Harish Chander Sircar was the first & senior-most officer commissioned in the @IAF_MCC on 8 Oct 1932. More dubiously, he also holds the record for the first to be dismissed from service in March 1935. The intervening period is a story of many firsts. #IAFHistory (1/15)
Harish Sircar hailed from a cultured & aristocratic Bengali family. Imbued with a passion for flying from an early age, he joined the IAF with alacrity when the opportunity arose. Intelligent with an
athletic frame, he made a tremendous impression on his colleagues. 2/
In Sep 1930, he was chosen to be amongst the first 6 to be trained as pilots at RAF Cranwell. The training incl flying on ac like the Avro Lynx, Armstrong Whitworth Atlas & the AW Siskin. Btwn the flying & classroom training, Sircar took to sports & was the Hockey team captain.3/
He had flown about 130 hours by July 1932 & graduated from Cranwell with four Indians. He was the best and was placed first, receiving his commission. With IAF yet to be formed, he proceeded to Army co-operation Course for the next few months. 4/
At the end of the Course, he was placed fifth, the four above him being British officers. He, along with the other Indians, was then posted to 16 Sqn, RAF, to fly with the unit and be ready to move to India. A move that transpired in early March 1933. 5/
No. 1 Sqn, IAF thrived despite much British resistance due to the support of its CO, Boy Bouchier. Sircar – earned two more firsts in May 1933 – the first to fly an IAF aircraft and the first to go solo on an IAF Aircraft. 6/
Sircar was considered so good that soon he was part of the IAF formation flight with Bouchier and the Flt Cdr, Peter Broad, as the other members. When the King’s birthday came, he was the only Indian to participate in the flypast – The first Indian again! 7/
Over the next year, the only IAF flight was put through its paces. Sircar was Bouchier’s favorite. Within a few months, he was doing photography, front attacks, bombing, puff shots, close recce, and cooperation exercises with the Balooch apart from formation flying. 8/
Bouchier, though was a lone man standing in support of the IAF. Skepticism among the brits was rife if IAF would be a still-born experiment. He faced several challenges – Two of the first five pilots had crashed and died, and airmen had mutineer due to poor wages. 9/
Life was going to be harder for him. On a dearly and cold winter morning of 8 January 1935, a Wapiti, piloted by Sircar crashed into 4/10 Baluch Troops, killing more than 15 of them, though Sircar and the Gunner Abdul Salaam survived with injuries. IAF’s survival was at risk. 10/
On that day, three Wapiti’s had taken off. Bouchier had given up the idea of formation due to strong winds. The mission was to carry out low attacks on a battalion, 4/10th Baluch Regiment. An hour later, Bouchier landed with news – “Sircar has crashed on top of the Troops”.11/
It transpired that Sircar came downwind & was caught in the slipstream of Bouchier & Philip. He tried to pull up but to no use. The aircraft caught fire and was burnt. Sircar was court-martialed and dismissed, though his sentence of Rigorous imprisonment was squashed. 12/
Many tried to help Sircar. CTO, Sqn Ldr Norton argued with the court on the effects of wind currents on aerofoils.He believed that a strong gale had caused a loss of lift to the aerofoil when downwind. The stick could not pull the aeroplane out of a partial stall. 13/
Bouchier was so disappointed that he did not speak to the boys for a month. He kept thinking more could have been done to save Sircar. Awan and Mukerjee bid a tearful farewell to Sircar, now the only two remaining pilots from the initial five. 14/
Sircar seems to have joined Civil aviation later. He died in 1977. In 2019, Sircar’s son met us and handed over his logbooks, which were subsequently given to the @IAF_MCC museum. Sircar’s career promised a lot but met a tragic end, much to the loss of IAF and India. 15/15
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On 20 Nov 1957, Air Cmde PC Lal, then AOC Training Command, hung up his blues and moved to Indian Airlines as GM on a 5 year deputation, to steady a struggling carrier. Few knew this would almost cost India one of its finest Chiefs. (1/12)
#IAFHistory @IAF_MCC
As GM, Lal sat on the committee to choose a replacement for the Dakotas. Three contenders were in play: the Avro HS 748, the Fokker Friendship and a Lockheed design. Defence Minister Krishna Menon was keen that India pick the Avro. 2/
There was one problem. The Avro barely existed. No prototype. No flight record. No performance sheets. Not even complete drawings. Menon still wanted an immediate firm order. Lal, responsible for passenger safety, refused to sign. 3/
In 1973, when princely titles were history, Jamnagar’s ruler Shatrusalyasinhji D. Jadeja entered uniform as Honorary Wing Commander. The Indian Air Force did not honour a title; it honoured a man who kept serving after titles stopped mattering. (1/14)
#IAFHistory
In 1950, under H.H. Digvijaysinhji's guidance, Jamnagar opened an Indian Air Force station. Roads were laid, land and clearances came quickly, and the base was treated as a civic priority from day one. The bond began as stewardship, not ceremony. 2/
In 1952, Jamnagar gifted an eight-inch silver pilot on wood that went each term to the “most promising” trainee at Jodhpur’s No. 2 Air Force Academy. It rewarded potential over pedigree—an early sign of how the house chose to back the IAF. 3/
Meant to hide at a quiet base, the @IAF_MCC MiG-21 instead made a home at Chandigarh. A six-month stopgap became four decades. The place where the story begins and ends. Here’s how it unfolded. 🧵(1/16)
#MiG21Nuggets #IAFHistory
After Independence, the IAF used “type bases”: Pune had Tempests, Kalaikunda had Mystères, Ambala had Hunters. That tidy system was still in place when the MiG-21 came up for induction. 2/
Before the team left for the USSR, AVM Pinto told CO designate, (then) Wg Cdr Dilbagh Singh the first MiG-21 squadron would go to Adampur—quiet, remote and ideal for secrecy. 3/
This, right here 👇🏽—is the real reason the MiG-21 earned the "flying coffin" tag. No, it wasn’t the LCA delay. No it wasnt the machine or spares itself.
The real cause lies deeper. The data and context are all there. Few connect the dots. Read On. (1/19)
#IAFHistory
I wrote about this in a @timesofindia editorial a few years ago. The MiG-21 earned the “Flying Coffin” tag not because of its airframe—but because we made it carry the weight of our institutional failure between 1980s -2000s. 2/
The MiG-21 entered IAF service in 1963, our first supersonic jet. It demanded a steep learning curve—especially in landing, where speeds exceeded 300 km/h. That was 2–3x faster than subsonic jets like the Vampire. It was not beginner-friendly. 3/
1/ There's growing confusion between two important systems:
👉🏽 Akashteer
👉🏽 IACCS
Both play crucial roles in India’s air defence.
But let’s be clear — they operate at different altitudes — literally and metaphorically.
Here’s how 👇 (1/8)
#IAFHistory
But, let’s get some history, geography and law right.
History: The Network Centric Warfare (NCW) concept was first developed by Vice Admiral Arthur Cebrowski (US Navy) and John Garstka in 1998. It envisioned linking forces digitally to enhance situational awareness and increase warfighting effectiveness.
2/
📕 Let’s talk law — the Union War Book is India’s master document on war responsibilities.
Until 1993, there was no single agency for air defence.
Each service did its bit, and consequently the Army built up significant frontline/terminal AD assets.
Then came a historic shift:
🛡️ “Air Defence of the country is the responsibility of the IAF.”