xiaoping. Xiao was personally interviewed by
Chiang Ching-kuo and appeared on the Republic of China national day celebration parade in October of the same year. Xiao later married Taiwanese TV reporter Chang Te-fung, who helped Xiao greatly in his investment in Taiwanese stock market, but the pair was eventually divorced.
On February 21, 1986, Chen Baozhong, 26, a
squadron commander of the 3rd wing of the PLAAF 4th aerial reconnaissance regiment flew a reconnaissance version of
Shenyang J-6 numbered 3283 from
Shenyang airport to
Suwon Air Base, South Korea, abandoning a training exercise.[3] Chen reached Taiwan on April 30, 1986, and was awarded 5,000 taels (approximately 250 kg) of gold. Little is known about Chen after his honorable discharge from the Republic of China Air Force.
On October 24, 1986, PLAAF pilot Zheng Caitian flew his
Shenyang J-6 from
Yantai to Seoul Air Base and when he reached Taiwan, he was awarded 5,000 taels (approximately 250 kg) of gold. Among the Chinese defecting pilots, Zheng has had the harshest life of all, because he invested in an electronic factory that went bankrupt, and lost all of his money in his subsequent investments.
On November 19, 1987, Liu Zhiyuan, a
squadron commander of PLAAF 49th
division flew his
Shenyang J-6 numbered 40208 from Longxi airport,
Zhangzhou to
Ching Chuan Kang Air Base in
Taichung,
Taiwan and was awarded 5,000 taels (approximately 250 kg) of gold. Liu invested heavily in the Taiwanese stock market and his assets (not including the gold rewarded to him) were once more than 10 million
New Taiwan dollars (approximately 400,000 United States dollars).
On September 6, 1989, Jiang Wenhao, a 23-year-old PLAAF lieutenant of the 2nd
wing of the 145th regiment of the 49th
division flew a
Shenyang J-6 numbered 40307 from Longxi airport,
Zhangzhou,
Fujian to
KinmenShang Yi Airport. Jiang was interviewed by the then chief-of-general-staff of Taiwanese armed forces,
Hau Pei-tsun and awarded a rank of lieutenant in the Republic of China Air Force. Jiang's financial reward, however, was reduced to 2,000 taels (approximately 100 kg) of gold from the original 5,000 taels (approximately 250 kg), because due to the reduction of tensions with China during the 1980s, Taiwan had greatly reduced the amount on September 15, 1988, in response to similar Chinese action four days earlier. (China had completely abolished any financial rewards to any Taiwanese defectors). Jiang was soon honorably discharged from the Republic of China Air Force after being promoted to captain. Jiang became a famed underwater photographer and won several awards, and he also worked as a diving instructor.
On August 25, 1990, Wang Baoyu, a squadron commander of the 62 Air Regiment of the 21st PLAAF Air Division, defected to former USSR by flying his
Shenyang J-6 to
Vladivostok after taking off from Jiaohe military airport in
Mudanjiang (not to be confused by the city of
Jiaohe and the civilian
Mudanjiang Airport at
Mudangjiang). A week later, he was turned over to China along with the aircraft (according to the Soviet eyewitness of the extradition procedure, Wang was severely beaten by Chinese escort detail officers as soon as they got him from the Soviets,) and Wang Baoyu was subsequently sentenced to death, although his sentence was commuted to life in prison. The
Chinese democracy movement condemned the Soviet act of returning the pilot back to China. Several high-ranking Soviet Air Defense commanders lost their jobs as a result of this defection, because Wang Baoyu was not detected until he had landed.
Note: Rewards paid in taels have been converted to mass at a rate of 50 grams (1.6 ozt) per "new market tael".
