The New Zealand Herald

An aerial dogfight over Kashmir ended in mystery

- Rahul Bedi

When Indian Air Force Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman spotted the enemy plane on his radar 7000ft (2130m) below him he had little hesitation.

Locking on to the Pakistani F-16 jet launching a cross-border missile raid over Kashmir he told his patrol partners: “I am going after him.”

The dogfight that followed ended with Varthaman’s MiG-21 fighter being shot down and the Indian airman captured by the Pakistanis.

What happened brought the two nuclear powers to the brink of conflict and sent shock waves across the region. It was the first time the nations had engaged in aerial combat since 1971 and the world held its breath.

The skirmish began at 9.45am last Wednesday above the Himalayan foothills when an Indian ground radar detected 24 Pakistani fighters flying close to the line of control that divides India and Pakistan.

Over the next 86 seconds, Varthaman and his adversarie­s dodged and weaved as missiles whistled through the air.

Pakistan’s fighter group included eight F-16s, four French Dassault Mirage-IIIs, four Chinese-origin JF-17 Thunder fighters and at least one Saab 2000 Erieye early warning and control platform.

The IAF scrambled a combat air patrol comprising two Russian Sukhoi Su-30 fighters, two upgraded Mirage-2000H’s and four upgraded Soviet-era MiG-21 Bison aircraft.

Indian military sources said the IAF joined the battle after three Pakistan Air Force F-16s crossed the border and discharged laser-guided missiles at the Nowshera munitions depot, 8km inside Indian territory, but missed their target.

Varthaman aimed to position himself at an angle of 60 degrees to the F-16 in his sights, an “angle of attack” that would enable him to execute a missile strike, the sources said.

The F-16 pilot, flying at more than 900km/h, went into a steep ascent, climbing to around 26,000ft before hurtling back down in a move to shake off his pursuer. Varthaman positioned his MiG-21 behind the F-16 and fired his Russian short-range Vympel R-73 air-to-air missile at the F-16, scoring a hit.

But within moments Varthaman’s fighter was incapacita­ted by one or possibly two air-to-air missiles, forcing him to eject and parachute down. He landed in Pakistan-administer­ed Kashmir. A crowd of villagers gave chase until he stumbled into a nearby shallow stream. He was shot in the leg and handed to the Pakistani authoritie­s.

Pakistan and India have been to war four times since 1947 but the aerial combat was the first between nuclear-armed states and the first between the air forces in 48 years.

The latest rise in tension started with a suicide bomb attack by Pakistan-based jihadists that killed 40 Indian troops. India retaliated with missile strikes at a militant base on the Pakistan side.

Varthaman was returned to India. However, the identity of the PAF pilot, his fate and his F-16 remains shrouded in mystery. India exhibited pieces of the downed PAF fighter that they say had fallen into Indian territory, but Islamabad has yet to own up to its loss.— Telegraph Group Ltd

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