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Air-Marshal; Malik Nur Khan. HJ, HSJ
C-in-C of PAF during the 1965 War.
As one of the most outstanding military commanders since World War II, Air Marshal Malik Nur Khan has had the unusual distinction of interspersing highly successful careers in both service and civil fields.
Following family tradition - his father fought as a much-decorated Indian Army cavalryman in World War I - Nur Khan entered the Royal Indian Military College at Dehra Dun in the mid-1930s at the age of 11 with the expectation of qualifying for Sand Hurst or its equivalent in India. Before he was 17, however, his enthusiasm for aviation resulted in him starting to learn to fly at his family's expense during vacations at the Lahore Flying Club, and he achieved his pilot's A-license on Tiger Moth biplanes as soon as he reached his 17th birthday. Significantly, he disappeared during his first solo to fly over his family house at Lahore, which resulted in him being briefly grounded by his anguished instructor, and his reputation for devilry in the air accompanied him throughout his eventful flying career.
The youthful pilot's plans to graduate to the RAF College Cranwell for a service flying career were thwarted by the outbreak of World War II, but his persistence resulted in him being accepted by the Indian Air Force for aircrew training some weeks before his 18th birthday- then the official age limit - in January 1941. After initial ground training at Lahore, Nur Khan began flying with RAF instructors on Indian Air Force Tiger Moths at Hyderabad (Begum bet), moving on to Ambala to complete his wings course before the end of 1941 on the more powerful Hawker Hart and Audax biplanes. He was the only student on his course to achieve 'above average' assessments from the RAF in armament, gunnery and bombing.
Among the student pilots on the same course as Nur Khan was a former RAF navigator, P. C. Lal, who became involved in an escapade, while flying in the back seat of an Audax, when the trainee from Ambala attempted to fly beneath some telephone wires crossing a ravine during some unauthorized low flying. Somehow, the sturdy Audax staggered back to base trailing bunches of wire from the top wing, but although Lal jumped out of the rear cockpit and pulled them off after Nur Khan had landed on the far side of the airfield, they had cut into the main spar causing damage which could not be concealed.
Nur Khan received a red endorsement in his logbook and was re-coursed, but P. C. Lal went on to become his squadron commander at a later stage, and held a senior staff post with the Indian Air Force during the 1965 war with Pakistan. He subsequently became C-in-C of the IAF in 1970.
Nur Khan's first operational posting was to No 3 Squadron of the original IAF at Peshawar, still flying Audaxes and Harts, against the perennial Fakir of Ipi and his dissident tribesmen in the North-West Frontier Region. Once again, he achieved the highest armament scores of all the squadron's pilots, and repeated this success in 1942 when converting to Vultee Vengeance dive-bombers at Peshawar, after an instructor's course on Harvards at Ambala. Nur Khan spent about six months bombing bridges used by the Japanese in Burma, operating from Assam with the Vengeance, which he recalls as 'a terrible aircraft', before returning to Peshawar to convert to Hurricane fighters.
After flying Hurricanes operationally against the Japanese in Burma in 1944, he was posted to Bangalore, in southern India, for a Spitfire course as a preliminary to joining the only Indian Air Force squadron earmarked to join the occupation forces in Japan. When he did get to Japan, however, in 1945, it was to fill a staff job as Squadron Leader Operations at Air HQ in Iwakuni.
On his return to Delhi in August 1947 he found India in the throes of partition, and he joined the exodus of the Muslim population via a hazardous train journey, through murderous religious riots, to Lahore. He transferred to the Royal Pakistan Air Force on its formation, becoming station commander at Chaklala, before being posted to London in 1948 as his new countrys first Air Adviser. In this capacity, he was responsible for evaluating the suitability of new British equipment for Pakistan's emergent air force, and recommended selection of the Hawker Fury piston engined fighter to re-equip the PAF's combat squadrons, the sturdy Bristol Freighter, in preference to the Vickers Valetta, as a Douglas C-47 transport replacement.
Further staff jobs followed his return to Pakistan, including commandant of the PAF Academy at Risalpur, and at Air HQ where as a group captain he eventually became Assistant Chief of Air Staff (Operations). In this capacity, he was involved in plans for the Americanization of the PAF, which at that time still had an RAF C-in-C. He was instrumental in overcoming his British chiefs preference for the Republic F -84 Thunder-jet strike-fighter offered by the US by demanding, against the threat of his resignation, the higher-performance and more versatile North American F-86F Sabre. This was to have far reaching effects in the 1965 war.
