AN OBITUARY - A TRIBUTE TO AIR MARSHAL NUR KHAN
by Air Marshal Ayaz Ahmed Khan
Air Marshal Nur Khan died at Islamabad on December 12. He was 88. Air Commodore Sajjad Haider's tribute to Nur Khan is highly appropriate. Air Marshal Nur Khan was an icon, a matchless leader and a dauntless warrior. I firt saw him in 1942, when as a Pilot Officer with a group of young RIAF pilots he performed low level aerobatics in a Audax bi-plane at the Badami Bagh cantonement in Srinagar. Every one thought that he would hit the Chinar trees, during inverted passes. My father Lt Col Ghulam Ahmed Khan OC of the Military hospital hostd a lunch for the IAF officers. I was introduced to Nur Khan. he looked dashing but incredibly young.
After the 1965 war, I received an order from the Commander in Chief to recommend all Wirelss Observer NCO 's and airmen for their outstanding reporting of IAF intruders, which had enabled the PAF air defences to shoot down very large numbers Indian fighters during low level interceptions. I recommended large numbers, who were awarded Tamgha Jurrat and other appropriate awards. I was ordered to fly to Pasroor airstrip soon after an IAF Gnat fighter had forced landed after seeing a F-104 on his tail. I landed my Harvard with Flt Lt Saad Hatmi. Pushed the Gnat and the Harvard into a sugar cane field. I could see Indian fighters overhead. The Gnat was refuelled, and as Saad Hatmi walked towards the Gnat, the IAF Squadron Leader-now a POW said," This airstrip is too short for Gnat take-off". Flt lt Saad Hatmi took off. The IAF Gnat is a prize trophy in the PAF Museum. My war cititation written by Air Cdre Masroor Hussain and endorsed by AM Nur Khan had in a few words recognized my own 65 War endeavours as Base Commander PAF Lahore. Soon after I was posted as OC 31 Bomber Wing and later sent to Joint Service Staff College UK. Nur Khan was my mentor and I hold him in the highest esteem.
On 9th September 1965, I requested for permission to fly B-57 night bombing missions. My request was turned down. The C-In-C had already issued a directive that Base Commanders are not to fly into enemy territory. I persisted and applied again. I was flying at night after four years, and was inspired by Nur Khan flying the C-130 for airdrop missions over the valley. He was a man of guts and valour and yet very forgiving. On fequent visits to Lahore, he would came straigt from the aircraft into my office, and question me about the MOU's training, and war readiness. During the finals of PAF Inter-Base hockey tournament between Lahore and Kohat he drove into the hockey field and watched the finals which Lahore won. I was captian of the Base hockey team and proud receipent of the annual hockey trophy from the C-In-C. As President of the Pakistan Hockey Association, and Chairman of the Pakistan cricket Board. Pakistan won the olympics under his stewardship.
His dynamic leadership of the PAF and PIA was unmatched. PAF was acclaimed as the best air force and PIA as the best airline. He was a hero and an icon which the nation is proud of. He lives in the heart of every Pakistani. The Pakistani nation will never forget him. May God bless him in heaven-Amen
Please forward my obituary to Sajjad Haider, with the request that it be given to the press.
From: nhaq@dsl.net.pk
To: ;
Subject: Fw: A Man of Steel (Air Cdre Sajad Haider's tribute to AM Nur Khan)
Date: Sun, 18 Dec 2011 20:40:24 +0500
He was the second Pakistani chief of the air force, but second to none. Excellence was never an option; it was an instinct he proved as he took PIA to the galaxy of the world's best airlines. In July 1965 he returned to the air force to take over from Asghar Khan, and led the PAF with stunning success into the war of 1965, which he always exhorted as a senseless war perpetrated by unprofessional men at the helm.
I knew him from the time he commanded the base at Mauripur (Masroor) and led a flypast of 100 F-86 Fighter aircraft on March 23. He wanted every fighter on the PAF to take to the air. It was near impossible. But he had the gumption to motivate the men in blue to achieve the impossible. The spectacle was witnessed by millions in Karachi in the mid-1950s, with Nur Khan leading, just before he left to take command of PIA.
His achievements as MD PIA were not limited to the airline. His contribution to Pakistan's sports was epoch-making. He raised the standard of squash and hockey from the mediocre to world class. Pakistan emerged as world champions from the developing world to challenge the mighty First World.
