Pope was born in
Miami, Florida on October 20, 1928. Pope "was the son of a moderately prosperous fruit grower in
Perrine, Florida, just south of Miami.... [he spent time busting] broncos in Texas." He graduated from the
University of Florida, After university, Pope entered the U.S. Air Force and served as a
first lieutenant in the Korean War. He flew a
Douglas B-26 Invader in combat, receiving three
Air Medals and a
Distinguished Flying Cross. After the war, the U.S. Air Force returned Pope to the United States as an Air Force instructor.
Điện Biên Phủ In March 1954, Pope left the U.S. Air Force and joined a CIA
front organization,
Civil Air Transport (CAT), flying one of its
Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcars to supply French forces besieged in the
Battle of Điện Biên Phủ in
French Indochina. On March 13,
Việt Minh artillery disabled Điện Biên Phủ's airstrip, forcing the French garrison there to be supplied by air drop. CAT pilots flew hundreds of sorties from
Cat Bi to Điện Biên Phủ. Another source suggests that
Aquila was bombed not on April 28 but on May 1 or 2. On April 29, Pope attacked the government-held province of
South East Sulawesi. He struck the Indonesian Air Force base at
Kendari, the provincial capital, with bombs and machine-gun fire. He then strafed an
Indonesian Navy patrol boat, KRI
Intana, killing five crew and wounding another 23. On April 30, Pope again attacked Palu and Donggala; sinking a ship, destroying a warehouse and demolishing a bridge. On May 1, Pope attacked the city of
Ambon, the provincial capital of
Maluku. His four 500 lb bombs missed his waterfront targets and fell in the sea. He then tried a strafing run, but his
starboard engine suffered an explosion. Pope aborted the attack and returned to Mapanget. It took several days for the B-26 to be given a replacement starboard engine. Pope's next sortie was on May 7, when he again attacked the government airbase at Ambon. He seriously damaged a
Douglas C-47 Skytrain and a
North American P-51 Mustang and caused other damage on the airbase. On May 8, he attacked the Palu area in the morning and Ambon in the afternoon. On Ambon, he bombed and machine-gunned the government-held Liang airbase in the northeast of the island, damaging the runway and destroying a
Consolidated PBY Catalina. He then continued to Ambon city where he attacked an Indonesian Navy gunboat at anchor. His bomb missed, but he then attacked with machine-guns, wounding two crew and damaging the gunboat. Since May 1, Beale and his B-26 had been resting at Clark Air Base, leaving Pope's aircraft as AUREV's only active bomber. On May 9, Beale returned to Mapanget, releasing Pope who then took his turn to fly to Clark for several days' leave. On May 15, Pope attacked a small transport ship, the
Naiko, in Ambon Bay. She was a merchant ship that the Indonesian Government had pressed into military service, and was bringing a company of Ambonese troops home from
East Java. Pope's bomb hit the
Naikos engine room, killing one crew member and 16 infantrymen and setting the ship on fire. He then attacked Ambon city, aiming for the barracks. His first bomb missed and exploded in a market-place next door. His next landed in the barracks compound, but bounced and exploded near an ice factory. He then returned to Mapanget to find that in his absence, the Indonesian Air Force had bombed the rebel air base, destroying a CIA/AUREV PBY Catalina and damaging a CIA/AUREV P-51 Mustang. The Indonesian government alleged that Pope's bombing of a marketplace in Ambon city had killed a large number of civilians. This later turned out to be untrue, but in the meantime the
U.S. Embassy in Jakarta protested to the
United States Department of State, which then warned the CIA team in
Manado. The CIA tightened its AUREV pilots'
rules of engagement to attacking only airfields and boats. Even military buildings were prohibited.
Capture By mid-May, Indonesian government forces were planning amphibious counter-attacks on the islands of Morotai and
Halmahera that Permesta had captured toward the end of April. This involved assembling a naval and transport fleet in Ambon bay, where ships started to arrive from
Java on May 16. At 0300 on May 18, Pope took off from Mapanget to attack Ambon again. He first attacked the airfield, destroying the C-47 and P-51 that he had damaged on May 7. A short distance west of Ambon Bay, he found the invasion fleet, which included two 7,000-ton merchant ships being used as troop transports. One of the transports, the
Sawega, was trying to take evasive maneuvers as Pope attacked it; his bomb fell in the sea short of its target. The Indonesian Air Force had one serviceable P-51 Mustang on Ambon, at Liang airbase. When Pope attacked Ambon airfield on May 18, the P-51 flown by
Ignatius Dewanto at Liang was scrambled to repel him. Dewanto closed on the B-26 just as Pope was attacking the
Sawega. The convoy took both aircraft to be AUREV and fired on both of them. Dewanto also hit the B-26, damaging its starboard wing and the bomber caught fire. Pope and his Permesta radio operator, Jan Harry Rantung, bailed out. As they jumped, the B-26 was entering a sharp dive and the
slipstream threw Pope against the tail fin, fracturing his right leg. They landed on the coast of Pulau Hatala, a small island west of Ambon, where a small Indonesian Navy landing party from one of the invasion fleet's minesweepers was put ashore and captured them. Some 20 other AUREV insurgent aircraft were reported to have been seen with
Nationalist Chinese markings obscured by hasty coats of paint. Their pilots were Nationalist Chinese and Americans from CAT. The execution was not carried out, but Pope remained under house arrest. He was used as a bargaining chip in Indonesian negotiations with the United States for arms. He was eventually exchanged with 10
Lockheed C-130 Hercules transport planes. In February 1962, U.S. Attorney General
Robert F. Kennedy paid President Sukarno a goodwill visit and pleaded for Pope's release. Sukarno also received a visit from Pope's wife, mother and sister, who all tearfully pleaded for his pardon. On July 2, 1962, Pope was quietly driven to the airport and put on a U.S. plane out of Indonesia. Sukarno told Pope:
Southern Air Transport After his release from Indonesian imprisonment in 1962 Pope returned to Miami, where he joined
Southern Air Transport (SAT). Like CAT, SAT was a CIA front organization flying covert missions in regions including southeast Asia. ==Recognition==