In the mid-1950s, Nur Khan also completed a course at the RAF Staff College, Andover, where one of his fellow-students was Ezer Weizman, later to become an outstanding C-in-C of the Israeli Air Force, at the time of the 1967 war in the Middle East, and more recently Defense Minister. In his autobiography On Eagles' Wings Ezer Weizman said of Nur Khan: 'He was a formidable fellow, and I was glad that he was Pakistani and not Egyptian.'
As station commander at Mauripur, Nur Khan had the responsibility of supervising the PAF's conversion to Sabres, the first high-performance jet fighter to arrive in Pakistan, and under his usual dashing leadership, his squadrons soon demonstrated their confidence and skill with their new equipment by performing the first 16-aircraft loop in tight formation.
When Air Marshal Asghar Khan became the PAF's first Pakistani C-in-C in 1957, Nur Khan was responsible for the organization of the new Operations Group, of which he then took command, at its Peshawar HQ, and remained there until seconded by the Pakistan Government as managing director of the national airline, PIA, in 1959. His success in establishing PIA on a firm and profitable financial basis in the ensuing six years is now a fact of airline history, and is all the more remarkable in view of his hitherto exclusively military background.
Characteristically, following notification of his pending transfer back to the PAF as Commander-in -Chief early in 1965, Nur Khan arranged to take a conversion course on Pakistan's most advanced jet fighters, and despite not having flown for about six years, had a quick check-out at Sargodha, on the Lockheed T-33, before converting to the Mach 2 Lockheed F-104A Star-fighter via the two-seat F-104B. He also flew a Sabre and soon got his hand back in to such effect that he achieved the near-impossible feat of scoring 100 per cent in air-to-ground gunnery. This was the first time this had been done in the P AF, but to show that it was no fluke, the C-in-C repeated this feat at a later date in both marks of Sabre then used by the PAF. He subsequently achieved the same quite remarkable achievement in the MiG- 19 when the first of these massive twin-jet fighters arrived from China.
This was leading from the cockpit with a vengeance, but in setting new standards for his pilots to emulate, Nur Khan, who was appointed Air Marshal during the 1965 war with India, established the foundations of aggressive tactics, and raised morale of the PAF accordingly. This substantial achievement was not without its risk, however. Maintaining his tradition of flying every combat type in PAF service, the C-in-C later pulled too hard in a high-altitude turn during his first flight in the delta-wing Mirage, and found himself in a spin - not the best of maneuvers in a tailless aircraft. Despite repeated urgings from Wg Cdr Alam, who was flying chase, for him to eject, Nur Khan succeeded in recovering control about 5-6,000ft from the ground, thereby saving the PAF an expensive loss. On another air-to-ground sortie, his habit of diving as close as possible to the target for maximum accuracy resulted in him picking up a ricocheting rocket splinter which damaged an engine in the (fortunately) twin -jet MiG- 19 which he was flying at the time.
Nur Khan's key part in the 1965 operations emerges in the narrative which follows, and there seems little doubt that without his leadership, Pakistan may well have failed to survive. The P AF was the only arm of the Pakistan defense forces which was prepared for imminent war at that time, and in the prevailing political paralysis which gripped the government and cabinet of Field Marshal Ayub Khan at the beginning of September, Nur Khan made effective use of the completely free hand he had been given to prevent an Indian breakthrough.
His conduct of the air war was all the more remarkable in view of the fact that he had taken over command of the PAF, after a long absence from military aviation, on 23 July 1965, only a few weeks before the outbreak of hostilities on 1 September. Immediately after the war, he instituted a series of major reorganization al moves to rectify some of the deficiencies which had become apparent, together with a massive re-equipment program for new combat aircraft from France and China, to overcome the arms veto imposed by the US on both sides in the 1965 conflict.
This resulted in his being instrumental in obtaining 90 Orenda engine ex-Luftwaffe Sabres via Iran, in addition to 75 MiG-19SF or F-6 fighter-bombers from China, in 1966, and arranging the purchase of an initial batch of 35 high -performance Mirage IIIs and 5s from France. Not content with virtually trebling the strength of the PAF to around 280 combat aircraft, Nur Khan also set out to rectify the proven deficiencies in airfields and radar installations by initiating the construction of six new major bases, at Mianwali, Murid, Hafizabad, lacobabad, Badin and Shorkot (Rafiqui), and equipping a substantial number of new early-warning sites.
