The
Indian Air Force Today
There are five operational air commands, the Western Air Command with headquarters in
Delhi being the prime one and responsible for air operations from Kashmir southwards to
Rajasthan and including the capital and the Punjab, with an Operations Group dedicated for
Jammu & Kashmir including Ladakh. Central Air Command based at Allahabad, encompasses
most of the Indo-Gangetic plain while Eastern Air Command, from Shillong, is responsible
for Bengal, Assam, the eastern states of Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Mizoram and the
others bordering area on Tibet, Bangladesh and Burma.South Western Air Command, at
Jodhpur, is responsible for air operations in most of Rajasthan, southwards through
Gujrarat to Saurashtra and the Kutch area. Southern Air Command was formed in July 1984
with headquarters at Trivandrum and has, geographically, the largest territory, from the
Deccan plateau area to the southern tip of the peninsula and including the island
territories of Lakshwadeep and the Andaman & Nicobar Islands. Training Command has its
headquarters at Bangalore, with the majority of flying and ground training establishments
located in Southern India. Maintenance Command operates from Nagpur in
Central India. The five Operational Commands through administrative Wings, control some 45
fixed-wing squadrons, 20 helicopter units and numerous surface -to- air missile squadrons,
with unit establishments varying from 12 to 18 aircraft. This represents a total aircraft
strength of nearly 1,700 including training and support types, manned by some 120,000
personnel.
The Indian Air Force is today the world's fourth largest, well-equipped and professionally
trained, smartly efficient and with an elan second to none.

Helicopters
The IAF's helicopter fleet has steadily increased in numbers over the past twenty
years, blossoming from a handful of U.S. types in the '60s to over 500 French, Indian and
Soviet built types. The pride of the force is, undoubtedly, the Mi 26 heavy lift
helicopter which has been operated by No. 126 H.U. with outstanding results in the
mountains of Northern India. The bulk of rotorcraft are Mi 17s and Mi 8s, well over one
hundred of these types serving in Helicopter Units throughout the country, playing a vital
logistic support role. Mi 8s are operated for commando assault tasks, for ferrying
supplies and personnel to remote mountain helipads and jungle clearings, carrying out SAR
(Search and Research Operations) and logistic support tasks in the island territories,
employed with the Indian permanent station in the Antarctica and so on.
The smaller
Alouette 111, renamed Chetak, is as ubiquitous, being employed for casevac(Casualty
Evacuation), communi- cations and liaison duties with the IAF having received over
150 examples of this versatile rotorcraft.
In 1986,
however, the Government of India formally constituted the Army's Aviation Corps and most
Chetak and Cheetahs operating in AOP Squadrons were transferred from the Air Force on 1st
November 1986. The Air Force continues to fly armed Chetaks in the anti-tank role as well
as for CASEVAC and general duties while the lighter Cheetah is operated by (FAC) flights.
In May 1984,
No. 125 Helicopter Unit was formed with the formidable Mi-25 gunship helicopter,
used to much effect in Sri Lanka. The upgraded Mi 35 has followed in April 1990, with No.
104 HU being reequipped with the type. Future requirements for armed helicopters are
planned to be met by the indigenous Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) currently under
development by HAL at Bangalore.
Trainer
The IAF replaced its HT 2 primary trainers with the HPT32 (Deepak), the new piston
engined trainer being utilised at the Basic Flying Training School at Allahabad since
January 1988 and at Air Force Academy at Dundigal. Flight cadets then proceed to the Air
Force Academy, Dundigal for instruction on the HJT 16 Kiran, first on the Mk.
I/IA and then on the armed Mk II version or the Polish origin Iskra, for tactical flying.
After commissioning, pilots are streamed to various conversion units, depending on their
selection and proficiency. Future fighter pilots are sent to operational conversion units
(now known as the MOFTU or MIG Operational Flying Training Unit) where operational
and tactical flyng is conducted on MIG 21. Thus are born the IAF's leaders and even
future spacemen, like Sqn Ldr Rakesh Sharma, India's first cosmonaut who participated in a
joint space flight with the Soviets in 1984.

