As told by Tom Cooper & Sergio Santana in their book Lebanese Civil War Volume 1: Palestinian Diaspora, Syrian and Israeli Interventions, 1970-1978, only months after the delivery of Dassault Mirage IIIELs fighter aircraft to Lebanon, an unusual diplomatic incident took place.
Representatives of the Soviet Embassy in Beirut approached Hassan Badaoui, a former Lebanese Air Force officer discharged for misconduct, requesting him to establish contact with one of the Lebanese Mirage pilots and obtain information about its radar- and avionics system.
Indeed, Badaoui then contacted Lieutenant Mahmoud Matar, promising him ‘lots of money’ if he cooperated.
However, Matar played a double game: he promptly informed his superiors, who advised him to maintain contact with Badaoui and the Soviets and obtain evidence to charge them with espionage.
Thus, during one of their subsequent meetings, the Soviets seemingly suggested Matar should — while on a long-range navigation training flight — defect via Turkey to Baku in Soviet Azerbaijan. In return, Matar was promised a sum of US $3 million and that his family would be kept safe in Switzerland.
As a guarantee of the seriousness of Soviet intentions, Matar received US$200,000. His flight was scheduled for Oct. 3, 1969.
However, during the final meeting, when the Soviets met Matar to set up his flight plan, the Lebanese police broke into the apartment.
An exchange of fire erupted, in which a Lebanese officer and a private, as well a Vladimir Vassileev (officially an engineer at the commercial mission of the Soviet Embassy in Beirut), and Aleksander Komiakov — a colonel of the Soviet Committee for State Security (Komitet Gosudarstvennoy
Bezopasnosti, KGB) in charge of the entire operation — were wounded.
Nevertheless, other Lebanese police officers managed to arrest both the Soviets and Hassan Badoui.
Only a few hours later, Beirut found itself on the receiving end of vehement protests from Moscow. These reached such proportions, that the Lebanese found no other solution: still on their stretchers, Vassileev and Komiakov were brought to an Aeroflot airliner waiting for them at Beirut IAP, on Oct. 4, 1969, and flown back to Moscow.
The Dassault Mirage III is a family of single-seat, single-engine, fighter aircraft developed and manufactured by French aircraft company Dassault Aviation.
It was the first Western European combat aircraft to exceed Mach 2 in horizontal flight. While the initial Mirage IIIC model was heading towards quantity production, Dassault turned its attention towards the development of a multirole/strike variant of the aircraft. Efforts in this direction would
eventually materialized in the form of the single-seat Mirage IIIE.
A good number of Mirage IIIEs were built for export as well, being purchased in small numbers by Argentina as the Mirage IIIEA, Brazil as the Mirage IIIEBR and Mirage IIIEBR-2, Lebanon as the Mirage IIIEL, Pakistan
the Mirage IIIEP, South Africa as the Mirage IIIEZ, Spain as the Mirage IIIEE, and Venezuela as the Mirage IIIEV with a list of subvariant designations, with minor variations in equipment fit.
All Lebanese Air Force Dassault Mirage III aircraft were sold to Pakistan in 2000
Lebanese Civil War Volume 1: Palestinian Diaspora, Syrian and Israeli Interventions, 1970-1978 is published Helion & Company and is available to order here.