Central Air Command (India)

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Central Air Command, Indian Air Force
AVSM, VM

The Central Air Command is one of the five operational commands of the Indian Air Force. It is currently headquartered in Prayagraj in Uttar Pradesh. It was formed on 19 March 1962, at Rani Kuthee, Calcutta.

History

Due to the possibility of war with China, No. 1 Operational Group was formed on 27 May 1958 at Ranikuthee in

Calcutta, to look after all the units. In 1959, it was upgraded to Eastern Air Force (EAF). In 1962, after the Sino-Indian War, EAF was moved to Shillong and Central Air Command (CAC) was formed on 19 March 1962 with its headquarters at Rani Kuthee, Calcutta (now Kolkata). Calcutta was considered an inappropriate location for the Central Air Command Headquarters and it was relocated to Allahabad in February 1966.[1]

During the

Mahavir Chakras were awarded to the members of Canberra squadrons. In a major attack, seven Canberras of No. 35 Squadron attacked the oil storage tanks at Karachi, destroying about 60% of Pakistan's oil reserves.[2]

On 3 November 1988, during the

1988 Maldives coup d'état, Indian troops were airlifted to Maldives in two CAC Ilyushin Il-76s and landed at Hulule airport on a dark unlit runway. By 2.30am on 4 November the Indian forces completed their mission and safely brought back the President of Maldives.[2]

In operation "Safed Sagar" during the

Kargil war in 1999, CAC played a prominent role by successfully carrying out attacks on enemy bases.[2]

The IAF's first exercise with a foreign air force (Garud) took place with the

Organization

Squadrons include:

Squadron Base Equipment Notes
No. 106 Squadron IAF
Agra Air Force Station
Avro 748
M
No. 4 Wing IAF
No. 8 Squadron IAF
Bareilly Air Force Station
Su-30MKI
No. 15 Wing IAF
No. 24 Squadron IAF
Bareilly Air Force Station
Su-30MKI
No. 15 Wing IAF
No. 111 Helicopter Unit, IAF
Bareilly Air Force Station
HAL Dhruv No. 15 Wing IAF
No. 16 Squadron IAF
Gorakhpur Air Force Station
SEPECAT Jaguar IS No. 17 Wing IAF
No. 27 Squadron IAF
Gorakhpur Air Force Station
SEPECAT Jaguar IS No. 17 Wing IAF
No. 105 Helicopter Unit, IAF
Gorakhpur Air Force Station
Mi-17V-5 No. 17 Wing IAF
No. 1 Squadron IAF
Maharajpur Air Force Station
Mirage-2000H No. 40 Wing IAF
No. 7 Squadron IAF
Maharajpur Air Force Station
Mirage-2000H No. 40 Wing IAF
No. 9 Squadron IAF
Maharajpur Air Force Station
Mirage-2000 No. 40 Wing IAF
TACDE
Maharajpur Air Force Station
No. 40 Wing IAF

Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief

List of Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief
Rank Name From To
Air Vice Marshal
Shivdev Singh 10 June 1963[3] 4 March 1966
Kundan Lal Sondhi 5 March 1966[3] 31 December 1966
Hari Chand Dewan 1 January 1967[3] 28 March 1968
Hrushikesh Moolgavkar 29 March 1968[3] 31 March 1971
Maurice Barker 1 April 1971[3] 15 June 1972
Bandi Sreeramulu Krishnarao 16 June 1972[3] 25 June 1972
Air Marshal
26 June 1972[3] 26 June 1974
Idris Hasan Latif 27 June 1974[3] 29 February 1976
George Kanishtkumar John 1 March 1976[3] 31 January 1977
Gian Dev Sharma 1 February 1977[3] 31 December 1978
Trilochan Singh Brar 10 February 1979[3] 20 September 1981
Balwant Wickram Chauhan 21 September 1981[3] 31 December 1983
Denis Anthony Lafontaine 1 January 1984[3] 31 October 1984
Ripu Daman Sahni 6 November 1984[3] 31 May 1986
Johney William Greene 1 June 1986[3] 31 March 1987
Nirmal Chandra Suri 1 April 1987[3] 29 February 1988
Mohinder Singh Bawa 1 March 1988[3] 31 December 1990
Swaroop Krishna Kaul
11 February 1991[3] 30 April 1992
Pondicherry Jayarao Jayakumar 1 May 1992[3] 28 February 1993
Naresh Kumar 1 March 1993[3] 31 May 1995
Dev Nath Rathore 1 June 1995[3] 30 June 1996
Vinod Patney 1 July 1996[3] 31 March 1997
Srinivasapuram Krishnaswamy 1 April 1997[3] 30 November 1997
Vinod Kumar Bhatia 1 December 1997[3] 31 October 1999
Vinod Patney 1 November 1999[3] 31 July 2000
Vinod Kumar Verma 1 August 2000[3] 30 April 2002
Shashindra Pal Tyagi 1 May 2002[3] 31 January 2003
Brijendra Mohan Bali 1 February 2003[3] 31 March 2004
Raghu Rajan 1 April 2004[3] 30 April 2005
Jaspal Singh Gujral 1 May 2005[3] 31 October 2006
Pradeep Vasant Naik 1 November 2006[3] 31 December 2007
Packiam Paul Rajkumar 1 January 2008[3] 30 June 2009
Gurdip Singh Kochar 1 July 2009[3] 31 October 2011
Arup Raha 1 November 2011[3] 31 May 2012
Jasvinder Chauhan 1 June 2012[3] 31 July 2014
Kulwant Singh Gill 1 August 2014[3] 31 December 2015
Shyam Bihari Prasad Sinha 1 January 2016[3] 31 December 2018
Rajesh Kumar 1 January 2019[3] 31 January 2021
Amit Tiwari 1 February 2021[3] 31 May 2021
Richard John Duckworth 1 July 2021[3] 30 June 2022
Amar Preet Singh 1 July 2022[4][3] 31 January 2023
Ravi Gopal Krishana Kapoor 1 February 2023[4][3] Incumbent

Operations

The CAC mainly patrols the North Central part of India. It has airbases at

Gorakhpur, Gwalior and Prayagraj and some units are located at Bihta, Darbhanga, Bakshi-ka-Talab, Nagpur, Kanpur, Nainital, Memaura and Varanasi.[2]

The CAC operates fixed-wing aircraft such as the

]

See also

References

  1. .
  2. ^ a b c d e Mani, Rajiv (2 October 2012). "Central Air Command: A dominant power in the sky". The Times of India.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap "Central Air Command - BRF". Bharat Rakshak. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Air Marshal AP Singh Assumes the Appointment of AOC-In-C Central Air Command" (Press release). PIB. 1 July 2022.