Corporate Air Services HPF821

Corporate Air Services HPF821 was a transport aircraft delivering weapons via clandestine airdrop to the Nicaraguan Contras which was shot down over Nicaragua on 5 October 1986 by a surface-to-air missile. Two U.S. pilots, Wallace "Buzz" Sawyer and William Cooper, and the Nicaraguan Nationalists radio operator Freddy Vilches died when the Fairchild C-123 Provider was shot down by a Sandinista soldier using an SA-7 shoulder-launched missile, while Eugene Hasenfus, the U.S. "kicker" responsible for pushing the cargo out of the aircraft, survived by parachuting to safety. The aircraft was carrying "60 collapsible AK-47 rifles, 50,000 AK-47 rifle cartridges, several dozen RPG-7 grenade launchers and 150 pairs of jungle boots".[1]

Corporate Air Services HPF821
A Fairchild C-123 owned by the U.S. Coast Guard, photographed in 1971
Incident
Date5 October 1986
SummaryShoot-down
Sitenear San Carlos, Río San Juan, Nicaragua
Aircraft
Aircraft typeFairchild C-123K
OperatorCorporate Air Services, owned by Southern Air Transport
RegistrationHPF821 (previously N4410F), ex-USAF 54-679 (c/n 20128)
Flight originIlopango International Airport, El Salvador
DestinationIlopango International Airport, El Salvador
Passengers0
Crew4
Fatalities3
Injuries0
Survivors1

Hasenfus was captured within 24 hours. He was convicted of terrorism-related charges, sentenced to 30 years in prison, and pardoned a month later to return to his family in Wisconsin; at the request of Senator Chris Dodd and others, he was released in exchange for Sandinista soldiers captured by the Contras.[1] Hasenfus's comments about CIA backing for the flights were initially denied by the U.S. government,[2] but investigations of what became known as the Iran-Contra affair showed that the U.S. had organized this and other flights, and had funded the cargo using illegal weapons sales to Iran.

Background

HPF821 was operated by Corporate Air Services, a front for Southern Air Transport, the registered owner of the aircraft.[3] Some of the pilots and crew involved with the Contra supply flights, including Eugene Hasenfus, had been involved in the CIA's aerial supply activities during the Vietnam War, using Air America, Southern Air Transport, and other CIA proprietary airlines. Two Cuban-Americans involved in organising the flights were known to Hasenfus as "Max Gómez" (real name Félix Rodríguez) and "Ramón Medina" (real name Luis Posada Carriles).[3]

Incident

Map of Central America. The aircraft flew from El Salvador along the western coast of Nicaragua to Costa Rica, before turning and entering Nicaraguan airspace near Costa Rica

HPF821 departed from Ilopango International Airport, El Salvador, carrying a cargo of "60 collapsible AK-47 rifles, 50,000 AK-47 rifle cartridges, several dozen RPG-7 grenade launchers and 150 pairs of jungle boots".[1] The aircraft flew along the western coast of Nicaragua to Costa Rica, entering Costa Rica from the northwest. Here, it turned and headed for Nicaragua.[3] After entering Nicaraguan airspace near the border with Costa Rica, the aircraft was maneuvering down towards 2,500 feet in preparation for dropping off its cargo. The young Sandinista soldier named José Fernando Canales Alemán sighted the cargo plane. He fired a Russian-made shoulder mounted SAM-7 (9K32 Strela-2) surface-to-air missile. It crashed near San Carlos, Río San Juan, killing three of its four crew: William J. Cooper, Wallace "Buzz" Sawyer, and radio operator Freddy Vilches. The fourth, Eugene Hasenfus, parachuted to safety, but was captured within 24 hours.[4] Hasenfus was a former Marine who had previously flown CIA missions in Laos and Vietnam, in the CIA's infamous Air America program.

Aftermath

Hasenfus was captured within 24 hours, and confessed to smuggling weapons.[5] He was sentenced by a Nicaraguan court to 30 years in prison. At the request of Senator Chris Dodd and others investigating the Iran-Contra affair, he was released in exchange for Sandinista soldiers captured by the Contras.[1] Hasenfus was pardoned and released on 17 December, and returned to the U.S. with Dodd, in what Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega described as a "gesture of peace by the people of Nicaragua".[5]

Logbooks retrieved from the wreckage of the aircraft listed various flights with Southern Air Transport personnel.[6]

Hasenfus' capture while delivering weapons and supplies to the right-wing Contra rebels gave the world its first glimpse of the Iran Contra scandal starting to unravel. First the CIA, Pentagon, State Department, and White House – denied any connection to him. The reason was that the US Congress had voted in the "Boland Amendment" to outlaw US-assistance to the Contras – including prohibiting all "funds available to the CIA and the Department of Defense from being used in Nicaragua for military purposes."[7]

Cynthia Arnson, the director of the Latin American Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, wrote in Crossroads: Congress, the President, and Central America 1976-1993: "Disclosure of the administration's deception in carrying out Nicaragua policy invited Congress to take drastic measures to restore equilibrium between the two branches, if only to reassert the primacy of law in a constitutional government."[8]

See also

References

  1. Timothy Lange, Daily Kos, 27 December 2009, Blast from the Past. Gene Hasenfus: December 1986
  2. Paul Goepfert, Chicago Tribune, 10 October 1986, Captive American Links Cia, Plane
  3. Envío, Hasenfus: Nothing But the Fact, No. 65, November 1986
  4. Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Fairchild C-123K Provider HPF821 San Carlos". aviation-safety.net.
  5. Kinzer, Stephen (18 December 1986). "HASENFUS IS FREED BY NICARAGUANS AND HEADS HOME". The New York Times.
  6. Greve, Frank (18 October 1986). "Logbooks Tie Contras, Fla. Airline Plane's Wreckage Yielded Pilot's Files". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
  7. "The exposure of Eugene Hasenfus".
  8. Arnson, Cynthia (1993). Crossroads: Congress, the President, and Central America 1976-1993 (Second ed.). University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 278.
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