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Commenced operations | 1946 | ||||||
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Ceased operations | 16 February 1968 | ||||||
Fleet size | See Fleet below | ||||||
Destinations | See Destinations below | ||||||
Parent company | CAT, Inc. | ||||||
Headquarters | Taipei, Taiwan | ||||||
Key people | Claire Chennault and Whiting Willauer |
In 1958 Time reported that 20 CAT aircraft were supplying the PRRI/Permesta movement against President Sukarno's government of Indonesia, which the Eisenhower administration feared had communist sympathies. [7] [8] In April 1958 two CAT pilots flew combat missions for Permesta's Angkatan Udara Revolusioner ("Revolutionary Air Force") or AUREV. William H. Beale [9] and Allen Pope [10] flew CIA Douglas B-26 Invaders for AUREV. In May, Beale withdrew from the operation, [11] by which time a third CAT pilot, Connie W Seigrist, had joined flying a CIA Consolidated PBY Catalina. [12] The CIA directed Beale and Pope to target not only Indonesian armed forces but also unarmed foreign merchant ships, in order to frighten overseas trade away from Indonesian waters, thereby weakening the Indonesian economy and undermining Sukarno's government. [13] On April 28, 1958, Beale attacked the Royal Dutch Shell terminal at Balikpapan in East Kalimantan, sinking the British tanker MV San Flaviano, [14] while Pope off the port of Donggala near Palu in Central Sulawesi sank merchant ships from Greece, Italy and Panama. [13]
On May 18 west of Ambon Island, Pope attacked one of a pair of Indonesian merchant ships that were carrying government troops for a counter-offensive against Permesta. [15] An Indonesian Air Force P-51 and anti-aircraft fire from the ships shot down the B-26, [16] and Pope and his Indonesian radio operator were captured. [17] The CIA had ordered the CAT pilots to fly "sterile", i.e. with no documents that could either identify them or link them with the US government. [18] However, Pope was carrying about 30 documents [19] including his detailed flight log, [19] [20] secret orders for temporary deployment in Indonesia, [20] military separation file [19] and CAT identity card. [19] Pope's capture with these documents immediately exposed the level of CIA support for the Permesta rebellion. [7] Embarrassed, the Eisenhower administration quickly ended CIA support for Permesta and withdrew its agents and remaining aircraft from AUREV. [21]
Early in 1960 an Indonesian military court tried Pope; in April it convicted him and sentenced him to death. [20] However, in 1962 Robert F. Kennedy negotiated with President Sukarno, and in August that year the Indonesian authorities released Pope and returned him to the US. [22]
In 1959, CAT was reorganized as Air America, which supported covert operations throughout Indochina during the Vietnam War (also known as the "Second Indochina War"), particularly in Laos. For further information see Air America (airline) § Early history: Civil Air Transport (CAT).
After pulling out of South Vietnam in 1975, there was an attempt to keep a company presence in Thailand. After this fell through, Air America officially disbanded on June 30, 1976.
CAT started to operate scheduled passenger services, beginning with international flights to Hong Kong, then to Japan, South Korea, the Philippines and Thailand, as well as domestic routes within Taiwan. The granddaughter of Sun Yatsen, Nora Sun, became the youngest flight attendant to work for CAT.
The first flights were carried out with C-46, then C-54 Skymaster aircraft. In 1958, CAT inaugurated DC-6B services. In 1961, CAT started to operate a Convair 880M, becoming the first airline to operate pure jet scheduled passenger services on regional routes in the Far East. [23] The Convair 880M was replaced by a Boeing 727 in January 1968. On 16 February 1968 the 727, flying from Hong Kong to Taipei, crashed near Linkou in northern Taiwan, ending 23 years of operations. The remnants of the cargo operation became Flying Tiger. Flying Tiger International merged to FedEx.
Air America was an American passenger and cargo airline established in 1946 and covertly owned and operated by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from 1950 to 1976. It supplied and supported covert operations in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War, including providing support for drug smuggling in Laos.
Ambon Island is part of the Maluku Islands of Indonesia. The island has an area of 743.37 km2 (287.02 sq mi) and is mountainous, well watered, and fertile. Ambon Island consists of two territories: the city of Ambon to the south and various districts (kecamatan) of the Central Maluku Regency to the north. The main city and seaport is Ambon, which is also the capital of Maluku province, while those districts of Maluku Tengah Regency situated on Ambon Island had a 2020 Census population of 128,069. Ambon has an airport and is home to the Pattimura University and Open University, state universities, and a few private universities, which include Darussalam University and Universitas Kristen Indonesia Maluku (UKIM).