Nur Khan consolidated this reorganization before his retirement as C-in-C of the PAF in 1969. He then held senior administrative posts in the government for a short time, including Deputy Martial Law Administrator and then Governor of West Pakistan, under President Yahya Khan, before resigning through political disagreements. Although opposed to the views of Yahya Khan, Nur Khan has always avoided political appointments, and it was on this basis that he eventually yielded to repeated requests from the Pakistani Government to resume control of Pakistan International Airlines in November 1973.
His success in not only keeping PIA out of Pakistan's turbulent political arena, but also returning it to a sound commercial basis, is indicated by the remarkable growth achieved during the five years of his recent control. In a period of general airline recession, he increased PIA's revenue passenger/km by a factor of three; its freight tons/km by a factor of 7.5; and capacity in seat/km by 2.5. When Nur Khan took over PIA again in 1973, its operating surplus for 73/ 74 was only RsO.18 million. The 1978 figure is somewhere round the Rs262 million or about US$26 million.
'Fortune favors the brave' could well be the Khan family motto. Having survived innumerable flying hazards unscathed, Nur Khan had his closest brush with death towards the end of 1977 when, in characteristic fashion, he attempted, single-handedly, to overpower an armed hijacker who was holding a PIA F-27 Friendship, its crew and passengers as hostages on the ground at Karachi Airport. After reasoning with the hijacker for several hours, Nur Khan attempted to snatch his gun in the close confines of the F-27's cabin. In the ensuing struggle, he was shot in the side at point-blank range by the gunman, the bullet lodging a centimeter or so from his spine. By that time, however he was on top of the hijacker, who was then overpowered by the crew of the F-27. Happily, Nur Khan recovered rapidly from his dangerous wound, and had the distinction of adding the Hilal-e Shujat - Pakistan's highest civil award - to the Hilal-e Jurat, or Distinguished Service Order, which had been awarded after the 1965 war. Air Marshal Nur Khan is the only Pakistani citizen to have been awarded both these decorations.
courtesy John Fricker - author of Battle For Pakistan.
C-in-C of PAF during the 1965 War.
As one of the most outstanding military commanders since World War II, Air Marshal Malik Nur Khan has had the unusual distinction of interspersing highly successful careers in both service and civil fields.
Following family tradition - his father fought as a much-decorated Indian Army cavalryman in World War I - Nur Khan entered the Royal Indian Military College at Dehra Dun in the mid-1930s at the age of 11 with the expectation of qualifying for Sand Hurst or its equivalent in India. Before he was 17, however, his enthusiasm for aviation resulted in him starting to learn to fly at his family's expense during vacations at the Lahore Flying Club, and he achieved his pilot's A-license on Tiger Moth biplanes as soon as he reached his 17th birthday. Significantly, he disappeared during his first solo to fly over his family house at Lahore, which resulted in him being briefly grounded by his anguished instructor, and his reputation for devilry in the air accompanied him throughout his eventful flying career.
The youthful pilot's plans to graduate to the RAF College Cranwell for a service flying career were thwarted by the outbreak of World War II, but his persistence resulted in him being accepted by the Indian Air Force for aircrew training some weeks before his 18th birthday- then the official age limit - in January 1941. After initial ground training at Lahore, Nur Khan began flying with RAF instructors on Indian Air Force Tiger Moths at Hyderabad (Begum bet), moving on to Ambala to complete his wings course before the end of 1941 on the more powerful Hawker Hart and Audax biplanes. He was the only student on his course to achieve 'above average' assessments from the RAF in armament, gunnery and bombing.
Among the student pilots on the same course as Nur Khan was a former RAF navigator, P. C. Lal, who became involved in an escapade, while flying in the back seat of an Audax, when the trainee from Ambala attempted to fly beneath some telephone wires crossing a ravine during some unauthorized low flying. Somehow, the sturdy Audax staggered back to base trailing bunches of wire from the top wing, but although Lal jumped out of the rear cockpit and pulled them off after Nur Khan had landed on the far side of the airfield, they had cut into the main spar causing damage which could not be concealed.
