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The Flying Hero of the 1971 War

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Nirmal Jit Singh Sekhon is the only Indian Air Force warrior to be decorated with the Param Vir Chakra.


'My admiration for his gallant action remains undiminished,' says M P Anil Kumar (Former IAF Pilot). 'It was not his day, yet he made it his own.'

The North American F-86 Sabre, designed by Edgar Schmued, is a legendary jet fighter. The Sabre was the mainstay of the Pakistan Air Force in the Indo-Pak wars of 1965 and 1971.


After daybreak on December 14, 1971, a strike force comprising four F-86F Sabres of PAF 26 Squadron (Black Spiders), each heaving two 500-lbs bombs and nose-bay crammed to capacity with 12.7-mm belted ammunition, led by squadron commander Wing Commander Sharbat Ali Changazi, with Flight Lieutenants H K Dotani, Amjad Andrabi and Maroof Mir as wingmen, took off from Peshawar.

They cruised on an easterly course towards the Srinagar [ Images ] airfield -- 320 kilometres afar -- to pockmark its runway with craters. To ensure the mission went through undisturbed, Flight Lieutenants Salim Baig and Rahim Yusufzai flew in two F-86Fs as escorts, both with all six M3 Browning machineguns fully loaded. All Sabres carried external 760-litre fuel tanks to stretch their endurance.

During hostilities, to shoot down enemy warplanes, every airbase mounts a pair of interceptors inside concrete shelters called blast pens at either runway end, pilots strapped up and hair-trigger-ready if need be, on what is called the Operational Readiness Platform, ORP in air force lingo.

At the first sniff of a raid, the base would 'scramble' these fighters to set up a Combat Air Patrol, CAP, either overhead or offset.

Since the Kashmir [ Images ] valley had no radar then, the Indian Air Force had to depend on the observation posts pitched atop the Pir Panjal ridges, and elsewhere, to detect bandits and convey warning of incoming raids.

The Sabres descended to low level over the Pir Panjal Pass, and veered toward north of Kasba village.

Northwest to southeast, technically in 13/31 direction, that's the orientation of the Srinagar runway.

Changazi navigated to roughly 5 kms southeast of the 31 end of the runway, pulled up to 3,200 metres altitude, coaxed the Sabre into a dive, aligned with the runway and pointed the gunsight's pipper 300 metres up from the 31 threshold.

Dotani, Andrabi and Mir would follow suit, but would aim the pipper farther up the runway to space out the craters.

After the attack, Changazi had planned to regroup the formation, swerve left, hit the deck and accelerate towards Baramulla to egress at full pelt.

The tiny dynamo Folland Gnat, designed by William 'Teddy' Petter, though not as acclaimed worldwide as the Sabre, could outmanoeuvre any flying machine.

Blooded by the IAF in the 1965 Indo-Pak War, she earned the sobriquet 'Sabre Slayer' and lived up to its billing in the subsequent 1971 War.

A detachment of 18 Sqn (Flying Bullets), equipped with Gnats, was charged with the air defence of Srinagar. As the frigid air was thick with fog, Flight Lieutenant Baldhir Singh Ghuman (G Man) and Flying Officer Nirmal Jit Singh Sekhon, the pilots on ORP, were taken off stand-by duty, but told to hang about.

As the hand ticked past 8 o'clock, the tannoy blared; they were ordered to scramble by Group Captain R S Sanadi, the station commander.

A spell of ORP-pause can induce the folk to switch to their heels. The Gnats still emerged from the pens (31 end) in about two minutes, but were held up as the ATC had not cleared them to take off.

When an air raid is imminent, the CAP aircraft are fielded out of the range of the air defence batteries (ack-ack and surface-to-air missiles) to not endanger own assets, and to give the AD weapons the freedom to blast the raiders.

Here, the L-60 ack-ack guns boomed to life, with its barrage directed towards the bandits about to bomb, but the ORP aircraft were still aground.

Thinking on his feet, sensing the peril of scrambling when the runway was being blitzed, Flying Officer Yogindra Singh (Yogi), the CAP controller, bounded out of the dugout, scrambled to recall the scramble to let the gunners have a go at the bandits, but he could not contact the pilots as they were operating on different radio frequencies.

Raring to take off, G Man desperately strove to raise the ATC. In vain. Unwilling to dally any more, he released the brakes. Young Sekhon trailed him 20 seconds later.

By the time Sekhon retracted the landing-gear, two pairs of bombs, one by one, had exploded on the runway behind him.

