OPERAT ON An elderly, partially blind woman is carried upon arrival in Israel. Bribes And Precision Helped The Rescue It took a $3 million payment and clandestine intelligence work to get the airlift off the ground. HELEN DAVIS Foreign Correspondent T his is a great moment for all our people." The speaker was Israeli Prime Minister Yit- zhak Shamir and he made the statement as the first of more than 14,000 Ethiopian Jews streamed into Ben- Gurion Airport last weekend in a heroic rescue operation that added a new chapter to the dramatic story of the modern State of Israel. With one extended swoop, nearly the entire community of Ethiopian Jews remaining in that war-plagued African nation was plucked to safety in the top-secret "Operation Solomon" — an operation conducted with military precision under the tightest of security nets. Lending an air of urgency to the operation was the 24 FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1991 backdrop of advancing Arab- backed Ethiopian rebels thought also to be harboring a grudge against Israel and Ethiopian Jews because of the Jewish state's past military aid to the collapsing Ethiopian regime. Full details of "Operation Solomon" are unlikely ever 70 Mossad-trained Ethiopian Jews who had escaped to Israel earlier returned to Addis Ababa to facilitate the operation. to be revealed by the Mossad, Israel's foreign in- telligence agency, but suffi- cient information has emerged to construct a pic- ture of the dramatic events that unfolded late last week. Two key Israeli figures have emerged as principal players in the high-stakes drama. The first is the ac- complished Israeli diplomat Simcha Dinitz, former am- bassador to the United States and now chairman of the Jewish Agency. He was the link between Jerusalem and Washington, whose desire to play midwife to the birth of a new Ethio- pia enabled the operation to take place. A letter from President Bush to Ethiopia's acting president urging him to let the Jews go helped pave the way. The second — and even more dramatic Israeli role — was that played by Uri Lubrani, a shadowy figure and the former Israeli envoy to Iran who was first to spot that the Shah would not survive the onslaught of Islamic fundamentalism. SOLOMON More recently, it was Mr. Lubrani who recognized that the bloody, 14-year reign of Ethiopia's Mengistu Haile Mariam could no longer resist the Eritrean and Tigrayan rebels. His task was to deal with the key officials of that dy- ing, tyrannical regime which had re-established re- lations with Israel in 1989 and had dealt with the Jew- ish state on the basis of driv- ing self-interest in the face of growing rebel military pressure. Ethiopia's Jews were vir- tually hostages of the regime, which refused to let them leave in large numbers to insure a steady supply of badly needed Israeli military assistance. Mr. Lubrani's task was to cajole, promise and threaten the E- thiopian leaders; to do everything necessary to safeguard them until the rescue mission could be mounted. "Operation Solomon" was finally activated last Tues- day, immediately after news filtered out that Mengistu had fled to the southern African state of Zimbabwe — an event believed to have been engineered by the United States. By that time, virtually all of Ethiopia's remaining Jews had walked to the capi- tal from their former homes in the war-ravaged, drought- stricken provinces of Gondar and Tigray. An estimated 4,000 died on the long, treacherous trek, easy prey to exhaustion, disease and roaming bandits. Meanwhile, about 70 Mossad-trained, Amharic- speaking Ethiopian Jews who had escaped to Israel five years earlier during "Operation Moses" were returned to Addis Ababa, where they melted unob- trusively into the squalid refugee camps and shanty towns where 14,000 Jews had been concentrated. The day after Mengistu fled, they moved into top gear. One group left the camps to organize busses that would transport the Ethio- pian Jews on the first stage of their journey to safety. A second group told in- habitants of the camps to prepare to leave. The destitute, displaced remnant of Ethiopia's Jew- ish community, mostly barefoot and wearing tradi- tional white robes, was about to be dispossessed of its last, precious belongings. They could not, they were told, take anything but the clothes they were wearing — no luggage except for per- sonal religious articles. At the same time as the E- thiopian end of the operation swung into action, Israeli Air Force transport planes took off from bases in the Jewish state for the three- and-a-half-hour journey to Addis Ababa. On board were some 200 crack commandos, led by Israel's Deputy Chief of Staff, Maj. Gen. Amnon Shahak. They had already been briefed on their task: to secure the airport at Addis Ababa and ensure the safe arrival and departure of scores of flights that would follow almost immediately. Less than 24 hours after Mengistu had fled, and with The Ethiopians were allowed to take nothing but the clothes they were wearing and personal religious articles. the sound of rebel gunfire clearly audible, fleets of busses, each accompanied by Mossad agents, had loaded their human cargo and were snaking through the deserted streets of Addis Ababa toward the Israeli Embassy compound. At the international air- port, the Israeli transport planes disgorged the corn- mandos who knew every inch of the airport layout from their training in Israel. As they took up their posi- tions, the Ethiopian police quietly left the area. This was not a matter of luck or intimidation, but the result of another piece of careful planning: Israel had taken the precaution of han- ding the Ethiopian au- thorities $35 million in cash "to facilitate the operation." "Our assessment was that the operation could not be carried out by force," said one Israeli official simply. With the airport perimeter and buildings under Israeli control, the approaching Israeli planes prepared to land. At the same time, the groups of Ethiopian Jews ar- riving at the embassy com- pound were quickly re- organized into fresh groups and once again put on the busses. This time they were bound for the airport, where the first of the planes had landed and were waiting, engines