Mike Flanagan (Irish-Israeli soldier)


Mike Flanagan was a British soldier of Irish birth who assisted the formation of the Israeli armed forces.
He was born in Foxford, County Mayo Ireland. Flanagan served with the British Army during World War II, and participated in the liberation of the Nazi-operated Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
Following the war, Flanagan was stationed in the British Mandate Palestine. Being sympathetic with the emerging nation of Israel, on 29 June 1948, Flanagan stole two British Cromwell tanks and drove them to Israeli forces in Tel Aviv. These became central to the Israeli Armored Corps. Flanagan is considered one of the most famous deserters from the British Army in Palestine. The tanks were hidden in Givatayim and later formed the basis of the Israeli Armored Corps. The Cromwell tanks are currently on display at the Armored Corps Memorial Site and Museum in Latrun.
Flanagan subsequently converted to Judaism, adopted the Hebrew name Michael Peleg, and married Ruth Levy, fellow soldier whom he had met on active service. They lived in Israel on Kibbutz Sha'ar HaAmakim. Flanagan served as a reservist in the 1956 Sinai Campaign, the 1967 Six-Day War, as well as the Yom Kippur War in 1973. He supervised the tank repair unit at the Armored Corps base in Julis throughout this time. After his retirement from the Haganah and the death of his wife he emigrated to Canada. He died 26 January 2014 and was subsequently buried in Sha’ar HaAmakim cemetery alongside his wife and son
He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Valor from The Wiesenthal Center in the United States. The Israeli Defense Forces honored Flanagan for his immense and critical contributions to the formulation of the IDF.