Aircraft Operated (1932-1991)
| Type of Aircraft |
Period |
| Westland WapitiILA |
1933-42 |
| Hawker Hart |
1939-40 |
| De Havilland D.H. 82A Tiger Moth |
1939-57 |
| De Havilland D.H. 89 Dragon Rapide |
1941-44 |
| Armstrong Whitworth A.W. 15 Atalanta |
1941-42 |
| Hawker Audax |
1941-45 |
| Bristol Blenheim Mk. 1 |
1941-42 |
|
1941-43 |
| North American T-6G Texan Harvard |
1942-75 |
| Hawker Hurricane Mk IIB/IIC |
1942-45 |
| Vultee Vengeance Mk 1/III |
1942-44 |
| VickersValentia Avro Anson 1942-45 HAL/MS 748 |
1942-44 |
| De Havilland D.H. 85 Leopard Moth |
1942-43 |
| De Havilland D.H. 94 Minor Moth |
1942-43 |
| Fairchild PT-26 Cornell |
1943-46 |
| Hawker Hurricane Mk X11 |
1943-45 |
| Hawker Hurricane MklV SukhoiSu-7BM l: |
1944-45 |
| Supermarine Spitfire Mk V111 |
1944-48 |
| Boulton Paul Defiant TT Mk Ill Mil Mi-8 |
1944-45 |
| Fairey Battle |
1944-45 |
| Auster AOP41511619 |
1945-70 |
| Supermarine Spitfire Mk XIV |
1945-50 |
| Hawker Tempest Mk 11 |
1946-53 |
| Douglas C-47 Dakota |
1946-88 |
| Airspeed Oxford SepecatJaguar S/B |
1947-49 |
| Percival Prentice T Mk 3 |
1948-59 |
| Consolidated Vultee B-24 Liberator Boeing 737 |
1948-68 |
| De Havilland Vampire FB Mk 52 |
1948-72 |
| De Havilland Devon C Mk 1 MiG-25R/bT |
1950-88 |
| Supermarine Spitfire MkXVI11 |
1951-57 |
| HAL HT-2 Mil Mi-25 |
1953-88 |
| De Havilland Vampire NFMk. 54 |
1953-66 |
| De Havilland Vampire TMk. 55 11yushinll-76MD |
1953-75 |
| Dassault Ouragan (Toofani) |
1953-67 |
| Fairchild C-1 19GL Packet MiG-27M |
1953-86 |
| Sikorsky S-55 |
1954-66 |
| Super Aero AE 45.5 1955-57 MiG-29B I rB |
|
| llyushin 11:14 1955-77 |
|
| De Havilland DHC-3 Otter 1956-91 HAL HJT- 16 Kiran Mk. II |
|
| Vickers Viscount |
1956-67 |
| Bell Model 47G Mil Mi-35 |
1957-72 |
| Dassault Mystere IVA |
1957-73 |
| English Electric Canberra B (1) Mk 58 B.Mk.66,B.Mk. 12, PR.
Mk.57, PR.Mk.67, T.Mk.54 |
1957- |
| Hawker Hunter F Mk.56.F Mk 56 A,T Mk. 66, T Mk. 66D |
1957- |
| HAL/Folland Gnat Mk 1 |
1958-78 |
| Sikorsky S-62B |
1960-64 |
| Mil Mi-4 |
1960-81 |
| Antonov An-12 B |
1961- |
| Lockheed Super Constellation |
1961-84 |
| Aerospatiale HAL Alouette III (Chetak) |
1962- |
| DHC-4 Caribou |
1963-87 |
| MiG-21 F-13 |
1963-68 |
| HAL/HS 748 |
1964- |
| HAL HF-24 Marut Mk.1,IT |
1964-83 |
| HAL HAOP-27 Krishak |
1965-77 |
| MiG-21 FL/U |
1966- |
| TupolevTu-124 |
1966-81 |
| SukhoiSu-7BM l: |
1968-86 |
| HAL HJT- 16 Kiran Mk l/IA |
1968- |
| Mil Mi-8 |
1971- |
| Aerospatiale/HAL Cheetah |
1973- |
| MiG-2 1 MF/M |
1973- |
| TS-11 Iskra |
1975- |
| HAL Ajeet (Gnat Mk.II ) |
1977-91 |
| MiG-21bis |
1977- |
| SepecatJaguar S/B |
1979- |
| MiG-23BNllJM |
1981- |
| Boeing 737 |
1981- |
| MiG-23MF |
1982- |
| MiG-25R/bT |
1982- |
| AntonovAn-32 |
1984- |
| Mil Mi-25 |
1984- |
| MilMi-17 |
1985- |
| 11yushinll-76MD |
1985- |
| Dassault Mirage 2000H |
1985- |
| MiG-27M |
1984- |
| Mil Mi-26 |
1986- |
| MiG-29B/UB |
1987- |
| HAL HPT-32 |
1988- |
| HAL HJT- 16 Kiran Mk. II |
1988- |
| HAL Dornier 228-201 |
1988- |
| Mil Mi-35 |
1990- |
|