Cuba
On 4 September 1962, a Cuban pilot-instructor Jose Diaz Vasquez defected with a
Zlin 326 Master-Trainer and landed at
Key West, US. His trainee, Edel Ramirez Santos asked to return home.[4]
On March 20, 1964, a
Mil Mi-4 was hijacked by crew members Guillermo Santos and Andres Izaguirre who shot dead the commander of the helicopter, Jose Garcia, and changed the course of the flight in the direction of
Naval Air Station Key West, where they ultimately landed.[4]
On 5 October 1969, a Cuban pilot, Lieut. Eduardo Guerra Jimenez defected with his
MiG-17 to
Homestead Air Force Base of
Miami. The plane was returned to the Cubans. Separately on June 12, 1979, ten years later, the same pilot hijacked
Delta Air Lines Flight 1061 back to Havana.[5]
On March 20, 1991, Cuban
Major Orestes Lorenzo Pérez defected in his
MiG-23BN to
Naval Air Station Key West,
Florida on a training mission of the
Cuban Air Force.[6] The plane was returned to the Cuban Air Force. On December 19, 1992, he returned to Cuba in a small, twin-engined 1961
Cessna 310, landing on the coastal highway of El Mamey beach in
Varadero,
Matanzas Province, 93 miles (149.6 km.), from
Havana at the agreed time. His wife María Victoria (34), and their two sons Reyneil (11), and Alejandro (6), were already waiting on his order delivered through two Mexican women as messengers a few days before. Orestes Lorenzo Pérez picked up his family and managed a successful safe return to
Marathon, Florida.[7]
On September 23, 1993, Capt. Leonidas Basulto Serrano defected with his MiG-23 fighter to the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay.[8]
Czechoslovakia
In 1953,
Mira Slovak, a pilot for
Czechoslovak Airlines, was flying a regularly scheduled flight from
Prague to
Brno. While en route, he overpowered the co-pilot, locked the cockpit door and dove the plane to below 1,000 feet. He flew the plane to
Frankfurt, where he requested and received asylum. He later went to the United States, where he flew various aircraft, raced boats, and was a pilot for
Continental Airlines.
In 1971,
stunt pilotLadislav Bezák – a winner of the
FAI World Aerobatic Championships in 1960 – defected by flying to West Germany. He brought his wife and four sons along in a
Zlin 226 that took off in Prague and landed in Nuremberg, where all six were awarded political asylum by West Germany.[9]
Dominican Republic
In April 1959, Captain Juan de Dios Ventura Simó defected from the
Dominican Air Force in a
de Havilland Vampire jet. He first flew to
Puerto Rico in order to ask for political asylum in the United States, but soon left the country to join a group of Dominican exiles in
Venezuela. In June 1959, they organized a Cuban-backed guerrilla campaign against Trujillo in the
Dominican Republic, but were quickly overwhelmed by Trujillo's superior military force. Ventura Simó, one of the few survivors, was captured and tortured by Trujillo's men, who organized a disinformation campaign against the opposition by claiming that Ventura Simó was not a real defector but a government spy who had led the rebels to their ruin. Once Ventura Simó was no longer useful, he was killed in prison and put on a plane which crashed at sea in order to frame the death as an aviation accident.[10]
On May 26, 1967,
Lieutenant Vasily Ilych Epatko flew his
MiG-17 (No. 25) from East Germany, where he was stationed, to West Germany and
made a successful belly-landing in a field near Kicklingen, Bavaria. It was almost immediately photographed by a Canadian CF-104 RECCE aircraft from 1Wing, Lahr, Germany. He was granted asylum by the United States.[12]
West Germany
On April 1, 1971,
West German Army Aviation cadet-pilot Corporal Hans-Dieter Reinkensmeier defected in a small
Cessna 172 to East Germany and asked for political asylum.[13]
Greece
On 11 September 1970 A
Greek Air ForceC-47 crossed into Soviet airspace in the area of
Sevastopol in order to defect. The pilot of a
Su-15 flew up alongside and rocked his wings, signaling "follow me". The C-47 complied and landed at
Bel'bek airbase. The Greek pilot, Captain Mikhalis Maniatakis, had stolen the aircraft from
Chania airbase on
Crete to flee from
junta-controlled Greece. Maniatakis requested political asylum in the USSR.
On 25 November 1973 A
Greek Air Force Lieutenant-Colonel Dimitrios Zelios landed at
Brindisi Airport in southwest Italy and asked for political asylum.
Hungary
In August 1969 a Hungarian Air Force pilot, Maj. József Bíró defected with his
MiG-15 from
Taszár Air Base, Hungary, to Udine, Italy. The military tribunal stripped his rank, and sentenced to death in absentia for high treason.