Nur Khan received a red endorsement in his logbook and was re-coursed, but P. C. Lal went on to become his squadron commander at a later stage, and held a senior staff post with the Indian Air Force during the 1965 war with Pakistan. He subsequently became C-in-C of the IAF in 1970.
Nur Khan's first operational posting was to No 3 Squadron of the original IAF at Peshawar, still flying Audaxes and Harts, against the perennial Fakir of Ipi and his dissident tribesmen in the North-West Frontier Region. Once again, he achieved the highest armament scores of all the squadron's pilots, and repeated this success in 1942 when converting to Vultee Vengeance dive-bombers at Peshawar, after an instructor's course on Harvards at Ambala. Nur Khan spent about six months bombing bridges used by the Japanese in Burma, operating from Assam with the Vengeance, which he recalls as 'a terrible aircraft', before returning to Peshawar to convert to Hurricane fighters.
After flying Hurricanes operationally against the Japanese in Burma in 1944, he was posted to Bangalore, in southern India, for a Spitfire course as a preliminary to joining the only Indian Air Force squadron earmarked to join the occupation forces in Japan. When he did get to Japan, however, in 1945, it was to fill a staff job as Squadron Leader Operations at Air HQ in Iwakuni.
On his return to Delhi in August 1947 he found India in the throes of partition, and he joined the exodus of the Muslim population via a hazardous train journey, through murderous religious riots, to Lahore. He transferred to the Royal Pakistan Air Force on its formation, becoming station commander at Chaklala, before being posted to London in 1948 as his new countrys first Air Adviser. In this capacity, he was responsible for evaluating the suitability of new British equipment for Pakistan's emergent air force, and recommended selection of the Hawker Fury piston engined fighter to re-equip the PAF's combat squadrons, the sturdy Bristol Freighter, in preference to the Vickers Valetta, as a Douglas C-47 transport replacement.
Further staff jobs followed his return to Pakistan, including commandant of the PAF Academy at Risalpur, and at Air HQ where as a group captain he eventually became Assistant Chief of Air Staff (Operations). In this capacity, he was involved in plans for the Americanization of the PAF, which at that time still had an RAF C-in-C. He was instrumental in overcoming his British chiefs preference for the Republic F -84 Thunder-jet strike-fighter offered by the US by demanding, against the threat of his resignation, the higher-performance and more versatile North American F-86F Sabre. This was to have far reaching effects in the 1965 war.
In the mid-1950s, Nur Khan also completed a course at the RAF Staff College, Andover, where one of his fellow-students was Ezer Weizman, later to become an outstanding C-in-C of the Israeli Air Force, at the time of the 1967 war in the Middle East, and more recently Defense Minister. In his autobiography On Eagles' Wings Ezer Weizman said of Nur Khan: 'He was a formidable fellow, and I was glad that he was Pakistani and not Egyptian.'
As station commander at Mauripur, Nur Khan had the responsibility of supervising the PAF's conversion to Sabres, the first high-performance jet fighter to arrive in Pakistan, and under his usual dashing leadership, his squadrons soon demonstrated their confidence and skill with their new equipment by performing the first 16-aircraft loop in tight formation.
When Air Marshal Asghar Khan became the PAF's first Pakistani C-in-C in 1957, Nur Khan was responsible for the organization of the new Operations Group, of which he then took command, at its Peshawar HQ, and remained there until seconded by the Pakistan Government as managing director of the national airline, PIA, in 1959. His success in establishing PIA on a firm and profitable financial basis in the ensuing six years is now a fact of airline history, and is all the more remarkable in view of his hitherto exclusively military background.
Characteristically, following notification of his pending transfer back to the PAF as Commander-in -Chief early in 1965, Nur Khan arranged to take a conversion course on Pakistan's most advanced jet fighters, and despite not having flown for about six years, had a quick check-out at Sargodha, on the Lockheed T-33, before converting to the Mach 2 Lockheed F-104A Star-fighter via the two-seat F-104B. He also flew a Sabre and soon got his hand back in to such effect that he achieved the near-impossible feat of scoring 100 per cent in air-to-ground gunnery. This was the first time this had been done in the P AF, but to show that it was no fluke, the C-in-C repeated this feat at a later date in both marks of Sabre then used by the PAF. He subsequently achieved the same quite remarkable achievement in the MiG- 19 when the first of these massive twin-jet fighters arrived from China.
