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No. 3 Squadron, Indian Air Force

No. 3 Squadron
No. 3 Squadron badge
"The crest of the No. 3 Squadron"
Active October 1941 - Present
Role Close Air Support
Interdiction
Reconnaissance
Base AFS Ambala
Nickname(s) Cobras
Motto(s) Lakshya Vedh
(Sanskrit: " Destroy Target with Precision")
Engagements

Hur's Operations NWFP
Burma Campaign
Operation Polo
Western Air War, 1965
Liberation War, 1971

(rank)Gp capt AP Singh
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Om Prakash Mehra
Insignia
Identification
symbol
A Winged dagger clenched in a fist and entwined by a cobra
Aircraft flown
Attack Mig 21 Bison

Hur's Operations NWFP
Burma Campaign
Operation Polo
Western Air War, 1965
Liberation War, 1971


The No.3 Squadron (Cobras) of the Indian Air Force (IAF) operates as a Close Air Support (CAS) and reconnaissance unit. Currently based at Pathankot Air Force Station, No. 3 Sqn falls under the Western Air Command, and alongside the No. 26 Sqn (Warriors), No. 104HU (Pioneer Rotarians) and No.125HU (Gladiators), forms the 18 wing of the IAF.

No. 3 Squadron's emblem is a winged dagger clenched in a fist and entwined by a cobra. Below this crest, the words Lakshya Vedh, literally 'on target,' are written upon a scroll.

No. 3 Squadron (Cobras) was formed on 1 October 1941 at Peshawar equipped with Hawker Audax light bombers transferred from No. 28 Squadron RAF under the command of Sqn Ldr Nan Bray. The initial recruits to the unit were drawn from No. 1 Squadron, Indian Air Force. Tasked with the role of fighter reconnaissance, the third squadron initially operated two flights of eight Audax aircraft. The Third Squadron was first deployed in December 1941 on a mission in the North-West Frontier Province, against the insurgency of the Faqir of Ipi, in an area that is now part of Pakistan. The squadron has since flown with distinction in a number of conflicts, including the Burma Campaign, Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 and the 1971 Liberation War.


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