The Indian Air Force (भारतीय वायु सेना : Bharatiya Vayu Sena) is the air-arm of the Armed Forces of India and has the prime responsibility of conducting air-based warfare and securing Indian airspace. It was established on October 8, 1932 as the Indian Air Force. It was granted the prefix "Royal" in 1945 in recognition of its services during the Second World War. The prefix Royal was dropped after India became a Republic in 1950. It is the fourth largest air force in the world.
The Indian Air Force (IAF) was established the passing of the Indian Air Force act on October 8 1932. Accordingly, IAF's No.1 Squadron came into being on April 1 1933. Initially, the IAF consisted of five Indian pilots, one RAF commanding officer and four Westland Wapiti biplanes.
The first five pilots commissioned into the IAF were Harish Chandra Sircar, Subroto Mukerjee, Bhupendra Singh, Aizad Baksh Awan and Amarjeet Singh. A sixth officer, S N Tandon had to revert to ground duties as he was too short. All of them were commissioned as Pilot Officers in 1932 from RAF Cranwell. Subroto Mukerjee later went on to become the IAF's first Chief of the Air Staff. Subsequent batches inducted before World War II included Aspy Engineer, K K Majumdar, Narendra, Daljit Singh, Henry Runganadhan, R H D Singh, Baba Mehar Singh, S N Goyal, Prithpal Singh and Arjan Singh.
The Royal Indian Air Force played an instrumental role in blocking the advance of the Japanese army in Burma, where its first air strike was on the Japanese military base in Arakan. It also carried out strike missions against the Japanese airbases at Mae Hong Son, Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai in northern Thailand. During the war, the Indian Air Force went through a phase of steady expansion. New aircraft, including the U.S.-built Vultee Vengeance, Hawker Hurricane and Westland Lysander, were added to its fleet.
In recognition of the services rendered by the IAF, King George VI conferred the prefix "Royal" in 1945. Thereafter the IAF was referred to as Royal Indian Air Force. In 1950, When India became a republic, the prefix was dropped and it reverted back to Indian Air Force.
In a bid to gain control of the erstwhile princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, Pathan tribesmen, armed and aided by Pakistan poured into Kashmir on October 20, 1947. Incapable of withstanding the armed assault in his province, the Maharaja of Kashmir, Hari Singh, asked India for help. The Government of India made its assistance conditional upon Kashmir's accession to India. The Instrument of accession was signed on October 26 1947 and the next day Indian troops were airlifted into Srinagar. The agreement was later ratified by the British.
Taking off from Safdarjang, then known as Willingdon Airfield, the IAF landed Indian troops at Srinagar airfield at 09:30 hours IST on October 27. This was the most instrumental action of the war as the troops saved the city from the invaders. Apart from the airlifting operations and supplying essential commodities to the ground troops, the Indian Air Force had no other major role to play in the conflict. On December 31, 1948, both nations agreed to a UN mediated cease-fire proposal marking the end of hostilities. A Line of Control has since separated Indian-held Kashmir from Pakistani-held Kashmir.
However, the leadership(military-civilian) failed to organise the air assaults efficiently- one of the primary reasons for the Indian defeat in the conflict. Without essential air support, the Indian Army faced overwhelming odds in their fight against well prepared Chinese troops. The Indian leadership grounded the IAF for the majority of the war fearing that if the IAF attacked Chinese forces, the PLAAF would retalliate on Indian cities. The IAF at the time possessed a superior force and could have won India the war if it was employed properly.
Soon after, the Indian government, learning from its mistakes, began a vigorous campaign to expand the IAF. An emergency flying scheme was started in Delhi, Madras, Kanpur, Nagpur and Patiala and more than 1,000 cadets received primary flying training by 1964. The IAF's strength was increased from 28,000 officers and men in 1961 to 100,000 officers and men by 1964. By 1965, the IAF had also added newly bought Antonov An-12B and C-119G transport aircraft to its fleet.
The appearance of the Sabres necessiated a move by the IAF to send the Folland Gnat fighters to the forward base of Pathankot destroying all the jets stationed on air base. Since the Gulf war this is the second such incident. Where an airforce was cought completly by surprise.(Dr D Passes rates in his Book as a Very Dark day for the Indian Air Force). The move suceeded - within two days the IAF drew first blood. Sqn Ldr Trevor Keelor of No.23 Squadron shot down a F-86 Sabre on September 3, marking the first air combat victory to the IAF since WW2. The very next day Flt Lt V S Pathania repeated the feat - by shooting down Fg Offr NM Butt's Sabre of the PAF.