Meanwhile, his individual courage was tested when a Fokker Friendship was hijacked and made to land in Lahore. When all negotiations failed, Nur Khan flew to Lahore and decided to take charge. To everyone's bewilderment and admiration he entered the small cabin and physically overpowered the hijacker just as he fired his gun, wounding the air marshal. However, he was overwhelmed by Nur Khan.
The day he took over the PAF in July 1965, he discovered much to his chagrin and more so for Asghar Khan that neither had been told by president Ayub Khan or Gen Musa that thousands of mujahideen including Pakistan army commandoes had been launched to take Kashmir. He shot off to GHQ to confront Gen Musa, the army chief, asking why the PAF had been kept in the dark. Musa told him that the president did not want to escalate the limited operation and the PAF had to stay out.
Nur Khan had anxious moments knowing that the ill-conceived action would inevitably conflagrate. What would he say to the nation if the Indian Air Force (IAF) was to pre-empt and ground the PAF in a relentless air operation? The rest is history. But for his alacrity and strategic perception the PAF would been devastated by a numerically preponderant IAF.
Nur Khan put the PAF on red alert on Sept 1 as the army's Operation Gibraltar came to a grinding halt and the Indians began a massive assault against Pakistan. In those moments Nur Khan was deeply concerned about the survival of the mujahideen force in the Kashmir valley with no hope for supply reinforcements.
Nur Khan ordered C-130 flights in the valley after consulting with the 12 Division command in control of the Kashmir misadventure. He boarded the first C-130 mission past midnight in inclement weather with a rudimentary radar, in total darkness in the treacherous valley. When Group Captain Zahid Butt overshot the drop zone, placed between high peaks on either side, he decided to abandon the perilous mission. Nur Khan peering over his shoulder asked him to make another attempt. This time the supplies were dropped on target.
Such was the audacity of the man in command of the PAF. The news propelled the morale of the PAF to incredible heights. Its performance in the 1965 war is written in glorious splendour.
I had the honour to fly with him as escort fighter during many missions he flew with my squadron based in Peshawar. He would arrive straight from his residence to our squadron, don his flying gear, order coffee and a hamburger, just like any young fighter pilot and off we went to the firing range at Jamrud.
Everyday he returned with incredible scores which the best pilots in complete form could hardly achieve. When I would tell him that he was going too low in the attacks, he would reply, "that is how you would need to attack the enemy in war".
The war was not on, yet he was irrepressible and would wait for the 'hit count' and rocket results.
One day when I had to abort for aircraft malfunction, my flight commander escorted him to the range. When he returned he had already been informed by the range officer how many hits he had scored on the target. As he stood on the wing of the
Sabrejet he smiled and said, "Now you beat that bloody score, Haider."
He had scored 100 per cent hits on the target. He had beaten my score. A record never broken by the very best anywhere to the best of my knowledge. That was my mentor, a man who considered nothing impossible and proved it with his excellence,
integrity and intrepidness. A legacy few air forces can boast to have inherited.
Farewell, my chief, I know you hated it when I wrote in my book that you were a maverick, but you know that I meant you were incomparable and lightening fast. You liked that. Pakistan's history will place you on the highest pedestal of military leadership. May your heroic and noble soul rest in peace.
The writer is a retired air commodore.
THERE must be a hush in the extraterrestrial firmament as an unusual meteor blazes with tremendous velocity towards its heavenly abode. Air Marshal Nur Khan was my mentor, a leader whose body and soul were forged in tempered steel. There are few who have lived with such courage and conviction.
by Air Marshal Ayaz Ahmed Khan
Air Marshal Nur Khan died at Islamabad on December 12. He was 88. Air Commodore Sajjad Haider's tribute to Nur Khan is highly appropriate. Air Marshal Nur Khan was an icon, a matchless leader and a dauntless warrior. I firt saw him in 1942, when as a Pilot Officer with a group of young RIAF pilots he performed low level aerobatics in a Audax bi-plane at the Badami Bagh cantonement in Srinagar. Every one thought that he would hit the Chinar trees, during inverted passes. My father Lt Col Ghulam Ahmed Khan OC of the Military hospital hostd a lunch for the IAF officers. I was introduced to Nur Khan. he looked dashing but incredibly young.
