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Now you take the word 'operational' pilot... Yeh I know there are other women fighter pilots are there in PAF... But only one "combat ready" fighter pilot Ayesha Farooq...
Between where I quoted wiki???
Most Probably Block 2.
I exactly know what I am saying... You please back up your comments with some source...Hi.
Dont Stuff your head with the things you dont understand
bye,
Hi.
Dont Stuff your head with the things you dont understand
bye,
Total history is here....Hi.
Dont Stuff your head with the things you dont understand
bye,
Many here think that PAF have many combat ready women pilots... Actually only one named "Ayesha Farooq" is there... Every others women fighter pilots are still under training...Oh Yaara. Leave his lil ego behind. All he does is incites agro, with no concrete contribution. Leave him with his lil one in the dump where he belongs. @Lil Mathew whe nyou start contributing rather than taking cheap shots then we will talk. Till then live in your little glass house.
Lol.. block I was discontinued and older jets upgraded to Block II status.
Yes...but CCS is not a must to be a combat ready pilot. An operational status on a front line squadron is needed to be a combat ready pilot AND that is a requirement to get selected for CCS. End of story. Cheers !!!Ccs is required before one is given command of a sqn so Sr major or Lt Col ranks
People compare it to top gun or other which are just meant for Jr officer and not command level course
You learn to fight/lead a sqn or wing level force
End of story
Excuse me, while I touch the sky: Meet war pilot Ayesha Farooq
The soft spoken war pilot said she is inspired by her mother, a housewife and a widow
KARACHI: Becoming the first and only female war pilot in the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) can’t possibly come easy, but Ayesha Farooq makes it seem otherwise.
Being a woman and engaging in war, undergoing rigorous training, dealing with ‘brutal seniors’, and living in a country – or world – where females are commonly known as the second sex, Farooq has indeed defied the glass ceiling.
The slim framed and soft spoken war pilot said she was inspired by her mother, a housewife and a widow, who for Farooq, is “the ultimate symbol of strength.”
“My mother raised me to be strong, to a point that if one day, I was left alone, I would be able to take care of myself,” she said while addressing a crowd at the Aga Khan University (AKU) in Karachi, adding that her achievement comes as a consequence of her mother’s support.
She also spoke fondly of a pilot who taught and inspired her, saying, “He taught me to touch the skies.”
Of her life and experience in PAF, Farooq spoke about fun-filled experiences with her juniors and seniors, rigorous training and emotional goodbyes.
“Life at PAF wasn’t just about hardcore training and brutal seniors; it included fun memories with friends,” Farooq said.
In response to a question about the physical training one undergoes at the flight school, Farooq briefly explained: “You have to wake up for a one-mile run every morning at about 4:30am – so you’d run first, and then you’d wake up.”
She added that they had to carry an MG3, a machine gun, which weighs about four kg- for two hours. “You wouldn’t think 4kg is heavy,” she said. “But carry something of that weight for two hours, and you will realise it is.”
After that, Farooq said the students would have to undergo the theory part of the course, and then take part in compulsory games, Farooq chose swimming and horse riding, then it was prep time followed by “lights off.”
Offering advice to young women, the war pilot said that instead of looking up to role models become one yourself.
She encouraged women and girls to come out of their houses, telling them that men and women could, in fact, compete on the same level.
Regarding facing gender discrimination, Farooq said, “I didn’t face that at all, but of course I had to work harder to prove myself. Being inducted as a female fighter pilot was a great experience, but all eyes were on you at that point.”
For a woman who came across as soft-spoken and who is qualified to engage in combat, Farooq also displays her sense of humour.
When asked whether she would rather have been a transport pilot as opposed to a fighter pilot, she responded with a laugh, “definitely a fighter pilot.”
“I visited the cockpit of an airline once, and when I walked in they were sitting and eating donuts,” she said, to raucous laughter from the audience. “I asked them what they were doing eating donuts, and they casually replied “oh it’s, on autopilot.”
* Correction: In an earlier version of the story, it was not mentioned that the talk was held at the Aga Khan University.
Published in The Express Tribune,
@tps77
Farooq, from Punjab province's historic city of Bahawalpur, is one of 19 women who have become pilots in the Pakistan Air Force over the last decade - there are five other female fighter pilots, but they have yet to take the final tests to qualify for combat.
Pakistan's only combat-ready female fighter pilot
A growing number of women, like Ayesha Farooq, have joined Pakistan's defence forces in recent years as attitudes towards women change.