On September 6, The Indian Army crossed the border at Lahore to relieve pressure off the Chamb Jaurian sector. On the evening of the same day, the PAF responded with attacks on Indian airfields. The attack on Pathankot was sucessful and the IAF lost nearly 10 aircraft on the ground. However the attack on Halwara was a dismal failure. Two of the attacking raiders were shot down for the loss of two Indian Hunters. The Indian pilots ejected and survived while both PAF pilots were killed.
The next day, September 7, the IAF mounted over 33 sorties against the PAF airfield complex at Sargodha. about half a dozen aircraft were destroyed on the ground. But losses were heavy too. Two Mysteres and three Hunters were lost to various causes. After this attack IAF planes started to avoid PAF planes in Air. One of the Mysteres was involved in an air combat with an F-104 Starfighter and shot it down before it crashed. The pilot Sqn Ldr Devayya was awarded the Maha Vir Chakra only after 23 years passed.
September 7 also marked the day when the PAF attacked IAF airfields in the Eastern Sector. The raid on Kalaikunda was sucessful once again and the IAF lost 8 aircraft in two raids. However the IAF had some consoling factor in that two of the attacking Sabres were shot down by IAF Hunters. One Indian pilot Flt Lt A T Cooke engaged four Sabres singlehandedly and shot down one confirmed and claimed another as probable. Due to the factor that IAF has almost 3 times the planes as PAF. Shooting down even one PAF plane was consoling.
The war tapered off after September 8th and there were ocassional clashes between the IAF and the PAF. During the conflict IAF Canberras raided several Pakistani bases including Sargodha and Chakala. At one stage the IAF was operating 200 air missions simultaneously. IAF Gnats of No 23 and 9 squadrons played a significant role in major air battles and helped to turn the tide after an initial Pakistani thrust.
The professional standards, capability and flexibility were soon put to test in December 1971 when India and Pakistan went to war over (then) East Pakistan. At the time, the IAF was under the command of Air Chief Marshal Pratap Chandra Lal. On November 22, 10 days before the start of a full-scale war, four PAF F-86 Sabre jets attacked Indian and Mukti Bahini positions near the Indo-Bangla border. Three of the 4 PAF Sabres were shot down by IAF Gnats, and hostilities commenced. On the 3 December the PAF carried out strikes against Indian bases in Srinagar, Ambala, Sirsa, Halwar and Jodhpur. IAF's initial strategy was Aggressive, but after witnessing Pakistan Air Force's aggressive assault, it turned defencive and payed more attention to East Pakistan campain. Launched a controllerd campaign against West Pakistan. Within the first two weeks, the IAF had carried out more than 4,000 sorties in East Pakistan and provided successful air cover for the advancing Indian army in East Pakistan. IAF also assisted the Indian Navy in sinking several Pakistani naval vessels in the Bay of Bengal. On the western front, PAF inflicted heavy casualties to both Air and Ground targets.
On August 10 1999, a PAF French-built naval Breguet Atlantic was caught spying over the Rann of Kutch area and was shot down by two IAF MiG-21 jets killing all 16 aboard. (See Atlantique Incident)
With its headquarters in New Delhi, the Indian Air Force has a strength of 170,000 personnel and 1129 combat aircraft (2005 figure).
The administrative branch of the IAF is divided into three main branches:
and five sub-branches:
| Commands | HQ Location | Current AOC-in-C | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Western Air Command | Subroto Park, New Delhi | Air Marshal A K Singh | |
| Eastern Air Command | Shillong, Meghalaya | Air Marshal Fali H Major | |
| Central Air Command | Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh | Air Marshal J.S. Gujral | |
| Southern Air Command | Trivandrum, Kerala | Air Marshal Sharad Yeshwant Savur | |
| South Western Air Command | Gandhinagar, Gujarat | Air Marshal PK Mehra | |
| Training Command | Bangalore, Karnataka | Air Marshal BN Gokhale | |
| Maintenance Command | Nagpur, Maharashtra | Air Marshal KS Chaturvedi |
Currently, 47 Wings and 19 FBSUs make up the IAF.
The Indian Air Force has a strength of 750+ combat aircraft and presently operates with a total of 42 squadrons. Most of the IAF's fighter jets are of French, Russian and British origin, with designs by the latter two countries being constructed by Hindustan Aviation under license. The indigenously-built HAL Tejas (formerly Light Combat Aircraft) is expected to enter service by 2010.