Meanwhile, Changazi and Dotani, the bombers, had flown over and overshot him, fortuitously into his crosshairs.

The Pakistanis were haring to touch the getaway speed. Sekhon first accelerated to catch up, and then nimbly twirled the Gnat to get astern of Dotani.

In the meantime, G Man turned left tightly, built up kinetic energy maintaining low level and then eased up when south of the airfield to position behind the bandits, but he couldn't spot the glint of neither the Sabres nor the Gnat through the foggy haze. He continued the climb to segue into the overhead CAP lap.

"I am behind two Sabres. I won't let the bastards get away," Sekhon roared on the radio.

Sigh. "Good show, Brother, where are you?" G Man reached out, wanting to check whether Sekhon's tail was clear of bogies.

Hush. Sekhon and G Man were separate and operating in two different Srinagars.

Realising a Gnat was doggedly snapping at their tails, Changazi ordered his formation to jettison drop tanks, and bid Dotani to turn left hard to throw off Sekhon.

Andrabi, who was hoping to catch his breath after pulling out of the dive, was compelled to hold his breath by the scintilla of a burst of bullets from the Gnat's two cannons arcing towards Dotani.

Unlike modern fighters, both the Gnat and the Sabre were not armed with air-to-air missiles, and front guns were the only weapon available to down the enemy aircraft in combat.

Since fighter jets are fast dynamic objects, constantly varying positions apace in all three dimensions, shooting down another fighter with guns demands sublime skill.

Simply put, if the angle and distance are not right, you score a washout. And you have to close in till you see your quarry king-sized -- 250 metres to 300 metres, to stamp your marksmanship.

Sekhon had fired just out of range. Dotani escaped by the skin of his teeth.

"Break," Andrabi hollered with as much breath he could summon up. With his life on the line, Dotani broke berserk.

The last ditch left his Sabre gasping for energy; he wisely dropped out and limped off westward into the mountains

Post-bombing, Mir could not sight the site of the dogfight, and therefore he straggled behind Dotani.

At full tilt, Andrabi aggressively manoeuvred himself to tailgate the Gnat, leaving Sekhon sandwiched between Changazi and Andrabi.

The raging, ripsnorting action was ripening 5 km to 6 km northwest of the airfield. At ground zero, the plume of dust and debris kicked up by the explosions was diffusing.

With visibility dimming further from his vantage, distinguishing the flecks of Sabres and Gnat battling it out at 100 metres above the terrain was impossible; Yogi's yeomanly effort at vectoring G Man over yonder floundered.

Sekhon had to fight it out all alone to wiggle out of the nutcracker. The Pakistanis couldn't have asked for anything more.

The Gnat chased a Sabre, the second Sabre pursed that Gnat, in tight turns, every combatant exerting not to yield edge while endeavouring to wrest some.

"I'm in a circle of joy but with two Sabres. I am getting behind one, but the other is getting an edge on me," Sekhon's voice crackled.

He let off a burst of 30-mm ammo from the ADEN cannons on Changazi. The shots whizzed by the Sabre.

Meanwhile, Andrabi, firing on all cylinders, had steadfastly gnawed away the distance and gained advantage over Sekhon. His serial short bursts rent the air with the rat-a-tat of 12.7-mm rounds, but drew a blank despite being within striking distance.

"Three is Winchester," disclosed Andrabi bashfully. He had run out of ammo.

Andrabi would have squirmed, laden with self-inflicted mortification, for first presumptuously proclaiming on radio that he was going to annihilate the Gnat's daffy jockey and then spraying 1,800 rounds prodigally.

Those who count their chickens before they hatch generally end up eating crow!

Changazi asked pratfallen Andrabi to play safe.

Close shave. Sensing the moment, Sekhon, the feisty fighter, made a damn good fist of the opening. In half a jiff, he straightened the wings, punched the fuel tanks, accelerated with the lighter Gnat, replenished kinetic energy, and waded in for another crack at the lead Sabre.

Manoeuvring with slick agility, the Gnat rapidly devoured angles and metres, and Sekhon, with the aplomb of a raptor, converged on to Changazi for the kill.

Unbeknown to the Indians, the Pakistanis had an ace up there -- the two escorts.

Several moments before Changazi inaugurated the Black Spiders' bombing run, the escort pair of Baig and Yusufzai had soared to set up CAP overhead -- to hunt for likely interceptors. They were circling, eagle-eyed, one kilometre above the battle area.