After the 1965 war, I received an order from the Commander in Chief to recommend all Wirelss Observer NCO 's and airmen for their outstanding reporting of IAF intruders, which had enabled the PAF air defences to shoot down very large numbers Indian fighters during low level interceptions. I recommended large numbers, who were awarded Tamgha Jurrat and other appropriate awards. I was ordered to fly to Pasroor airstrip soon after an IAF Gnat fighter had forced landed after seeing a F-104 on his tail. I landed my Harvard with Flt Lt Saad Hatmi. Pushed the Gnat and the Harvard into a sugar cane field. I could see Indian fighters overhead. The Gnat was refuelled, and as Saad Hatmi walked towards the Gnat, the IAF Squadron Leader-now a POW said," This airstrip is too short for Gnat take-off". Flt lt Saad Hatmi took off. The IAF Gnat is a prize trophy in the PAF Museum. My war cititation written by Air Cdre Masroor Hussain and endorsed by AM Nur Khan had in a few words recognized my own 65 War endeavours as Base Commander PAF Lahore. Soon after I was posted as OC 31 Bomber Wing and later sent to Joint Service Staff College UK. Nur Khan was my mentor and I hold him in the highest esteem.
On 9th September 1965, I requested for permission to fly B-57 night bombing missions. My request was turned down. The C-In-C had already issued a directive that Base Commanders are not to fly into enemy territory. I persisted and applied again. I was flying at night after four years, and was inspired by Nur Khan flying the C-130 for airdrop missions over the valley. He was a man of guts and valour and yet very forgiving. On fequent visits to Lahore, he would came straigt from the aircraft into my office, and question me about the MOU's training, and war readiness. During the finals of PAF Inter-Base hockey tournament between Lahore and Kohat he drove into the hockey field and watched the finals which Lahore won. I was captian of the Base hockey team and proud receipent of the annual hockey trophy from the C-In-C. As President of the Pakistan Hockey Association, and Chairman of the Pakistan cricket Board. Pakistan won the olympics under his stewardship.
His dynamic leadership of the PAF and PIA was unmatched. PAF was acclaimed as the best air force and PIA as the best airline. He was a hero and an icon which the nation is proud of. He lives in the heart of every Pakistani. The Pakistani nation will never forget him. May God bless him in heaven-Amen
Please forward my obituary to Sajjad Haider, with the request that it be given to the press.
From: nhaq@dsl.net.pk
To: ;
Subject: Fw: A Man of Steel (Air Cdre Sajad Haider's tribute to AM Nur Khan)
Date: Sun, 18 Dec 2011 20:40:24 +0500
Subject: A Man of Steel (Air Cdre Sajad Haider's tribute to AM Nur Khan)
A man of steel
He was the second Pakistani chief of the air force, but second to none. Excellence was never an option; it was an instinct he proved as he took PIA to the galaxy of the world's best airlines. In July 1965 he returned to the air force to take over from Asghar Khan, and led the PAF with stunning success into the war of 1965, which he always exhorted as a senseless war perpetrated by unprofessional men at the helm.
I knew him from the time he commanded the base at Mauripur (Masroor) and led a flypast of 100 F-86 Fighter aircraft on March 23. He wanted every fighter on the PAF to take to the air. It was near impossible. But he had the gumption to motivate the men in blue to achieve the impossible. The spectacle was witnessed by millions in Karachi in the mid-1950s, with Nur Khan leading, just before he left to take command of PIA.
His achievements as MD PIA were not limited to the airline. His contribution to Pakistan's sports was epoch-making. He raised the standard of squash and hockey from the mediocre to world class. Pakistan emerged as world champions from the developing world to challenge the mighty First World.
Meanwhile, his individual courage was tested when a Fokker Friendship was hijacked and made to land in Lahore. When all negotiations failed, Nur Khan flew to Lahore and decided to take charge. To everyone's bewilderment and admiration he entered the small cabin and physically overpowered the hijacker just as he fired his gun, wounding the air marshal. However, he was overwhelmed by Nur Khan.
The day he took over the PAF in July 1965, he discovered much to his chagrin and more so for Asghar Khan that neither had been told by president Ayub Khan or Gen Musa that thousands of mujahideen including Pakistan army commandoes had been launched to take Kashmir. He shot off to GHQ to confront Gen Musa, the army chief, asking why the PAF had been kept in the dark. Musa told him that the president did not want to escalate the limited operation and the PAF had to stay out.