On April 7. 1970 a Hungarian Air Force pilot, 1st Lt. Sándor Zoboki defected with his
MiG-15 (serial number 907) from
Taszár Air Base, Hungary, to Udine, Italy. In the same year the military tribunal stripped his rank, and sentenced to death in absentia for high treason.
Israel
On 13 July 1990, at 4:30 a.m., 33-year-old Captain Haggai Mori, set out from
Sde Dov Airport without permission with a
Dornier Do 28 plane and attempted to defect to Syria. According to Arab sources, the enemy plane was met by
Syrian Air Force fighter planes and driven off from Syrian airspace. After this, Mori committed suicide. The wreckage of the missing plane was found on the western slopes of the
Golan Heights, near the Syrian border.[14]
Iran
On 16 October 1982, Iranian defector Keyhan Jahanfakhr, a commercial airline pilot, asked for political asylum after landing his
Iran AirBoeing 727 for a stopover in
Austria.[15]
On 10 July 1983, Iranian defector Captain Iraj Fazeli landed a US-made
F-5E Tiger II jet at an airport in
Van, one of Turkey's easternmost provinces bordering Iran. The aircraft belonged to TFB.2 at
Tabriz.
In early 1984, Iranian defectors flew an F-5E to
Saudi Arabia (the pilot returned to Iran several years later). In both of these cases, the jets were back in Iran a few weeks later.[citation needed]
On 30 August 1984, Iranian pilot Captain Rahman Nageeb defected in his
F-4E Phantom II serial 3–6552 to Iraq, and his RIO became a
POW who was later released with other prisoners.
On 21 July 1985, Iranian pilot Mehdi Babaie and two airmen flew their US-made
Boeing CH-47 Chinook helicopter serial 5–4089 to Iraq.
On 31 August 1986 an Iranian top-line
F-14A Tomcat fighter armed with at least one
AIM-54A landed in Iraq. An Iraqi military spokesman identified the pilot and
weapon systems officer (WSO) as Major Ahmed Murad Talibi and Captain Hassan Nagafi Habibullah. Upon landing, the aircraft was surrounded by up to 20 US technicians, who took care of it and the defecting pilot, while the WSO, who had opposed the defection became an Iraqi POW, was later released with other prisoners (the pilot was later killed in Europe). The F-14A along with the aforementioned F-4E were flown to Saudi Arabia by US pilots.[citation needed]
On 2 September 1986, 2 Iranian F-4 Phantom and 1 F-14 Tomcat were hijacked to Iraq.[16][17]
Iraq
On April 2, 1960, Iraqi pilot Lt. Abbud Salim Hasan flew his British-made
Hawker Hunter to Syria, where he asked for political asylum, claiming to have escaped from Communist domination in the air force.
On November 30, 1963, Iraqi airman
Lieutenant Abdel Rahim al-Salim Zuher escaped to the
USSR by flying through
Iran and landing at an airfield in
Baku,
Azerbaijan SSR. He gave as reason for his defection an unwillingness to participate in the suppression of Kurdish rebels. The aircraft type in which he defected is not known but it may have been a
de Havilland Vampire. The pilot was granted
political asylum.[18]
Following Captain Munir Redfa's defection, there were at least two Iraqi pilots who defected to
Jordan with their
MiG-21F-13 jets. Jordan granted them political asylum but returned the aircraft to Iraq.
On the early morning of 2 December 1981, an Iraqi pilot of the 84th Sqn defected with his
MiG-23 to
Vahdati Air Base in Iran. He managed to land safely, and subsequently proved to be a superb source of intelligence for the
IRIAF. However, the plane was left in the open for several hours too long, and in the afternoon the
Iraqi Air Force dispatched a strike against the Iranian base destroying the aircraft with unguided 68mm rockets from
Su-20 bombers.[19]
On 10 March 1976, Sunthorn Mongkamsee of
Laos landed his American-made
Cessna L-19 light observation aircraft in
Thailand.[22]
On 24 August 1979, Laotian pilot Flight Lieutenant Chaisin Chinthenam flew his
C-47 Dakota into north eastern Thailand and asked for asylum.