Baig, the escort leader, observing the fierce dogfight from his perch, had expected Andrabi to clobber the Gnat, and was therefore stunned by the relay of spent ammo.

The sight of the Gnat about to slay the Sabre made his hair stand on end. He gathered his wingman, and swooped down to the aerial arena. Concurrently, Changazi's SOS knelled in his earpiece.

With the escorts lunging into the ring, Sekhon was up against four Sabres. With G Man and the CAP controllers nowhere to mind his tail, he was unaware of the escorts joining the fray. To thwart the inevitable was beyond even Super Sekhon.

Unchallenged, the Sabres sped towards the Gnat.

Baig watched the Gnat growing king-sized through the sight graticules, and zeroed the pipper on the Gnat. Three hundred metres. Six machineguns volleyed, discharging the whole nine yards.

"I think I have been hit, G Man come and get them."

Flash. With black smoke belching out of her belly, the Gnat levelled her wings and headed towards the base. Baig knew it was all over bar the bragging.

The hail of bullets peppered the Gnat's tail. (Wing Commander G M David, now retired, who had assisted Yogi that morning, says they found 37 bullet holes about the Gnat's rear fuselage, tailplane and fin.) That knocked out her flight control system, meaning the laws of flight abandoned the Gnat.

She flipped inverted, nosedived and corkscrewed into a gorge near Badgam.

Before that, Sekhon had pulled the ejection seat handle to save himself. The canopy flew off, but the parachute deployed only partially as the Gnat was too close to the ground.

Half an hour later, G Man, who was constrained to orbit overhead, landed back on the badly damaged runway. His exclusion that morning would remain a lifelong regret for him.

For his extraordinary gallantry, the Republic decorated Flying Officer Nirmal Jit Singh Sekhon, posthumously, with the Param Vir Chakra, hitherto the only air warrior to be elevated to the highest wartime pedestal.

When I first heard of his heroism, Sekhon was credited with a kill and probably another. The 'reconstruction' of that red-hot air battle over Srinagar with the inputs of PAF pilots, deprives him of that attribution. However, my admiration for his gallant action (taking off while the airfield was under attack, taking on four Sabres for about five minutes without slackening his moxie) remains undiminished.

It was not his day, yet he made it his own.

13sekhon.jpg



The Flying Hero of the 1971 War - Rediff.com India News
 
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Some people here thinks that IAF was sitting duck in war. lets see their reactions
 
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Some people here thinks that IAF was sitting duck in war. lets see their reactions

Who says IAF were sitting Ducks. IAF pilots were as good as PAF pilots. Sekhon God Bless his soul was truly a Sher a Bacha he had time to bug out but he didn't. Yes I believe that his wing man was a Coward.
On a Fighter base in war you can takeoff for any place as long as you know you have enough space to take off.
During 71 BD 14 SQD we took off from the roads inside the base. Dilawar if I am right took off from the road twice.

In the case of Sekhon multiple factors took place other wise he would have got atleast 1 or may be 2 kills. Why I am saying this because the dame GNAT was so small by the time you saw it either he was so close to you that you are in his guns range vice versa.
First the 6 man team from PAF all of them had a lot of hours.
Second the weather was bad
Third the Runway was damaged.
Fourth his wingman was a coward.

I didn't know the pilots of IAF during the war yes I got to meet them after war and became best friends. But that day Sekhon was the Hero not Baig.
 
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@ Sir Muradk.

Firstly good to see you back.
A bit off topic, but never the less related to the '71 war, I read a member here who mentioned you having a rather mischievous encounter, when your formation intercepted an Indian Chopper, which turned out to be flying some Indian politicians.
Just wondering, if you would kindly post the details.
 
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I love Indians... 4 Sabres down and they call their Gnat a Sabre Slayer...
 
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Who says IAF were sitting Ducks. IAF pilots were as good as PAF pilots. Sekhon God Bless his soul was truly a Sher a Bacha he had time to bug out but he didn't. Yes I believe that his wing man was a Coward.
On a Fighter base in war you can takeoff for any place as long as you know you have enough space to take off.
During 71 BD 14 SQD we took off from the roads inside the base. Dilawar if I am right took off from the road twice.

In the case of Sekhon multiple factors took place other wise he would have got atleast 1 or may be 2 kills. Why I am saying this because the dame GNAT was so small by the time you saw it either he was so close to you that you are in his guns range vice versa.
First the 6 man team from PAF all of them had a lot of hours.
Second the weather was bad
Third the Runway was damaged.
Fourth his wingman was a coward.