Ambon is the capital and largest city of the Indonesian province of Maluku. This city is also known as Ambon Manise, which means "beautiful" or "pretty" Ambon in the Ambonese language. It covers a land area of 359.45 km2, and had a population of 331,254 at the 2010 Census and 347,288 at the 2020 Census; the official estimate as at mid 2022 was 348,225. The city is divided into five administrative districts – namely Nusaniwe, Sirimau, Teluk Ambon, Baguala and Leitimur Selatan. Known as Indonesia's music city, Ambon became the first city in Southeast Asia to be recognised as the UNESCO City of Music in 2019.
The China National Aviation Corporation was a Chinese airline which was nationalized after the Chinese Communist Party took control in 1949, and merged into the People's Aviation Company of China (中國人民航空公司) in 1952. It was a major airline under the Nationalist government of China.
This is a list of aviation-related events from 1951:
This is a list of aviation-related events from 1952:
This is a list of aviation-related events from 1954:
This is a list of aviation-related events from 1958.
Flying Tiger Line, also known as Flying Tigers, was the first scheduled cargo airline in the United States and a major military charter operator during the Cold War era for both cargo and personnel. The airline was bought by Federal Express in 1988.
Permesta was a rebel movement in Indonesia that was declared on 2 March 1957 by civil and military leaders in East Indonesia. Initially the center of the movement was in Makassar, which at that time was the capital of the province of Sulawesi. However, support for the movement in South Sulawesi gradually dissipated, forcing the headquarters to move to Manado in North Sulawesi.
Active from 1951 to 1975, Air Viet Nam was South Vietnam's first commercial air carrier, headquartered in District 1, Saigon. Established under a decree by Chief of State Bảo Đại, the airline flew over two million passengers, throughout the Vietnam War, and until its collapse due to the Fall of Saigon.
HMS Aurochs (P426/S26), was an Amphion-class submarine of the Royal Navy, built by Vickers Armstrong and launched 28 July 1945. Her namesake was the aurochs, an extinct Eurasian wild ox ancestral to domestic cattle and often portrayed in cave art and heraldry.
Allen Lawrence Pope was an American military and paramilitary aviator. He rose to international attention as the subject of a diplomatic dispute between the United States and Indonesia after the B-26 Invader aircraft he was piloting in a Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) covert operation was shot down over Ambon on May 18, 1958, during the "Indonesian Crisis".
Morotai Island is an island in the Halmahera group of eastern Indonesia's Maluku Islands (Moluccas). It is one of Indonesia's northernmost islands.
William Henry Beale Jr. was a US military and paramilitary aviator. In the Second World War, he was in the USAAF and flew bombing missions in the northern Pacific theater. In the Permesta rebellion in Indonesia in 1958 he flew bombing missions for the CIA. His career ended on a CIA covert mission in Laos in 1962 when he was killed in a plane crash.
SS San Flaviano was a British oil tanker owned by Eagle Oil and Shipping Company, a British subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell. She was built by Cammell Laird in England in 1956 and attacked and sunk by the CIA in Borneo in 1958.
MV Daronia was a 1930s British oil tanker owned by Anglo-Saxon Petroleum, a British subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell. She was launched in 1938 by Hawthorn, Leslie in North East England and completed in 1939. She was one of a class of 20 similar tankers built for Anglo-Saxon.
SS Aquila was a cargo ship built in Britain in 1940 for Stavros Livanos' Trent Maritime Co Ltd. by William Gray & Company. An identical sister, Duke of Athens, was built for Trent at the same time.
SS Flying Lark was a ship built in Fredrikstad, Norway in 1915 as the banana boat SS Honduras. Over a 43 year career that spanned oceans and seas the world over she had 10 owners, eight names and a succession of different managers.
Civil Air Transport | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 民航空運公司 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 民航空运公司 | ||||||
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Civil Air Transport (CAT) ( IATA :CT, ICAO :CAT, call sign :Mandarin) was a Nationalist Chinese airline,later owned by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),that supported United States covert operations throughout East and Southeast Asia. During the Cold War,missions consisted in assistance to "Free World" allies according to the Mutual Defense Assistance Act of 1949.
CAT was created by Claire Chennault and Whiting Willauer in 1946 as Chinese National Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (CNRRA) Air Transport. Using surplus World War II aircraft such as the C-47 Dakota and the C-46 Commando,CAT airlifted supplies and food into war-ravaged China. It was soon pressed into service to support Chiang Kai-shek and his Kuomintang forces in the civil war between them and the communists under Mao Zedong. Many of its first pilots were veterans of Chennault's World War II combat groups,popularly known as Flying Tigers. (Other of Chennault's veterans went on to form another air transport company,the Flying Tiger Line. This was a completely separate operation from Civil Air Transport and the follow-on Air America.)
