No. 26 Squadron (Pakistan Air Force)

No. 26 Squadron
Black Spiders
Active 30 August 1957 — Present
Country  Pakistan
Allegiance  Pakistan
Branch  Pakistan Air Force
Type Fighter squadron
Role Multi-role
Airbase PAF Base Peshawar
Aircraft JF-17 Thunder Block 1
Engagements

1971 Indo-Pak War

War on Terror
Decorations 2× Sitara-i-Juraat
Aircraft flown
Attack Nanchang A-5C (1984—2010)
Fighter Shenyang F-6 (1980—1984)
JF-17 Thunder Block 1 (2010—Present)

No. 26 Squadron, named the Black Spiders, is a Pakistan Air Force (PAF) fighter squadron.

History

A model of the Shenyang F-6, armed with air-to-air missiles, on display at the PAF Museum Karachi.
A Black Spiders JF-17 performs at the Zhuhai Air Show 2010.

The squadron was established at PAF Base Masroor on 30 August 1967, equipped with the F-86 Sabre, commanded by Wing Commander Rehmat Khan and assigned the role of operational training of pilots on the F-86. It was later moved to PAF Base Peshawar. Over the next 10 years over 300 PAF pilots and 150 foreign pilots were trained and graduated.

During the 1971 Indo-Pak War the unit flew over 300 air defence, counter air and close air support missions under the command of Wing Commander S. A. Changazi. Counter air sorties were often targeted at the Indian Air Force bases in Srinagar and Awantipura. Close air support sorties were flown over Chamb and Shakargarh. The unit shot down 7 Indian aircraft and damaged 2 more. A Folland Gnat and Hawker Hunter were downed by Flight Lieutenant Salim Baig Mirza. After flying 15 sorties, Squadron Leader M. Aslam Chaudhary was shot down on 10 December 1971 during a close air support mission over Chamb when his section of two F-86 were bounced by six Indian Hawker Hunters. Flight Lieutenant Fazal Elahi was shot down by ground fire on 8 December 1971 during a close air support sortie. Mirza and Elahi were awarded the Sitara-i-Juraat posthumously.

The obsolete F-86 was replaced in December 1980 by the Shenyang F-6 and the squadron role changed to Air Superiority. The F-6 was replaced in 1984 with the Nanchang A-5C and the unit became a Tactical Attack squadron. In 1985 the squadron was awarded with the Flight Safety, Command Armament and the Professionals Trophies. In April 1989 the squadron provided pilots to ferry A-5C fighters requiring overhaul to China. In 1991 the first four of the squadron's aircraft were fitted with new Martin-Baker ejection seats.

During the 1996-2001 phase of the Afghan civil war A-5s of both the 16th and 26th Squadrons are reported to have flown strike missions against Northern Alliance positions as part of the Pakistani support to the Taliban.[1]

No. 26 Squadron
Black Spiders
Role Operational Aircraft Notes
1967—1980 F-86 Sabre
Air Superiority 1980—1984 Shenyang F-6
Tactical Attack 1984—2010 Nanchang A-5C
Multi-role 2010—Present JF-17 Thunder (Block 1) The PAF's first JF-17 squadron, formed from the JF-17 Test and Evaluation Flight.

Exercises

References

  1. Cooper, Tom; Troung; Koelich, Marc (10 February 2008). "Afghanistan, 1979–2001; Part 2". ACIG. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.