Good for him!
Godspeed Eric, on one last mission.
From an article in 2009:
Worcestershire News
Stalins forgotten British lifesavers
Jun 24 2009 by Andy Richards, Birmingham Mail
Eric Carter
ERIC Carter was a 21-year-old fighter pilot when he was piled onto a train in Hull with the rest of 81 Squadron and taken to Liverpool in 1941.
There, he was ushered onto a ship and set sail for the open seas, none the wiser about his destination. Rumours in the squadron suggested they might be heading for Africa, but they soon found out they would be ditching their warm-weather gear for good.
Eric was part of Force Benedict, a clandestine operation to save the Russian port of Murmansk as the Nazi war machine marched on Moscow. The operation was top-secret because Stalin did not want the world to know his regime needed British assistance.
Eric, aged 89, now lives in Chaddesley Corbett in Worcestershire. Perhaps the last surviving member of the secret squadron who helped save Russia from defeat by Nazi Germany, his story may never have been revealed had it not been for a chance discovery.
The discovery of a medal awarded to Force Benedicts wing commander, Group Captain Henry Neville Gynes Ramsbottom-Isherwood, lifted the lid on the squadrons heroics.
He was one of only four non-Russians given the nations highest military award, the Order of Lenin, which was sold by Sothebys this week for £46,000.
Eric said: Stalin did not want his people to know that he had asked the West for help and we were threatened with a court martial if we said anything. It was a very well-kept secret, but I was young and I must have been mad. Perhaps we were just a tougher generation.