Lebanon
On 30 December 1987,
Druze Lt. Majed Karamah of the
Lebanese Air Force, flew the French-made Gazelle helicopter from a military base north of
Beirut to the
Shouf and handed it to the pro-Syrian Druze militia.
On 11 February 1981 A
Libyan Air Force Captain pilot flying a
MiG-23 defected from Libya by flying to
Crete,
Greece. The pilot claimed that the reason for his defection was the suspicion of his attempt to commandeer a Libyan C-130 carrying 19 Libyan army officers sentenced to death and fly them to Greece. The attempt failed, and sometime later, he became a suspect when Libyan military intelligence found out about his (failed) attempt. The pilot later graduated from Yugoslav Air Force Academy.[24] The aircraft was later returned to Libya on February 14.
There were a number of defections to
Egypt in 1987. First on March 2, a crew of five defected in a
C-130 with two of the officers asking for political asylum. Then on March 29, three officers defected on a
CH-47 Chinook, while finally on July 16 three more officers defected, this time in a
Mil Mi-8.[25]
Mozambique
On 8 July 1981 Lieutenant Adriano Francisco Bomba flew a
MiG-17 from
Maputo to over
Kruger National Park in South Africa, after which he was intercepted and escorted to land at
Air Force Base Hoedspruit. On landing he asked for political asylum. The aircraft was later returned to Maputo by road, after extensive examination, flight testing and an appearance at an air show.
On April 28, 1950, 24-year-old Lieutenant Lee Kun Soon defected by flying his Soviet-made
Ilyushin Il-10 to
Pusan, South Korea.
On September 21, 1953, 21-year-old
No Kum-sok, a senior
lieutenant in the
Korean People's Air Force, flew his
MiG-15 to the
South and is associated with
Operation Moolah. Considered an intelligence bonanza as this fighter plane was then the best the Communist bloc had, No was awarded the then immense sum of $100,000 (just under $1 million adjusted for inflation (2020)) and the right to reside in the United States. An offer to return the MiG was ignored, and the aircraft is now on display at the
National Museum of the United States Air Force,
Dayton, Ohio.
On June 21, 1955, North Korean air force pilots Capt. Lee Un-yong and Lt. Lee Eun-song defected to
Seoul,
South Korea, with a
Yak-18 training plane.
On February 25, 1983, Captain Lee Ung-pyong (28) of the North Korean Air Force used a training exercise to defect and landed his
MiG-19 at an airfield in
Seoul. According to then-common practice, he received a commission in the South Korean Air Force, eventually becoming a colonel and taught at the South Korean Air Force academy until his death in 2002. He received a reward of
₩1.2 billion.[30]
In 1949, Lt. Arkadiusz Korobczyński defected with
Il-2M3 attack aircraft (No 3) from
Polish Navy's air base in
Wicko Morskie to
Gotland Island in Sweden.
On March 5, 1953,
Polish Lt.
Franciszek Jarecki flew from
Słupsk (Polish Air Force Base) to
Rønne Airport on
Bornholm Island in a
MiG-15bis (No 346) - a modern
Soviet fighter. Western air specialists checked the aircraft and several days later, the MiG returned to the
People's Republic of Poland by ship. Jarecki, however, went to the United States, where he provided much important information about modern Soviet aircraft and air tactics.
On May 20, 1953, Lt. Zdzisław Jaźwiński from 28th Fighter Squadron in Słupsk defected with
MiG-15bis to Rønne Airport on Bornholm Island, Denmark.
On September 25, 1956, Lt. Zygmunt Gościniak from
Zegrze Pomorskie defected with
MiG-15bis (No 1327) and landed (without using landing gear) at Rønne Airport on Bornholm Island.
On November 7, 1957, Lt. Kożuchowski from 31st Fighter Squadron in
Łask defected with
Lim-2 (
MiG-15bis, No 1919) and crash-landed near
Halland in Sweden.[31]
On October 12, 1959, Capt. Andrzej Krajewski, Polish Air Force pilot [Lublin/Radom] defected from Grudziadz Aeroclub in a bi-plane with his pregnant wife and three-year-old daughter and landed on a military field near Rønne, Bornholm Island.