Nur Khan had anxious moments knowing that the ill-conceived action would inevitably conflagrate. What would he say to the nation if the Indian Air Force (IAF) was to pre-empt and ground the PAF in a relentless air operation? The rest is history. But for his alacrity and strategic perception the PAF would been devastated by a numerically preponderant IAF.
Nur Khan put the PAF on red alert on Sept 1 as the army's Operation Gibraltar came to a grinding halt and the Indians began a massive assault against Pakistan. In those moments Nur Khan was deeply concerned about the survival of the mujahideen force in the Kashmir valley with no hope for supply reinforcements.
Nur Khan ordered C-130 flights in the valley after consulting with the 12 Division command in control of the Kashmir misadventure. He boarded the first C-130 mission past midnight in inclement weather with a rudimentary radar, in total darkness in the treacherous valley. When Group Captain Zahid Butt overshot the drop zone, placed between high peaks on either side, he decided to abandon the perilous mission. Nur Khan peering over his shoulder asked him to make another attempt. This time the supplies were dropped on target.
Such was the audacity of the man in command of the PAF. The news propelled the morale of the PAF to incredible heights. Its performance in the 1965 war is written in glorious splendour.
I had the honour to fly with him as escort fighter during many missions he flew with my squadron based in Peshawar. He would arrive straight from his residence to our squadron, don his flying gear, order coffee and a hamburger, just like any young fighter pilot and off we went to the firing range at Jamrud.
Everyday he returned with incredible scores which the best pilots in complete form could hardly achieve. When I would tell him that he was going too low in the attacks, he would reply, "that is how you would need to attack the enemy in war".
The war was not on, yet he was irrepressible and would wait for the 'hit count' and rocket results.
One day when I had to abort for aircraft malfunction, my flight commander escorted him to the range. When he returned he had already been informed by the range officer how many hits he had scored on the target. As he stood on the wing of the
Sabrejet he smiled and said, "Now you beat that bloody score, Haider."
He had scored 100 per cent hits on the target. He had beaten my score. A record never broken by the very best anywhere to the best of my knowledge. That was my mentor, a man who considered nothing impossible and proved it with his excellence,
integrity and intrepidness. A legacy few air forces can boast to have inherited.
Farewell, my chief, I know you hated it when I wrote in my book that you were a maverick, but you know that I meant you were incomparable and lightening fast. You liked that. Pakistan's history will place you on the highest pedestal of military leadership. May your heroic and noble soul rest in peace.
The writer is a retired air commodore.
__._,_.___
Editor,
Tariq Khattak, Islamabad, Pakistan.
GSM = 0300-9599007 and 0333-9599007
Email: Tariqgulkhattak@gmail.com
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Tariq Khattak, Islamabad, Pakistan.
GSM = 0300-9599007 and 0333-9599007
Email: Tariqgulkhattak@gmail.com
Thanks for participating.
Kindly suggest improvements.
Please let us know:
I. If you want to receive individual emails
II. Receive one mail with all activity in it
III. Do not want to receive any mail at all
REQUESTS:
1) Please directly contact sender for personal/individual correspondence.
2) Try to discuss issues that will catch attention of many readers.
3) Please avoid sending messages in any language other than English
4) Avoid sending messages addressed to many recipients.
5) Do not send messages aimed at personal publicity.
6) Please do not send personal/other links unless necessary.
7) The Group is not obliged to publish printed news,
very short/long comments and objectionable material.
8) Every mail cannot be published; it will overload Mailboxes
of our valued members.
9) Try to Disagree Without Being Disagreeable, Unsympathetic and/or Unpleasant.
x==x==x==x==x==x
Please note that,
It is a common platform for journalists and all others who are interested in knowing about the issues that are sometimes not reported. This group favours philosophy of progress, reform and the protection of civil liberties. Please share and educate others. The owners and managers of this site do not necessarily agree with any of the information. It is an open forum; everyone is allowed to share anything. Mails sent by members and non-members are subject to approval. However, we are not responsible in any way for the contents of mails / opinion sent by members. We do not guarantee that the information will be completely accurate. (Nor can print and electronic media). If you find content on this site which you feel is inappropriate or inaccurate, incomplete, or useless you are most welcome to report it or contradict it.
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