The various types of combat aircraft in the IAF are listed below.
| Current Aircraft | ||||
| Role | Type | Squadron Numbers | Estimated Combat Aircraft | Estimated Trainer Aircraft |
| Air Superiority and Multi Role | MiG-29 | 28, 47, 223 | 48 | 6 |
| Air Superiority and Multi Role | Mirage 2000H 16 | 1, 7, 9 | 36 | 10 |
| Air Superiority and Multi Role | MiG-21 Bison | 3, 21, 32, 51 | 64 | 8 |
| Air Superiority and Multi Role | Sukhoi-30 MKI | 20 , 30 | 32 | 0 |
| Air Superiority and Multi Role | Sukhoi-30 MK | 24 | 18 | 0 |
| Air Superiority and Multi Role | MiG-21Bis | 4,15, 23,26,35,45 | 64 | 8 |
| Ground Attack | MiG-27 ML | 2,10,18,22,29,222,TACDE(0.5) | 104 | 13 |
| Ground Attack | MiG-23 BN | 221 | 16 | 2 |
| Ground Attack | MiG-21 M/MF | 17,37,101,108 | 72 | 9 |
| Ground Attack | Jaguar IS | 5,14,16,27 | 64 | 8 |
| Ground Attack | Jaguar IS | 6 | 10 | 2 |
| Reconnaissance | Canberra | 106 'B' Flight | 9 | 0 |
| Second Line Combat Aircraft | MiG-23 MF | 224 | 16 | 2 |
| Second Line Combat Aircraft | MiG-25R | 102 | 3 | 1 |
| Second Line Combat Aircraft | MiG-21FL | 8,52,MOFTU A,MOFTU B,OCU | 80 | 10 |
| Helicopters | Mi-8 | 105,107,109,110,112,118,119,121,122F | 102 | 0 |
| Helicopters | Mi-17 | 127,128,129,130,152,153 | 72 | 0 |
| Helicopters | Mi-24/35 | 104,125 | 20 | 0 |
| Helicopters | Mi-26 | 126HF | 4 | 0 |
| Helicopters | Chetak | 111,116,141SSS F, 142SSS F,HTS | 48 | 0 |
| Helicopters | Cheetah | 114,131F,132F | 24 | 0 |
| Helicopters | Dhruv | ? | 12 | 0 |
| Transport Aircraft | Il-76 MD (24) | 44,25 'A' | 24 | 0 |
| Transport Aircraft | Il-78 MKI (6) | 78 | 6 | 0 |
| Transport Aircraft | An-32 (119) | 12,25'B',33,43,48,49,,PTS, TTW | 112 | 0 |
| Transport Aircraft | HS-748 (68) | 11,41 'A',59,106 'A',6 Cmd Flts(2 A/c) | 64 | 0 |
| Transport Aircraft | Do-228 (24) | 41,TTW,6 Comm Flts(2 A/c) | 40 | 0 |
| Transport Aircraft | Boeing 737 | Air HQ Flt | 4 | 0 |
| Transport Aircraft | Embraer 135BJ | Air HQ Flt | 4 | 0 |
| Trainer Aircraft | HJT-16 Kiran | AFA(A), AFA(B) , FIS , FTW | 0 | 84 |
| Trainer Aircraft | HPT-32 Deepak | BFTS, FIS, AFA | 0 | 70 |
The Sukhoi Su-30MKI (MKI: 'Multifunctional Commercial - Indian') is the IAF's prime air superiority combat aircraft. The Su-30K variant was first acquired in 1996. In October 2004, the IAF signed a multi-billion US$ contract with Sukhoi according to which Hindustan Aeronautics was given the license to manufacture 140+ Su-30MKI's with full technology transfer. HAL plans to manufacture about 15 of these aircraft annually. The twin seater, multi-role fighter has a maximum speed of 2500 km/h (Mach 2.35) and has a service ceiling of 17,500 metres. The aircraft with a normal fuel load 5270 kg can travel up to 1900 miles and can carry 8,000 kg external armament.
Israel Aircraft Industries and Aeronautical Development Establishment (ADE), India's leading unmanned aerial vehicle research agency are also jointly developing three new UAVs.
HAL Lakshya, indigenously-developed pilotless target aircraft, was inducted into the IAF in July 2005. Israel has also bought a few of the Laksya PTAs. Another UAV, the Nishant Remote Piloted Vehicle (RPV) has also been developed, with an endurance of over 3 hours. It will be inducted into the indian army by 2007. The 380 kg Nishant UAV does not require a runway to launch, and is launched by rail-launching from a hydro-pneumatic launcher. Launches at a velocity of 45 m/s are carried out in 0.6 seconds with 100 kW power. Another smaller mini-UAV, called Kapothaka is also being developed by Aeronautical Development Establishment (ADE). DRDO's Vehicle research Development Establishment (VRDE) also developed a UAV based on the Nishant engine.
MiG-21 fighters, the backbone of the Indian Air Force and used extensively for training pilots, used to crash.IAF has lost around 220 jet in the last 10 years. Its more then any other country. Infact IAF didn't even lose have as much during three wars it fought. The replacement for the Migs to train young pilots has been ordered and the Hawks will replace Migs as the Advance trainer aircraft.But the process has been very slow.