By 1950,following the defeat of Chiang's forces and their retreat to Taiwan,the airline faced financial difficulties. The CIA formed a private Delaware corporation called Airdale Corporation,which formed a subsidiary called CAT,Inc. The subsidiary corporation purchased nominal shares of Civil Air Transport. CAT maintained a civilian appearance by flying scheduled passenger flights while simultaneously using other aircraft in its fleet to fly covert missions.
With the spread of communism throughout Southeast Asia,CAT's mission changed.
During the Chinese Civil War,under contract with the Chinese Nationalist government and later the CIA,CAT flew supplies and ammunition into China to assist Kuomintang forces on the Chinese mainland,primarily using C-47 and C-46 aircraft. With the defeat of the Kuomintang in 1949,CAT helped to evacuate thousands of Chinese to Taiwan.
During the Korean War,CAT airlifted thousands of tons of war materials to supply United States military operations,including support of Kuomintang holdouts based in Burma (Operation PAPER [1] ). On 29 November 1952,a CAT C-47 left Seoul on a mission to collect an anti-Communist Chinese agent in the foothills of northeastern China,using a "pole and line" technique. The mission was apparently compromised and Chinese forces were waiting for them. Approaching low over the ground,it was attacked by small-arms fire,and crash-landed near the town of Antu in China's Jilin province. The pilots,Robert Snoddy and Norman Schwartz were killed during the crash and subsequent fire,and were buried nearby. The two CIA officers,John T. Downey and Richard G. Fecteau survived and were immediately taken prisoner by Chinese forces,who were waiting for the flight. Downey and Fecteau were held by China and regularly interrogated for nearly twenty years. Fecteau was released unexpectedly following Nixon's visit to China in 1972,but Downey was released only after Washington publicly acknowledged their spy mission in 1973.
At the time the families of the pilots were told,in order to keep the CIA's covert actions in China secret,that they had crashed into the Sea of Japan on a routine flight to Tokyo. In 2001,China allowed the US Defense Department's Prisoner of War and Missing in Action (POW/MIA) office to conduct a recovery effort for the bodies of the pilots. In 2005 the POW/MIA office announced that it had identified the remains of Robert Snoddy using DNA analysis. Schwartz's remains have not been recovered.
The 1952-1953 edition of Jane's All The World's Aircraft lists the head office address as Suite 309,Kass Building,711 14th Street,N.W.,Washington,D.C.,with the footnote that the company had reregistered in the U.S. The president is given as Whiting Willauer,and the fleet listed as 23 Curtiss C-46 Commando and 4 Douglas DC-3 aircraft.
On May 1,1953,Operation Squaw began,calling for CAT to airdrop supplies to French troops besieged at Na Sam,Laos. This operation was the first U.S. involvement in what became the First Indochina War. [2] CAT transported supplies and troops for French operations during Operation Castor in November 1953. [3]
CAT assisted the French government at various times during its Indochina wars,flying supplies and equipment into Hanoi's Gia Lam airport and other fields using C-46 and C-47 transport planes.
Operation Squaw-II was approved on January 29,1954,and,after negotiations with the French,a contract was signed on March 3 for CAT to supply 24 pilots to operate 12 C-119s. [4] At the Battle of Dien Bien Phu,CAT supplied the French garrison by parachuting troops and supplies with covert USAF C-119 inscribed with French Air Force insignia. Two CAT pilots James B. McGovern Jr. and Wallace Buford were killed in action during the siege of Dien Bien Phu in May 1954. [2] [5] They were the first American casualties of what was later termed the Vietnam War. [3] McGovern's remains were recovered in 2002 and identified in 2006. [2] [6] Seven surviving CAT pilots out of the thirty-seven involved in the battle received the French Legion of Honor in February 2005 during a special ceremony at the French embassy in Washington. [3]
The 1956-1957 edition of Jane's All The World's Aircraft lists the head office address as 46 Chung Shan Road,North,2nd Section,Taipei,Taiwan (Formosa). The president and general manager is given as Hugh L. Grundy,with C.J. Rosbert listed as vice-president and assistant general manager. The fleet is listed as 2 Douglas DC-4,22 Curtiss Commando,2 Douglas DC-3,3 Douglas C-47,and 2 Convair Catalina.
In the 1958-1959 edition of Jane's,the last year in which the "Airlines of the World" section was carried,the home office address in Taiwan remained the same,but no company officers are listed. The fleet is given as 3 Douglas DC-4,25 Curtiss C-46,5 Douglas DC-3,2 Convair Catalina,with 2 Douglas DC-6B on order.
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