In this
painting I tried to recreate unmatched gallantry of a young Indian pilot who unfortunately did not
return from a raid over Sargodha, Pakistan, on 7th September 1965.
Squadron
Leader A.B.Devayya was part of a large formation of Mysteres of No. 1
Squadron, attacking Sargodha at the
crack of dawn. Owing to the extreme range of the target, only a single pass
attack was possible. It was suicidal to
even undertake such a mission as minor navigational error could result in entire
formation running out of fuel in the enemy territory. Also, for most pilots it
was their first mission deep inside enemy territory.
Defending
the PAF airbase were few US made F-86 Sabres and F-104 Starfighters, both aircraft
far superior to subsonic Mysteres that IAF had acquired from France in mid
fifties.
Mysteres
reached their target on time and as they pulled up for attack all hell turned loose
with heavy anti aircraft fire opening up. Each pilot now concentrated to
deliver his weapon accurately on the intended target. Lady
luck seemed to favour them and they came out of the attack almost unscathed. As
every member ducked to ultra low levels at full speed in the homebound course, Devayya
joined in after his attack as the last aircraft in the trail.
Flight Lieutenant Amjad Hussain, the lone PAF
pilot flying a Starfighter was vectored by the radar to intercept the Mysteres as they were getting away. He positioned behind the last Mystere for a
missile attack which happened to be Devayya . What happened subsequently can only be pieced
together by some contradictory accounts available from Pakistani source. None of
the members of Devayya’s formation was aware of this attack developing on their
tails.
From the
accounts published in books and articles
in Pakistan, IAF could reconstruct what now can be termed as an incredible act
of heroism by an airman who decided to stand up and fight when this should have been the last option to exercise
for a pilot who had barely enough fuel to land back home and was hundreds of
miles inside the enemy territory.
It is now
believed beyond doubt that Devayya after being shot at and his aircraft damaged
by the lethal cannon fired from the Starfighter, turned around to challenge his
adversary in a ‘fight to finish’ like a true gladiator. In the classic air
battle that followed between the vintage Mystere and the state of the art,
supersonic Starfighter, Devayya managed to turn the tables in his favour and
hunter became the hunted. Devayya’s
bullets tore into the Starfighter causing a control failure, forcing Amjad
Hussein to eject from his aircraft. Amjad barely survived the ejection at low level.
He was awarded the “Sitara-i-Jur’at”, Star of Courage, the third
highest military award in Pakistan soon after the war. Devayya was put on the list of “Missing believed
Killed” after the war. What lead to his actual death still remains a mystery. It
was revealed much later by Pakistan that Devayya’s body was found almost intact
by villagers not very far from Sargodha and buried. It is quite possible that Devayya’s Mystere
finally went out of control forcing him to abandon it at low level.
Unfortunately, ejection seat fitted in a Mystere was not designed for safe
operation at low levels.
Devayya’s
act of gallantry would have gone unknown and unrecognised by his countrymen had
it not been for the Pakistani account that acknowledged the extreme courage of
this young Indian pilot. Some 23 years
later Devayya was decorated by Indian Government with a Maha Vir Chakra posthumously,
country’s second highest gallantry award.
Air Commodore Kaiser Tufail , a retired officer of
PAF in his book, “Great Air Battles of Pakistan Air Force”, had summarised the
encounter between Devayya and Amjad Hussain as below :-
For
many decades the famous dogfight has confounded historians and air enthusiasts
alike. The respective Air Forces cited both pilots for courage as well as their
shooting skills. Flt Lt Amjad Hussain was awarded the Sitara-i-Jur’at soon after the war. Sqn Ldr Ajjamada Bopayya
Devayya was posthumously awarded the Maha
Vir Chakra in April 1988, after a passage of 23 years. ......... it can
be said that the medals are testimony to the dogged determination of two air
knights, who gave their best in this truly classic duel.
John Fricker, an American defence
analyst, in his book on air operations in Indo – Pak war of 1965, also mentions that, “..... shooting down in air combat of a Lockheed
Starfighter of the PAF by and obsolescent Dassault Mystere IVA...is among the
most creditable and least published achievements by IAF during the 1965 war..”
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