In 2003, the IAF placed an order for 66 Hawk T1 training aircraft in a deal worth over 1 billion GBP. The supply of these advanced trainer aircraft will bring to an end the use of the MiG-21 as a training jet. India also manufactures less-sophisticated HAL HJT-16 Kiran and this aircraft will be replaced with the advanced HJT-32. IAF uses HPT-32 Deepak for basic training.
Eager to end its dependence on the MiG-21s, the IAF announced that it intended to purchase 126 aircraft worth over US$6 billion in 2004. The air force sent a Request of Information (RoI) for the following aircraft: Russian MiG-29 M2, French Mirage 2000-5Mk2, Swedish Gripen and the US F-16C. Besides the F-16Cs, the US has also offered the sale of F-16 Block 70 and F/A-18 Hornet 18E/F combat aircraft. However, the IAF seemed inclined towards purchasing the MiG-35 (MiG-29OVT). In 2005 it planned to purchase 12 Mirage 2000-5 from Qatar but Doha ceased negotiations with New Delhi for the sale of the aircraft claiming the bid quoted by India was too low. IAF has placed an order for 29 upgraded versions of indigenously-manufactured Jaguar IM strike aircraft.
Experts estimate that for India to exert influence over South Asia and the Indian Ocean region, it would require at least 60 squadrons of aircraft performing multi-role combat, deep penetration strike, air superiority, air defence, reconnaissance and electronic warfare tasks. However, the IAF presently operates only 42 squadrons, making the acquisition of these, and other aircraft all the more vital. In November 2005, the Indian Defence Ministry decided to purchase 200 Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft instead of the initial proposal of 126 aircraft, opening the door for more than one supplier. The value of the original contract was 6 Billion USD; the revised plan brings the total value of the contract to 11 billion USD. The new aircraft will not only increase IAF fleet but would also replace aging Jaguars, MiG-23s and MiG-27s.
It is reported that most IAF officers favour the MiG-35 and the Mirage 2000-9 over the F-16s and F/A-18 Hornets. MiG and Dassault have historically been reliable suppliers in terms of transfers of technology, licensed production in India, personnel training, supply of spare parts, maintenance and upgrading. IAF pilots and technicians are familiar with earlier aircraft from MiG and Dassault and would need minimal retraining. Infrastructural and logistical support for maintenance and spares would also be easier for these aircraft compared to the unfamiliar Gripens, F-16s and F/A-18s. Apart from the 200 multi-role combat aircraft and 120+ Light Combat Aircraft, the Indian Air Force was recently given a clearance by the Indian Ministry of Defence to purchase 80+ combat helicopters, six to eight air-refuelling planes and some additional medium-range transport aircraft. India is eyeing to buy 10 to 15 C-130 HerculesJ aircraft.
Besides 200 medium multi-role combat aircraft, the IAF will also buy 120+ indigenously-built HAL Tejas light combat aircraft in a deal worth US$ 1.5 billion. These aircraft are expected to enter service by 2010. The HAL HJT-36 Intermediate Jet Trainer carried out its maiden test flight in 2003 and is all set to enter service within the next 5 years. HAL recently signed a deal with Russian company Saturn DDB for supply of a specially designed engine for the trainer. The 66 Hawk T.132s will begin arriving in India from 2007. The Hawk, along with the HAL HJT-36, will serve the IAF's future fighter training needs. Apart from combat and training aircraft, India is also developing un-manned surveillance aircraft in collaboration with Israel Aircraft Industries (IAI).
In 2001, the Ministry of Defence signed a deal with Russia to jointly develop and fund the Perspektivnyi Aviatsionnyi Kompleks Frontovoi Aviatsyi (Future Air Complex for Tactical Air Forces) program. The program was initiated to develop a fifth generation fighter aircraft to fill a role similar to that of Lockheed Martin's F-22 Raptor in all aspects. Initially, Mikoyan-Gurevich's Project 1.44 was expected to get the contract. However, Sukhoi Aviation Corporation came up with a more cost-effective aircraft and won. Design work has commenced on Sukhoi's experimental Su-47 Berkut aircraft. PAK FA proves to be a very ambitious program and the estimated costs for developing the aircraft vary between US$15-20 billion. As of 2003 it was undergoing flight testing. The aircraft is set to go into production for the Russian and Indian Air Force in 2009.
India is also planning to construct a fifth generation aircraft named as the Medium Combat Aircraft or MCA. The MCA is presently in early stages of development and production is expected to commence in 2015. Hindustan Aeronautics has already commenced the development of a medium-range transport aircraft which will replace the IAF's ageing fleet of Antonov An-32s.
The IAF and the Indian Army are currently developing Akash and Trishul surface-to-air missiles as a part of the Integrated Guided Missile Development Program.
Air forces | Indian Air Force | Military of India | 1932 establishments
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