News IDF major corroborates anchors helicopter report Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By JTA | February 13, 2015 An Israeli army officer who was on a helicopter with NBC news anchor Brian Williams during the Second Lebanon War said his reporting “was representative of the experience.” “The general descriptions Williams gave were accurate,” Jacob Dallal, a reserve major in the army’s media liaison office, told Bloomberg in a phone interview on Feb. 9. Williams, who the Washington Post reported has given several different versions of the 2006 flight, was given a six-month suspension without pay by NBC, the network announced on Feb. 10. Williams admitted over the weekend that he was not on a helicopter that was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade in Iraq in 2003. His accounts of incidents elsewhere also are being called into question. In a 2007 interview, Williams said of his helicopter ride over northern Israel during the war between Israel and Hezbollah that there were “rockets passing just beneath the helicopter I was riding in.” “There was Katyusha rocket fire during the helicopter flight, the pilots showed where the Katyusha had just landed, and you could see the big clouds of dust where they landed,” Dallal told Bloomberg. He said the helicopter was not in danger and that the “trajectory of the rockets was beneath us.” — jta JTA Content distributed by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency news service. Also On J. Jewish Life Passover events for kids and families around the Bay Area Israel Netanyahu pauses judicial reform, a major win for protesters Gaming A bestselling novel, a Holocaust game, and accusations of 'uncredited work' Bay Area In Afghanistan he was a doctor. Now he struggles to pay rent. Subscribe to our Newsletter Enter Email Sign Up