I didn't know the pilots of IAF during the war yes I got to meet them after war and became best friends. But that day Sekhon was the Hero not Baig.

Never knew that you were a vet.
Respects and salutes to you sir!
 
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Yar it is a bit funny the chopper was at the wrong place at the wrong time. It wasn't PAF fault all I recall seeing a white Dhotii which was I presume was the politician's because the pilots would not wear that during war time. I am not going to take any names was but it was shot down. That day the info coming in on the RT was just a Big Cluster F.
All I saw was some guy waving his Dhoti out of the window. Again don't know if the dhoti was coming out of the window or he opened the door. During War special lines are 24/7 open to communicate with the enemy and if such a civilian wants to look at the damage of his or her Village and is authorized by authorities both sides are aware of it and no one bites them.
 
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They also claimed some half a dozen PAF Mirages shot down, i guess it was just a Mirage in their minds.

Yes it came in the news paper during the WAR ( Indian News paper ) That they had shot down Mirages.
but After the war PAF was able to line up 22 Mirages for all to see on the tarmac at Sargodha, while the 23rd Mirage was under maintenance in a hangar. The impressive sight belied claims of any losses that had been incurred by the Mirage fleet during the war.
 
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RESPECTED MURADK SIR

good to have u back in this forum ,
Well i want to ask u something Traditionaly both IAF & PAF pilots have been trained in WVR aerial warfare,but now situation has changed to BVR warfare.& indian pilots have start to adapt to these BVR warfare.
how is PAF pilots preparing for BVR warfare ??.

Any kind words from u would be highly appreciated:D
 
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Yar it is a bit funny the chopper was at the wrong place at the wrong time. It wasn't PAF fault all I recall seeing a white Dhotii which was I presume was the politician's because the pilots would not wear that during war time. I am not going to take any names was but it was shot down. That day the info coming in on the RT was just a Big Cluster F.
All I saw was some guy waving his Dhoti out of the window. Again don't know if the dhoti was coming out of the window or he opened the door. During War special lines are 24/7 open to communicate with the enemy and if such a civilian wants to look at the damage of his or her Village and is authorized by authorities both sides are aware of it and no one bites them.

:lol: So the guy removed his Dhoti in a desperate bid to wave as a white flag. :lol:

Surprised such a sight didn't cause the Chopper pilot to crash in the first place.

I understand, some times later, the former Indian Gujarat energy minister's chopper also ended up in PAF's gun sights, but upon realising it was allowed to go.
 
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Yes I remember if my memories serves me right it was 17 SQD.
 
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Yes it came in the news paper during the WAR ( Indian News paper ) That they had shot down Mirages.
but After the war PAF was able to line up 22 Mirages for all to see on the tarmac at Sargodha, while the 23rd Mirage was under maintenance in a hangar. The impressive sight belied claims of any losses that had been incurred by the Mirage fleet during the war.
Yet not a single detail to back the claim, similarly, 9 Starfighters were claimed by the Indian authorities, yet serial number and wreckage photos of only a couple available.
BTW, I have misplaced the gun camera image of your text book delivery.....I was hoping to read some follow up to that. :)
 
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Yes it came in the news paper during the WAR ( Indian News paper ) That they had shot down Mirages.
but After the war PAF was able to line up 22 Mirages for all to see on the tarmac at Sargodha, while the 23rd Mirage was under maintenance in a hangar. The impressive sight belied claims of any losses that had been incurred by the Mirage fleet during the war.

First of all salutes and respects.. but I am curious sir, if PAF didn't loose any fighters during the war, how was India able to establish a naval blockade and complete air-superiority over bangladesh ?

What were the PAF pilots doing ? An insightful reply would be much appreciated. thanks !!
 
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First of all salutes and respects.. but I am curious sir, if PAF didn't loose any fighters during the war, how was India able to establish a naval blockade and complete air-superiority over bangladesh ?

What were the PAF pilots doing ? An insightful reply would be much appreciated. thanks !!

No body is saying that PAF never lost any aircraft, however contrary to the Indian claims, PAF didn't loose any Mirage fighters which were in any case based in Western theatre. In East Pakistan, PAF, merely had a single F-86 Unit, facing ten IAF squadrons, several of which were equipped with MiG-21s. The IAF achieved air -superiority in the Eastern sector, not by destroying PAF, rather the single airfield in Dacca was damaged beyond repair and most of the F-86s remained grounded for the rest of the war. !!
 
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