Anchit Gupta Profile picture
Jan 26 8 tweets 6 min read
Republic Day special! Haider Raza - The forgotten Airman. Commissioned @IAF_MCC as a pilot with the 2nd Pilot Course in 1940, he later moved to Pakistan Air Force, from where he left as the Vice Chief. Not before he had made his mark...His story.. (1/7)
Born on 23 Sep 1916 in Chapra, United Provinces to Mary (Lyng) Raza and Syed Mustapha Raza, he chose to move to PAF on partition, even though his brother continued to serve with the Indian Army. He though spent his last years and died in the USA. (2/7)
He saw service with 1 Sqn and was the first non-white Commanding officer of 10 Sqn of the @IAF_MCC . His last posting before the partition was as Officer-in-Charge Flying of Kohat, the only station open to Indians to command and control. (3/7)
Raza's first 4 years were with 1 Sqn, where he rose to be B Flight Commander (Seen in pic) and served in Imphal - Kohima (where this pic was taken). He was one of the only two pilots to fly two tours of operations with 1 Sqn in Burma. (4/7)
The Japanese offensive in Burma proved relentless, and 1 Sqn was withdrawn to India. On the way, Haider Raza became separated from the unit, but fought on alone, bombing and machine-gunning the Japanese invaders for two weeks. At one point he signalled headquarters...(5/7)
‘This one-man guerrilla war is great fun, but I only have one shirt and one pair of shorts and that isn’t enough for two weeks in the jungle.’ Realizing Raza had been forgotten, his superiors ordered him to fly back, where the young pilot was mentioned in despatches (6/7)
Raza left PAF as its vice chief in 1962 and migrated to the USA. @vayusena tracked down his grave to St James Church, Lothian, Maryland. As per his last wishes he wanted to be next to his best friend of his later years Harold McKnight. (7/7)

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More from @AnchitGupta9

Jan 26
Trivia question for all the @IAF_MCC aficionado - Which was the first "Fighter" Sqn of the IAF? Type your answer as a response and/or retweet to spread the question!

Hint: It is not 1 Sqn, Tigers! The devil lies in the detail :-)
8 Sqn! On October 9,1944, the Sqn was ordered to convert to Spitfires. At the same time, it received the Harvard, with Air Defence as its primary and Ground Attack as its secondary role. Thus it became the first Fighter sqn in the IAF.
Read 4 tweets
Jan 22
IAF CHOPPERS & WEATHER BY A VET "HIP" PILOT

1.Plains. The IAF permits IFR flying by heptrs equipped for it. Climb through non-convective weather to IFR levels, fly through it, descend & land at an airfield. Navaids available! . @sajaniaf @realkaypius @arunp2810 @VishnuNDTV
2.Do IAF helicopter pilots train for Instrument Flying? Absolutely. They need to practice, get tested before being awarded an Instrument Rating – same as fixed wing – White, Green, Master Green.
3. Hills. Max four octa, only contact flying under VFR permitted. Why? 5 reasons for it - Read on
Read 16 tweets
Jan 22
When IAF had a legal Branch!

Yes, a separate branch just like GD(P), SIGS, A&SD. While the exact date of formation of the branch is not known, it can be surmised that the branch was setup between October 1945 and January 1946. Three more officers transferred on 22 April 1946 +
The first officer to be in the Legal Branch was then F/O (later Gp Capt) Syed Mohammad Aslam (1889). He later transferred to PAF. Three officers served in the Legal branch at the time of independence – Wg Cdr Basant Singh (2723), F/L PK Shastri (2878) and S/L BD Mistry (2728)+
After Independence – PK Shastri and BD Mistry were seconded to the JAG branch (Army) serving as Deputy Assistant JAGs. PK Shastri returned to AirHQ and became the first Chief Legal Advisor (1949-51) of the IAF. This post is now known as JAG (Air). +
Read 6 tweets
Nov 7, 2021
Galway Clash of 1962 - Helicopter Fleet and the untimely death of AVM Eric Pinto, the common thread to all of them - Late Flt Lt Satnam Singh Sondhi (5181) of the @IAF_MCC . Read on....(1/n)
In October of 1962, Galwan and Hot Springs were flashpoints of conflict with the Chinese and it was essential to maintain a presence. These posts were surrounded by the Chinese and the only way to service them was by Air, a practice still nascent at that time. (2/17)
On 4 Oct 1962, 1/8 Gurkhas were being replaced with 5 Jat at Galwan right under the noses of the Chinese. The ops was being carried out by 2 Mi-4 Hepts of 107 HU. On one such leg, one of the Heptrs had engine trouble and had to land on a river bed (in Hotsprings area) (3/17)
Read 17 tweets
Nov 1, 2021
This is a thread on a maverick fighter pilot nicknamed "mad Mally". Surinder Singh Malhotra was commissioned with 88 Pilot Course in 1964 and was removed from service in 1975. Enough to build a lasting reputation, including earning a Vir Chakra during the 1971 war. (1/6)
Mally flew the Su-7 for a fair part of his career. One fine day in 1970, while on a DACT between 26 Sqn (Su-7) and 1 Sqn (MiG-21 Bis). Mad Mally from 26 went for a 1 vs 1 with Allen Alley of 1 Sqn. From the famous abreast position 'combat combat go' was called. (2/6)
After about 30 seconds Sqn Ldr Alley called out, " hey Mally call it off, we seem to have lost each other." Mally replied, " Sir continue I am 800 m behind you closing in." It was clear what he was capable of, but no one wanted to be the one authorizing him to fly! (3/6)
Read 6 tweets
Nov 1, 2021
Trivia: @IAF_MCC's Hindon AFS was an accidental IAF Base. 1960s Palam was largely an IAF airfield with a civil enclave, HQ Ops Command was also located at Palam. As Comets and Boeing 707s started entering commercial service it was decided to make a greenfield civil airport (1/3)
This was fixed up near Gaziabad, east of the river Jamuna. But by the time the airport was completed, MOCA had lost interest in it as the only road link over the river was through the old steel bridge near Red Fort and there were no funds to create more bridges. (2/3)
So, the inevitable happened and the IAF was forced to take over the new airport near the Hindon river (hence the name) and hand over a major part of Palam for commercial operations. 1 June 1965, 28 Wing was inaugurated by ACM Arjan Singh (3/3)
Read 4 tweets

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