Elat
Posted: Mon Jan 19, 2009 7:06 pm
Israel has issued an 8o p. stamp depicting the destroyer Eilat, a tribute to the ship which was sunk on October 22, 1967; by guided missiles from a Soviet-built "Komar" vessel of the Egyptian Navy. The rocket missiles had a homing device and although they could be seen approaching the destroyer, evasive action was impossible. The vessel never stood a chance.
The Eilat was on a routine patrol at Romani on the Sinai coast, miles from Port Said where the Egyptian ship which fired the rockets was lying. Of the 202 officers and men on board the Israeli destroyer it was announced that 17 were killed and 26 were reported missing. Of the 159 survivors, 48 were injured.
Israel protested to the United Nations Security Council that the attack on the destroyer was not only a breach of international maritime law but also a most dangerous breach of the cease-fire arrangements made after the six-day war, describing the sinking as a deliberate and flagrant act of belligerency. The Egyptians claimed that the Eilat was in Egyptian territorial waters, decorating the four naval officers concerned.
The Eilat was the former British destroyer Zealous, built by Cammell Laird, Birkenhead, in 1944. She was sold to the Israeli Navy on July 15, 1955, together with a sister-ship, the Zodiac. Standard displacement was 1,710 tons and length 3624 ft., beam 354 ft. and draft 16 ft. Armament consisted of four 4.5-in., and five 4o mn. guns, with eight 2 -in. torpedo tubes. Propelling machinery was a set of Parsons geared turbines developing' 40,000 s.h.p. to give a speed of 36 knots. There seem to be various translations of the Israeli name of the destroyer, among them, Elat, Eilat and Eilath.
SG411 Sea Breezes 7/69
The Eilat was on a routine patrol at Romani on the Sinai coast, miles from Port Said where the Egyptian ship which fired the rockets was lying. Of the 202 officers and men on board the Israeli destroyer it was announced that 17 were killed and 26 were reported missing. Of the 159 survivors, 48 were injured.
Israel protested to the United Nations Security Council that the attack on the destroyer was not only a breach of international maritime law but also a most dangerous breach of the cease-fire arrangements made after the six-day war, describing the sinking as a deliberate and flagrant act of belligerency. The Egyptians claimed that the Eilat was in Egyptian territorial waters, decorating the four naval officers concerned.
The Eilat was the former British destroyer Zealous, built by Cammell Laird, Birkenhead, in 1944. She was sold to the Israeli Navy on July 15, 1955, together with a sister-ship, the Zodiac. Standard displacement was 1,710 tons and length 3624 ft., beam 354 ft. and draft 16 ft. Armament consisted of four 4.5-in., and five 4o mn. guns, with eight 2 -in. torpedo tubes. Propelling machinery was a set of Parsons geared turbines developing' 40,000 s.h.p. to give a speed of 36 knots. There seem to be various translations of the Israeli name of the destroyer, among them, Elat, Eilat and Eilath.
SG411 Sea Breezes 7/69