On 2 October 1962 a twin-engined
Saudi Air ForceFairchild C-123 Provider, laden with US-made arms and ammunition said to have been sent by Prince Hassan to the Royal supporters in Yemen, defected to Egypt. Its three crew members sought and were given political asylum. The crew were identified as pilots Rashad Sisha Mecca, Ahmed Hussein Ikka and flight engineer Omar.[34]
On 3 October 1962 two Saudi Arabian fliers landed an air force training plane in upper Egypt and asked for and received political asylum. It was the second such defection in two days. Pilots identified as Aly El-Azhari and Abdul Wahab.[citation needed]
On 8 October 1962 two more Saudi Arabian military aircraft defected to Egypt.[citation needed]
On July 12, 1988, a
Somalia Air Force pilot Colonel Ahmed Mohamed Hassan defected to Djibouti with his
MiG-17F fighter jet, saying that he was refusing to obey orders to bomb civilian targets in the North.[37]
On May 29, 1989, a Somalia Air Force pilot lieutenant colonel Mohamed Sheikh Ibrahim Yusuf defected to Djibouti with his
An-26 transport plane, and requested political asylum.
South Korea
In September 1949, a South Korean pilot, 1st Lieutenant Pak Yong-ju, defected with his
Stinson L-5 to North Korea.
On December 3, 1952, a South Korean Army Aviator student, 2nd Lt. Kug Yong-am, defected with his L-19 51–4794 to
Pyongyang, North Korea.
In October 1953, a South Korean pilot-instructor Capt. Kim Sung-bai defected with an F-51 Mustang fighter plane to North Korea.
On January 20, 1954, a South Korean pilot 2nd Lieutenant Choi Mai-chong defected with an L-19 light observation plane to North Korea.
In 1961, a disappointed Soviet pilot flew his
Sukhoi Su-9 interceptor to
Abadan,
Iran. Few details about this incident are known, but the plane and the pilot were quickly picked up by officers of the
Foreign Technology Division (FTD) of the
U.S. Department of Defense. After being disassembled within 24 hours the Su-9 was transported to the US, while the pilot followed shortly after.
On May 7, 1973,
Lieutenant Yevgeny Vronsky flew his
Sukhoi Su-7 from East Germany, where he was stationed, to West Germany and ejected near
Wolfenbüttel. The wreckage of the aircraft was returned to the Soviet Union, but German authorities let Vronsky stay in the country.
On September 6, 1976,
LieutenantViktor Belenko flew to
Hakodate Airport in Japan and
defected with his
MiG-25P to
Hakodate, Japan. After being inspected by the Foreign Technology Division of the United States
DoD, the MiG-25 was released to Japan, who then returned it in pieces to the Soviet Union after having been disassembled and analyzed by the United States.[39]
On September 25, 1976
Lieutenant Valentin Ivanovich Zosimov (
Russian: Валенти́н Ива́нович Зо́симов, 1939–1995) flew his civilian
AeroflotAN‐2 to Iran.[39] In October 1976 after threats by the Soviet Union to send insurgents [40] the Iranian regime, led by
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, forcibly returned Zosimov back to
Baku,
Azerbaijan where he was sentenced to 12 years in prison. He was sent to
Perm-36 from which he was released on October 23, 1986.[39][41]
On May 20, 1989,
CaptainAleksandr Zuyev defected with his
Mikoyan MiG-29 to
Trabzon, Turkey. In his autobiography Fulcrum: A Top Gun Pilot's Escape from the Soviet Empire (
ISBN0-446-51648-1), Zuyev reported that the USSR quickly did a deal with the Turkish government upon his defection, and the MiG-29 was returned to the Soviet Union. According to Zuyev himself, the first words he said as he stepped out of the cockpit after his successful defection were: "I'm an American!". He was airlifted out of Turkey by a U.S. C-130 that same night to
Ramstein Air Base in West Germany, due to injuries sustained during his escape from the Soviet airbase.
