What's new

PAF Books

PAK FAZAIA TAREEKH KAY AAINAY MAI

http://img208.imageshack.us/i/pakfazaiatareekhkayaain.jpg/

PAK FIZAYA KI DASTAAN E SHUJAAT

http://img403.imageshack.us/i/pakfizayakidastaaneshuj.jpg/

PAKISTAN AIR FORCE A NEW DAWN

http://img188.imageshack.us/i/pakistanairforceanewdaw.jpg/



The Story of the Pakistan Air Force a saga of courage and honor
http://img238.imageshack.us/i/thestoryofthepakistanai.jpg/


The story of the Pakistan Air Force, 1988-1998 a battle against odds

http://img188.imageshack.us/i/thestoryofthepakistanai.jpg/

The Gold Bird Pakistan & its Air Force

http://img99.imageshack.us/i/desistorecom207476029.jpg/

Asian Air Power - Exotic Warplanes In Action

http://img399.imageshack.us/i/asianairpowerexoticwarp.jpg/

Story of PAF Heroes
http://img399.imageshack.us/i/93203775.jpg/
 
HI ,
INSHA ALLAH I WILL RECIVED A COPY OF( PAKISTAN AIR FORCE A NEW DAWN 1998-2008 ) ON 28 OCT 2009
THE PRICE OF THE BOOK IS =4870/- PK RUPESES
 
THE STORY OF PAF:
A SAGA OF COURAGE AND HONOUR

I found this a good book and I want to buy this book. Will you please tell me from where can I buy it...
 
THE STORY OF PAF:
A SAGA OF COURAGE AND HONOUR

I found this a good book and I want to buy this book. Will you please tell me from where can I buy it...

Hi,i have both books for sale.
1st book is "THE STORY OF PAKISTAN AIR FORCE A SAGA OF COURAGE AND HONOUR (1947-1988)"
2nd book is""THE STORY OF PAKISTAN AIR FORCE A BATTLE AGAINST ODDS (1988-1998)"
1st book price :1000/-PK RS
2nd book price :1000/-PK RS
 
Cutting Edge PAF: A Former Air Chief’s Reminiscences of a Developing Air Force
By Air Chief Marshal (retired) M Anwar Shamim Vanguard Books; Pp 345

Of late, there have been numerous occasions to visit the hallways of Pakistan Air Force (PAF) history. Pioneers adorn the walls while historians glower from a corner, trying to reconstruct these men’s stories. Men who went up in a blaze of glory, men who left a trail of controversy, and men who went on to lead quiet lives in the suburbs, they are all in there somewhere. Missteps aside, each of them contributed towards making the air force what it is today.

Written under duress, the air chief marshal buckled under his daughter’s pressure and broke his silence about life in the PAF. The title suggests that his autobiography focuses more on the professional achievements of the service than the controversial aspects of his tenure. However, the slew of allegations and ‘bizarre rumours’ about him and his wife have been duly addressed at the end.

The tone is circumspect; the prose is simple; and the story follows the evolutionary path of a PAF initially composed of 222 officers and 2,342 airmen moulded into a cutting edge force that became the pride of the nation and the talk of the town. He commanded 33 Fighter Wing during the 1965 War, served as air adviser to His Majesty King Hussein Bin Talal, planning and developing a modern Jordanian Air Force, and rose to become the second longest-serving PAF chief in 1978.

Cutting Edge PAF is divided into pre-war reminiscences and post-war contributions of the man who helped shape a modern air force. It is also about the vicissitudes of life experienced as a young air force officer and the boy who was first to go solo from No 2 University Air Squadron, the graduate from Royal Australian Air Force College, Point Cook, raving about the Aussie way — their honesty, cleanliness and habit of giving host teams a thundering good time one day before a match — and the pilot who ferried a fleet of F-86s from Paris to Karachi only to make a harrowing discovery near Rome that the air traffic controller’s knowledge extended to just two words, ‘Continue approach’!

An analysis of both wars is embedded within to complete the look of a period piece. Mostly, it serves as a platform to restore his image as a forward-thinking leader with the foresight to choose F-16s for Kahuta — indefensible and eight minutes away from the PAF, but only three minutes ride from the Indian Air Force. A man credited with three Tactical Commands, thus decentralising tactical operations, one ‘Institute of Air Safety’ that trained Air Safety Specialists, seven ‘Jet Stream’ exercises in seven years designed to test preparedness, which also laid the seed of inter-services cooperation and a nine hole golf course in every base, leading the PAF to become inter-services champs in 1980. Sound investments — all of them, yes, even the golf courses.

