Indian Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

aksha

Captain
Su-30MKI
Aksha, i have 205 in 10 Sqns a new recently and also one other annouced for some weeks
but i have a doubt for 3 Sqns
Exist a full list ?

no official list

but this from BRF

list of Su-30mki squadrons: 2, 8, 15, 17, 20, 24, 30, 31, 102, 106, 220.
 

aksha

Captain
latest pic from the Indradanush 2015 exercise

YXBP8Gx.jpg
 

aksha

Captain
Su-30MKI
Aksha, i have 205 in 10 Sqns a new recently and also one other annouced for some weeks
but i have a doubt for 3 Sqns
Exist a full list ?

this is a better answer to your question
list of squardons in the IAF,
could be a little outdated, but its the most accurate
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and this is from the Indradanush exercise 2015

That Patch
Belongs to the No.2 Squadron "Winged Arrows"
"Amogh Lakshya " or "True to Aim"
XOhvI4P.jpg




these are the squardon patches of the IAF
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aksha

Captain
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In a stunning revelation about the 1971 India-Pakistan war in a book written by a retired Indian Navy submariner, an Indian submarine had a brush with a hitherto unidentified nuclear submarine near Pakistani shores.

According to the book Foxtrots of the Indian Navy, by Commodore P.R. Franklin (Retd) who has fictionalised the names of the vessels and the personnel, the Indian submarine was ready to fire and was within striking distance but refrained from attacking since the other vessel could not be positively identified and also drifted off on its own.

The book narrates various accounts of the now decommissioned Soviet Union-built Foxtrot-class submarines the IN used. While it is known that the Arabian Sea often saw nuclear submarines from naval teams of the US, Britain, France and Russia, the origin of the said nuclear submarine which was confirmed to be nuclear-powered based on its “sonar acoustic signature” could never be ascertained.

As per the book, the submarine, while on patrol during the war in 1971, picked up a “contact” on its sonar while closing in on her. Both then engaged in complex manoeuvres around each other. It is pertinent to note that Indian submarines were under strict orders to positively identify targets as enemy assets before attacking them.




According to excerpts from the book made available to this newspaper, the Indian submarine has been identified as Vanshali, a name arrived at by anagramming letters from the names of the eight submarines in the class.

“It was classified as a platform being driven by steam turbines. All propulsion systems have their own signatures. Steam turbines are distinctive by their characteristics. The Sonar Officer reported details to the Captain. It was closing Vanshali. The Captain took Vanshali up to periscope depth again, for the second time. This was to identify the target in accordance with Higher Directives. Two bow tubes housing anti submarine torpedoes, and two housing anti-shipping torpedoes were made ready to fire at short notice. Since the contact was not identified, and since Vanshali was in hostile territory, any firing on her part could only be reactive, and in self-defence,” an excerpt from the book reads.

While the Vanshali went into “ultra-quiet” mode and stopped her propulsion, the officers and crew on board are described as having had “butterflies in their stomachs”.

“Both were drifting. There was pin-drop silence in the boat. Then the ‘contact’ decided to go away. Her powerful props started churning water, and she could be distinctly heard revving up as she altered course, increased speed, and sped away,” another excerpt reads.

Defence analyst Joseph Chacko, the author of the first ever book on the history of the Indian Navy’s submarine arm, titled Foxtrot to Arihant, too confirmed the incident had taken place.

“The submarine in question was INS Karanj, a Soviet-built Foxtrot-class boat. The incident was mentioned to me too by another submariner while I was researching on Navy submarines. However, it could not be officially confirmed,” he said.

Cmde Franklin also states in his book that the Navy had received the reports with scepticism.




any way ,the best books on the Indian Navy's submarine arm
both are well written and accurate
by JOSEPH P. CHACKO and Commodore P.R. FRANKLIN

husHqkv.jpg


MujdVsx.jpg
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Well, let's get a JPG of it up[ here. I removed the disbanded squadrons and also the original composition/type:

View attachment 15960

...or a PDF if you prefer (Attached):
Yeah !
18 fighters by Sqn theoretical staffing, all C-17 in one, 6 C-130J for actual and futur annouced based to Panagargh in Eastern India
My favorite stuff... :)

For get number by units sometimes on the net but diffficult the best in the magazines especially Combat Aircraft Monthly by units and by types sometines or national magazines.
 
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