US billionaire Michael Bloomberg announced Tuesday he was jetting into Tel Aviv to show solidarity with Israel, calling for a US flight ban to be lifted immediately.
The move from the former mayor of New York, a city of eight million with the largest Jewish population in the US, puts him at odds with the US government that backed the ban to protect US citizens from possible Hamas rocket attacks.
Bloomberg urged the US Federal Aviation Administration to reverse the ban, saying it had handed Hamas an “undeserved victory” in a more than two-week conflict with Israel.
He announced in a statement via his official Twitter account that he was boarding an Israeli airlines flight.
“This evening I will be flying on El Al to Tel Aviv to show solidarity with the Israeli people and to demonstrate that it is safe to fly in and out of Israel,” he wrote.
He called Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion the “best protected airport in the world” where El Al flights had continued safely despite the European and North American hiatus.
“The flight restrictions are a mistake that hands Hamas an undeserved victory and should be lifted immediately.
“I strongly urge the FAA to reverse course and permit US airlines to fly to Israel,” Bloomberg added.
The FAA ordered US airlines to halt flights to Tel Aviv for at least 24 hours after a rocket fired from Gaza struck near the city’s main airport.
The move from the former mayor of New York, a city of eight million with the largest Jewish population in the US, puts him at odds with the US government that backed the ban to protect US citizens from possible Hamas rocket attacks.
Bloomberg urged the US Federal Aviation Administration to reverse the ban, saying it had handed Hamas an “undeserved victory” in a more than two-week conflict with Israel.
He announced in a statement via his official Twitter account that he was boarding an Israeli airlines flight.
“This evening I will be flying on El Al to Tel Aviv to show solidarity with the Israeli people and to demonstrate that it is safe to fly in and out of Israel,” he wrote.
He called Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion the “best protected airport in the world” where El Al flights had continued safely despite the European and North American hiatus.
“The flight restrictions are a mistake that hands Hamas an undeserved victory and should be lifted immediately.
“I strongly urge the FAA to reverse course and permit US airlines to fly to Israel,” Bloomberg added.
The FAA ordered US airlines to halt flights to Tel Aviv for at least 24 hours after a rocket fired from Gaza struck near the city’s main airport.