This impressive list of achievements can only be rivalled by an equally formidable string of allegations that plagued his career. Stigmas are easily attached and impossible to remove. The writer tries nevertheless. His book reproaches Defence Journal for pitting a group captain against his air chief by allowing Cecil Chaudhry’s views to be aired without investigation and wonders at the PAF for letting them go unchallenged. He attaches an excerpt from Profiles of Intelligence by Brigadier Syed Ali Tirmizi (1995), which gives a new twist to the story, bringing up Cecil Chaudhry’s links with the Soviets. He cites the ‘Legion of Merit’ given by the US government as proof against drug conspiracy charges and describes the foolproof process of Foreign Military Sales (FMS) to counter the kickback story where he saved, not cost, his country millions.

He also goes to great lengths to clear his wife’s name. Ms Tahira Shamim is said to have revamped the entire Pakistan Air Force Women’s Association (PAFWA) on modern managerial lines and started the Mujahida Academy, now affiliated with the Air University. He attributes suggestions of impropriety to natural prejudice against women taking initiatives at a time when it was not fashionable. A neat explanation — a little too neat some might say.

This carefully drawn sketch is set to dazzle. And in this group portrait, incidents have been arranged to showcase not just the expanding firepower and might of the service but also the initiative and ability of its officers — one in particular — Anwar Shamim, who as the air chief took on the challenge of absorbing F-16s in one year when the usual timeframe was three; who claims his testimony as a witness during the PAF witch-hunts got several innocents off the hook; and whose stories of command decisions range from improving the morale of his men where needed to fixing the discipline within ranks when required — like the uppity airman on probation who started walking when ordered to double march and took to running when told to halt.

Past familiar landmarks of history, through corridors of power lies the room where policies are made, decisions are taken and fates are sealed. Cutting Edge PAF provides an engrossing look at the duties of the air board, functions of the AHQ, etc., during the transformative phase of a service striving hard to achieve a higher state of operational readiness. The book shines a blinding light on the good, hoping to banish the bad and the ugly. And it works. For a while. Cutting Edge PAF is due out by April 2010.

Afrah Jamal is a freelance journalist. She can be reached at afrahjh@hotmail.com


Uploaded with ImageShack.us

CUTTING EDGE PAF

A Former Air Chief's Reminiscences of a Developing Air Force

by Air Chief Marshal M. Anwar Shamim (Retd)

Publication Date: 2010
Extent: 351 pages
ISBN: 9789694025407
Price: $9.46 / Rs795.00

The Book:

An Air force facing multiple threats cannot mature and become a self-assured fighting force overnight. Air Chief Marshal Shamim inherited an air force, a large part of which had yet to be operationally trained and fully tested an its fighting mettle. He therefore set himself the goal of attaining the highest possible level of operational preparedness for the PAF within the resource, which the nation could make available. This was no easy task, taking into consideration our grave security situation; he drove himself and all of us hard and relentlessly.

The Author:

Air chief Marshal M Anwar Shamim graduated as a pilot from point cook, Australia in 1954. After his jet conversion on Vampires in Australia, he was posted to PAF’s first jet unit, no 11 Squardon, which he later went to command in 1963. In 1964, he was given charge of PAF’s elite 33 wing, which he commanded during the 1965 war. He led the famous raid on Amritsar’s radar, which earned him a Sitara-i-Jur’at. In 1968, he was sent to Jordon as adviser to King Hussein. On return to Pakistan, he took over as Air defense sector commander south, in which capacity he controlled air defense operations in 1971 war. He had the privilege of commanding sakesar, korangi creek and PAF’s largest, Masroor, Air bases. He was appointed assistant chief of air staff in 1975. In 1978, he was selected to be the chief of air staff, and appointment he held till 1985. He was instrumental in two important developments in the PAF’s that have helped it remain second to none: introduction of regional commands to decentralized command and control and ensure better liaison with the army and navy field formations; secondly, the induction of F-16s which redressed the imbalance against the traditional adversary India over years.

Source: Vanguard Books: Books
 
RARE PAF BOOKS FOR SALE
I HAVE THESE PAF BOOKS FOR SALE ,IF ANY BODY INTRESTED TO BUY FOLLOWING BOOKS MAIL ME
1 COPY OF "THE STORY OF PAKISTAN AIR FORCE A BATTLE AGAINST ODDS (1988-1998)"
1 COPY OF "THE STORY OF PAKISTAN AIR FORCE A SAGA OF COURAGE AND HONOUR (1947-1988)"
1 COPY OF "History of the Pakistan Air Force, (1947-1982 ) Syed Shabbir Hussain, M. Tariq Qureshi"
1 COPY OF "Defenders of Pakistan by Mohamed Amin, Masud Quraishy,
Duncan Willetts, Brian Tetley"
1 COPY OF "Battle for Pakistan the Air War of 1965 BY JOHN FRICKER"
hassanlove007@gmail.com
all books are 2nd hand and normal condition.
 
I m a Sargodhian and left PAF College Sargodha in 2000 . Back then a book by Col (retd) Ishfaq called 'Gentlemen Bismillah' was very famous among us cadets . I would recommend it to everyone.
 
Back
Top Bottom