Syria
On 15–17 August 1968, the pilots of nine Syrian
MiG-17s and three
MiG-21s defected to Jordan after failing in a coup attempt
On June 14, 1976, A Palestinian pilot in the Syrian Air Force, Flight Lieutenant Mahmoud Musleh Yasin, defected to Iraq with his
MiG-23 Flogger.
On July 27, 1976, Syrian pilot Captain Ahmed Abdul Qadar Al-Termanini, the "
October war" hero, defected to Iraq with his MiG-21 fighter jet.
On October 11, 1989, Syrian pilot Abdel Bassem landed his
MiG-23ML in Israel.
Taiwan
On 12 January 1955, Major Xao Long defected to the People's Republic of China with his crew, on board a
C-46 Commando transport plane.
On 1 June 1963, Tingze Xu, a pilot in the
Republic of China Air Force 43 Squadron, defected to the People's Republic of China in a
F-86F Sabre. In doing so, he took off from
Hsinchu Air Base,
Taiwan and landed at Longtian,
Fujian province, PRC. The aircraft is now on display in the Military Museum of Chinese People's Revolution in Beijing.[43]
On 26 May 1969, two
Republic of China Air Force pilots defected to the People's Republic of China with
T-33 Shooting Star trainer aircraft serialled 3024. The crew were later identified as instructor pilot Wang Tianming and cadet Zhu Jingrong. The aircraft is now on display in the Military Museum of Chinese People's Revolution in Beijing.
On August 8, 1981, Major Huang Zhi Cheng (黄值诚), an instructor pilot, defected to the
People's Republic of China with his
NorthropF-5F serial 5361. He obtained a reward of US$370,000 (sum immediately returned) and was nominated Deputy Commander of a pilot training school.[44] According to the Chinese government he was the 90th member of the Nationalist forces to defect by plane since 1949.[45]
On 22 April 1983, Li Dawei (李大维), flying a
U-6A Beaver, defected from the Republic of China to the People's Republic of China. The aircraft is now on display in the Military Museum of Chinese People's Revolution in Beijing.
On 2 November 1989, the pilot of a Taiwan Air Force
Northrop F-5E (serial #5120), Lin Xianshun (林贤顺), ejected 80 km inside the
Guangdong province of mainland China; the pilotless jet careened down and crashed. Its remains are put on show at the Chinese People's Revolution Museum at Xiaotangshan (Datangshan).[44]
In July 1963, United States Airman Roberto "Robert" Ramos Michelena defected to Cuba in a
T-34 Mentor.[48]
On 21 May 1967, Major Richard Harwood Pearce, a
Bronze Star Medal recipient in the
Vietnam War, who was cleared to handle secret US Army materials, defected to
Cuba in a
Cessna 150 light plane. Pearce was granted asylum in Cuba.[49]
Venezuela
On 26 June 1973,
Venezuelan Air Force pilot Capt. Aristides Gonzalez Salazar and a crewmember Sgt. Carlos Ramirez Madero defected with
Canberra B. (I). Mk.52 jet bomber to Cuba.
South Vietnam
On 27 February 1962, South Vietnamese pilot Lieutenant
Nguyen Van Cu defected to
Cambodia with his
Douglas A-1H Skyraider Skyraider (Bu 134485) after failing in a coup attempt.
On 7 November 1973, South Vietnamese pilot Lieutenant Ho Duy Hung defected to North Vietnam with a US-made
UH-1A helicopter serial number 60139.[50]
On 8 April 1975, a
Republic of Vietnam Air Force officer, Captain Nguyen Thanh Trung, bombed the presidential palace in Saigon and defected to North Vietnam in his
F-5E.[51]
Yugoslavia
On 13 September 1953, a
Yugoslav Air Force pilot Lieutenant Nikola Jakšić flew his
P-47D Thunderbolt to
Italy and asked for political asylum after landing at
Aviano Air Base. Airport officials quoted him as saying he had "chosen freedom."[52]
On 30 June 1988, a
Zimbabwe Air Force pilot Flight Lieutenant Gary Kane stole his
Bell 412 helicopter in an abortive attempt to rescue alleged South African agents from prison.
^Associated Press, "Chinese Pilot Defects", Playground Daily News, Fort Walton Beach, Florida, Saturday 22 February 1986, Volume 40, Number 16, page 1E.