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The skies of India are suddenly bereft of a star – legendary military leader and iconic air warrior, Marshal of the Indian Air Force Arjan Singh (98) flew into eternity on Saturday evening.
With his passing, the nation has lost a military leader of the highest calibre and quiet determination. Imbued with unbounded courage, he was perceived as the bravest air warrior, an elder statesman, and above all, an iconic Indian.
Not just the air warrior community and the armed forces, but the entire country mourns the loss of an awe-inspiring public figure of monumental stature.
A fourth generation armed forces man – his father, grandfather and great grandfather served in the cavalry – Arjan Singh was commissioned in 1939 at the Royal Air Force College, Cranwell. He was accorded the rare honour of being invited there 28 years later as IAF Chief to take the salute at a passing out parade, and was a frequent visitor thereafter.
When I visited Cranwell for a talk few years back, with immense and justifiable pride the Commandant pointed to a portrait of Arjan Singh, which continues to adorn the entrance to the main building.
Nearer home and tellingly, Arjan Singh’s individual professional growth during early years coincided with the evolution of the IAF from its birth in 1932, initial baby steps and transition from propeller-driven combat fighters to an all-jet fleet. Its subsequent transformation from a tactical ‘support force’ to being the strategic sword-arm of India’s defence and security owes much to Arjan Singh’s unparalleled operational leadership during the 1950s and 60s.
His two tenures on the Burma Front during World War II were the start-point landmarks of what turned out to be a stupendous flying career. As Commanding Officer of the legendary 1 Squadron (Tigers) during the 1944 Arakan Campaign in Burma, he flew close support missions on Hurricane fighters, that helped break the Japanese siege of Imphal and tilted the scales in favour of the allies. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross in that campaign.
Years later he was Air Officer Commanding Operational Group (responsible for air operations from Kargil to Kanyakumari ) for six years. This Group, which later became Western Air Command, helped shape India’s air power doctrine and strategy, related training needs and professional ethos that served the IAF brilliantly in subsequent wars.
We need to recall his immediate readiness to accept risks and respond at electrifying speed to the defence minister and the army chief, both of whom sought emergency air support to the army formations facing a perilous Pakistani armour assault (Operation Grand Slam) in the Akhnoor-Chhamb sector.
As he promised, the first Vampire formation was airborne from Pathankot in less than an hour, to which I was witness! But in his characteristic coolness, he shook off some initial setbacks due to loss of aircraft to eventually prevail over the adversary.
Unsurprisingly, after the war, Arjan Singh was elevated to Air Chief Marshal, awarded the Padma Vibhushan, and after retirement in 1969, he served with distinction in varied assignments: Ambassador to Switzerland and Kenya; Member, Minorities Commission and Lieutenant Governor, Delhi, before graciously embracing true retirement.
I had the privilege to know the Marshal personally over decades, particularly during my tenure in the Air Chief’s Office, and following my retirement, as the Deputy Director, Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, and later as the founding Additional Director, Centre for Air Power Studies (2002-2012). One observed close at hand the ramrod straight soldierly bearing, understated British-style humour and earthy and yet big-picture-centric public articulations of India’s most celebrated air warrior.
In an unsurprising magnanimous gesture, they contributed a vast sum from personal savings towards a welfare scheme for the wards of non-combatants in the IAF.
Their bond with the Air Force family was tenacious, the personal chemistry exemplary, and both had a subtle charm to put everyone at ease in their presence. Their home bespoke of excellence in taste and aesthetic ambience. In short, a couple extraordinaire. As the Marshal joins his wife in their ethereal abode, the air warrior community, armed forces and the nation need to salute his many-splendoured career and life.
(The author, Air Vice Marshal (retd) Kapil Kak, is a strategic analyst and commentator. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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