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Thursday, March 28, 2024
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IAF Marshal Arjan Singh For You

The nation paid respects to the sole Marshal of the Indian Air Force Arjan Singh, who passed away on Saturday at the age of 98.  IAF veterans remembered him as “a man of integrity, a kind-hearted leader and an Air Warrior who leaves behind an incomparable legacy.”

His last rites were performed with a 17-gun salute and fly past by IAF fighter jets in the ‘missing man’ formation, at the Brar Square, New Delhi.

Marshal Arjan Singh served as Chief of the Air Staff from 1964 to 1969. For his distinguished service in commanding the IAF during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965, he was awarded the Padma Vibhushan and in 1966 became the first IAF officer to be promoted to Air Chief Marshal. After retiring from the IAF, he served as a diplomat, politician, and advisor to the Indian government. He was Lieutenant Governor of Delhi from 1989 to 1990. In 2002, on the occasion of Republic Day he became the first and only officer of the Indian Air Force to be promoted to five-star rank as Marshal (Highest Military Rank attainable) of the Indian Air Force, equal to the Army rank of Field Marshal (only Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw and Field Marshal K.M Cariappa have been conferred this highest rank in the Indian Army).  He was made India’s Ambassador to Switzerland and in 1974, the High Commissioner to Kenya and also served as a member of the Minorities Commission.

Marshal Arjan Singh was an officer who shaped the IAF in its early years as well as during some of its most difficult junctures and had the honour of leading the fly-past of more than a hundred IAF aircraft over the Red Fort on India’s first Independence Day, August 15, 1947.

Born on April 16, 1919, in Lyallpur, Punjab (now in Faisalabad, Pakistan) to a family of soldiers, Arjan Singh joined the nascent IAF in 1938 after completing his education from the Government College at Lahore. He was commissioned from the Royal Air Force College at Cranwell in the UK in December 1939. As a Pilot Officer posted in Karachi, he participated in operations against the tribals in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP).

The highlights of his early career were the two operational tenures on the Burma Front during the Second World War, first as a Pilot Officer with Tigers Squadron and subsequently as the Commander of the same Squadron. As a perfect Squadron Commander, flying Hurricane fighters in defence of Imphal in 1944, besieged by the Japanese, he had displayed masterly leadership. In an unprecedented step, the then Supreme Allied Commander of the South East Asian Command, Lord Mountbatten, had personally awarded him the Distinguished Flying Cross on the battlefield for his leadership and performance in defeating the Japanese.

 Arjan Singh held many important posts in the IAF before taking over as Air Marshal in August 1964. The Pakistan Air Force was led by his batchmate from the Royal Air Force College, Air Marshal Asghar Khan, at the time. During the conflict at Kutch in early 1965, the two chiefs had established contact and agreed on keeping the two air forces out, to prevent any inadvertent escalation. But once Pakistan had launched Operation Grandslam to cut off Jammu and Kashmir from the rest of India by launching a military attack in Akhnoor in September 1965, the then army chief, General J N Chaudhuri, had met him at Vayu Bhawan and suggested that the Pakistani assault would best be stopped by the IAF.

Arjan Singh and Chaudhuri had then gone to meet the defence minister, Y B Chavan, who famously gave them the go ahead. As Arjan Singh later recounted, “Pakistan had a qualitatively superior force that included modern fighters such as F-86 Sabres and F-104 Starfighters. The Indian Air Force had Mysteres, Vampires, Ouragans, Hunters, and Gnats in its inventory. We were fighting against all odds as they had air-to-air missiles and we just had a few Russian MiGs that were not used much in the war.”

In the subsequent weeks though, the IAF had established its air superiority, with deep-penetration attacks against enemy targets, including the farthest Pakistani airfields like Peshawar and Mauripur.

Arjan Singh continued to believe that the 1965 War ended in a stalemate despite India being in an advantageous position. “When the talk about ceasefire started, I had advised Shastriji (Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri), who was under enormous international pressure, against accepting it,” he later recounted. “On the other hand, Pakistan was losing its aircraft at a fast rate and was keen on accepting the ceasefire. However, because of international pressure and other considerations, India agreed to the ceasefire.”

Marshal Arjan Singh was a fatherly figure for all the men in uniform and an inspiration for generations to come. He was a fair, benign and charismatic man who led by example.

 

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Pallavi Singh
Pallavi Singhhttps://www.instagram.com/pallavee_singh/
Defence aficionado, curious, writer, humble, explorer, elegant. I am an Electrical & Electronics Engineer who is inclined towards humanities.
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