This was leading from the cockpit with a vengeance, but in setting new standards for his pilots to emulate, Nur Khan, who was appointed Air Marshal during the 1965 war with India, established the foundations of aggressive tactics, and raised morale of the PAF accordingly. This substantial achievement was not without its risk, however. Maintaining his tradition of flying every combat type in PAF service, the C-in-C later pulled too hard in a high-altitude turn during his first flight in the delta-wing Mirage, and found himself in a spin - not the best of maneuvers in a tailless aircraft. Despite repeated urgings from Wg Cdr Alam, who was flying chase, for him to eject, Nur Khan succeeded in recovering control about 5-6,000ft from the ground, thereby saving the PAF an expensive loss. On another air-to-ground sortie, his habit of diving as close as possible to the target for maximum accuracy resulted in him picking up a ricocheting rocket splinter which damaged an engine in the (fortunately) twin -jet MiG- 19 which he was flying at the time.
Nur Khan's key part in the 1965 operations emerges in the narrative which follows, and there seems little doubt that without his leadership, Pakistan may well have failed to survive. The P AF was the only arm of the Pakistan defense forces which was prepared for imminent war at that time, and in the prevailing political paralysis which gripped the government and cabinet of Field Marshal Ayub Khan at the beginning of September, Nur Khan made effective use of the completely free hand he had been given to prevent an Indian breakthrough.
His conduct of the air war was all the more remarkable in view of the fact that he had taken over command of the PAF, after a long absence from military aviation, on 23 July 1965, only a few weeks before the outbreak of hostilities on 1 September. Immediately after the war, he instituted a series of major reorganization al moves to rectify some of the deficiencies which had become apparent, together with a massive re-equipment program for new combat aircraft from France and China, to overcome the arms veto imposed by the US on both sides in the 1965 conflict.
This resulted in his being instrumental in obtaining 90 Orenda engine ex-Luftwaffe Sabres via Iran, in addition to 75 MiG-19SF or F-6 fighter-bombers from China, in 1966, and arranging the purchase of an initial batch of 35 high -performance Mirage IIIs and 5s from France. Not content with virtually trebling the strength of the PAF to around 280 combat aircraft, Nur Khan also set out to rectify the proven deficiencies in airfields and radar installations by initiating the construction of six new major bases, at Mianwali, Murid, Hafizabad, lacobabad, Badin and Shorkot (Rafiqui), and equipping a substantial number of new early-warning sites.
Nur Khan consolidated this reorganization before his retirement as C-in-C of the PAF in 1969. He then held senior administrative posts in the government for a short time, including Deputy Martial Law Administrator and then Governor of West Pakistan, under President Yahya Khan, before resigning through political disagreements. Although opposed to the views of Yahya Khan, Nur Khan has always avoided political appointments, and it was on this basis that he eventually yielded to repeated requests from the Pakistani Government to resume control of Pakistan International Airlines in November 1973.
His success in not only keeping PIA out of Pakistan's turbulent political arena, but also returning it to a sound commercial basis, is indicated by the remarkable growth achieved during the five years of his recent control. In a period of general airline recession, he increased PIA's revenue passenger/km by a factor of three; its freight tons/km by a factor of 7.5; and capacity in seat/km by 2.5. When Nur Khan took over PIA again in 1973, its operating surplus for 73/ 74 was only RsO.18 million. The 1978 figure is somewhere round the Rs262 million or about US$26 million.
'Fortune favors the brave' could well be the Khan family motto. Having survived innumerable flying hazards unscathed, Nur Khan had his closest brush with death towards the end of 1977 when, in characteristic fashion, he attempted, single-handedly, to overpower an armed hijacker who was holding a PIA F-27 Friendship, its crew and passengers as hostages on the ground at Karachi Airport. After reasoning with the hijacker for several hours, Nur Khan attempted to snatch his gun in the close confines of the F-27's cabin. In the ensuing struggle, he was shot in the side at point-blank range by the gunman, the bullet lodging a centimeter or so from his spine. By that time, however he was on top of the hijacker, who was then overpowered by the crew of the F-27. Happily, Nur Khan recovered rapidly from his dangerous wound, and had the distinction of adding the Hilal-e Shujat - Pakistan's highest civil award - to the Hilal-e Jurat, or Distinguished Service Order, which had been awarded after the 1965 war. Air Marshal Nur Khan is the only Pakistani citizen to have been awarded both these decorations.
courtesy John Fricker - author of Battle For Pakistan.