Reuters
Ayesha Farooq is one of a growing number of women who have joined Pakistan's defence forces in recent years as attitudes towards women change.
MUSHAF AIR BASE, PAKISTAN // With an olive green head scarf poking out from her helmet, Ayesha Farooq flashes a cheeky grin when asked if it is lonely being the only war-ready female fighter pilot in Pakistan.
Farooq, from Punjab province's historic city of Bahawalpur, is one of 19 women who have become pilots in the Pakistan Air Force over the last decade - there are five other female fighter pilots, but they have yet to take the final tests to qualify for combat.
"I don't feel any different. We do the same activities, the same precision bombing," the soft-spoken 26-year-old said of her male colleagues at Mushaf base in north Pakistan, where neatly piled warheads sit in sweltering 50C.
A growing number of women have joined Pakistan's defence forces in recent years as attitudes towards women change.
"Because of terrorism and our geographical location it's very important that we stay on our toes," said Farooq, referring to Taliban militancy and a sharp rise in sectarian violence.
Deteriorating security in neighbouring Afghanistan, where US-led troops are preparing to leave by the end of next year, and an uneasy relationship with arch rival India to the east add to the mix.
Farooq, whose slim frame offers a study in contrast with her burly male colleagues, was at loggerheads with her widowed and uneducated mother seven years ago when she said she wanted to join the air force.
"In our society most girls don't even think about doing such things as flying an aircraft," she said.
Family pressure against the traditionally male domain of the armed forces dissuaded other women from taking the next step to become combat ready, air force officials said. They fly slower aircraft instead, ferrying troops and equipment around the nuclear-armed country of 180 million.
Centuries-old rule in the tribal belt area along the border with Afghanistan, where rape, mutilation and the killing of women are ordered to mete out justice, underlines conservative Pakistan's failures in protecting women's rights.
But women are becoming more aware of those rights and signing up with the air force is about as empowering as it gets.
"More and more ladies are joining now," said Nasim Abbas, Wing Commander of Squadron 20, made up of 25 pilots, including Farooq, who fly Chinese-made F-7PG fighter jets.
"It's seen as less of a taboo. There's been a shift in the nation's, the society's, way of thinking," Wing Commander Abbas said on the base in Punjab's Sargodha district, home base to many jets in the 1965 and 1971 wars with India.
There are now about 4,000 women in Pakistan's armed forces, largely confined to desk jobs and medical work.
But over the last decade, women have became sky marshals, defending Pakistan's commercial liners against insurgent attacks, and a select few are serving in the elite anti-terrorist force. Like most female soldiers in the world, Pakistani women are still banned from ground combat.
Pakistan now has 316 women in the air force compared to around 100 five years ago, Wing Commander Abbas said.
"In Pakistan, it's very important to defend our front lines because of terrorism and it's very important for everyone to be part of it," said avionics engineer Anam Hassan, 24, as she set out for work on an F-16 fighter aircraft, her thick black hair tucked under a baseball cap.
"It just took a while for the air force to accept this."
one of 19 women who have become pilots in the Pakistan Air Force over the last decade - there are five other female fighter pilots, but they have yet to take the final tests to qualify for combat.
I did post June 2015 "New York times" source also...View attachment 456850
https://tribune.com.pk/story/790817/excuse-me-while-i-touch-the-sky-meet-war-pilot-ayesha-farooq/
YOUR OWN POST
View attachment 456853
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wo...ly-female-fighter-pilot-is-ready-for-war.html
Now don't post your OUTDATED OFF-TOPIC IDIOCY
do u want me to give your posting value ...??? do your work by your ownIf you have any source saying other than this... Plead post it???
Your pictures are from a video posted from 2011...do u want me to give your posting value ...??? do you work by your own
for start look both screenshots non is not Ayesha Farooq
View attachment 456875
View attachment 456878
idiocy again .... are both pictures from 2011 ??Your pictures are from a video posted from 2011...
I already posted articles from 2013 & 2015 that only Ayesha Farooq is combat ready...
Flying solo mission not mean that they are combat ready... You yourselfgiven example now: Saira Amin...
Your second picture is Saira Amin (woman in 1:45 of your video),who got sword of honour in 2006... She was in the second batch of three women ( first batch contained four women) joined for PAF fighter pilot training... But as I said earlier she also not became a combat ready forighter pilot...
How stating a fact become trolling man...