Mitty Masud folds his wings
Hilal-i-Juraat
By Air Chief Marshal Jamal A. Khan
One
of the PAF's most courageous leaders, Air Commodore M. Zafar Masud, HJ,
SBt, breathed his last on Oct 7. In 1953, my first posting after
operational training was to a jet fighter squadron at Faisal air base,
Karachi, which was commanded by the legendary F. S. Hussain. The
squadron commander's fatherly figure was balanced by Flight Lieutenant
Mitty Masud, our tough, uncompromising second-in-command.
Masud led us through the hazards of
combat flying with the same energy and disregard for danger as he
showed in his spirited embrace of Karachi's social milieu. Ever visible
was the infectious idealism - the reason for his nickname, an allusion
to the fictional Walter Mitty - that drove him to set for himself and
his subordinates difficult-to-achieve standards.
Masud retired from the PAF in Sept 1971,
his promising career cut short by his opposition to the military
suppression in East Pakistan.
Coming from a Gujranwala family, Mitty
was by 1947 already an air force pilot and became the youngest pioneer
of the newly born Pakistan Air Force.
An exceptional fighter pilot, Masud was
at his best when given really challenging assignments, but even when
asked to take on some mundane tasks he tackled those with great energy
and inventiveness. Quite remarkably, within days of taking over a new
unit, the men under him would begin to identify with his goals, and the
experience always left them better trained and stronger advocates of
professional values.
In 1958 Air Marshal Asghar Khan chose
Wing Commander Masud to organize, train and lead an aerobatics team of
16 Sabre jets that set a world record, validating the PAF's place among
the well- regarded air arms of the world.
Within months of that event Masud was
assigned to set up and command the Fighter Leaders' School, the premier
institution of the PAF that today runs under the name of Combat
Commanders' School. Then came a Staff College course in England from
which Masud returned with the best foreign student award.
1n 1965, Group Captain Masud became a war
hero for his courageous leadership as commander of Pakistan's key air
base at Sargodha. The team of officers and men under Masud fought back
the Indian Air Force assaults on Sargodha with skill and disciplined
confidence. Simultaneously they punished the IAF in other combat zones,
and assisted in halting the Indian Army from Sialkot to Kasur. Among
his pilots were dead and living heroes the nation has come to know
well: Rafiqui, Alam, Munir, Alauddin Ahmed, Yunus, Middlecoat and Cecil
Chaudhry.
Masud's men gave the best that he
demanded of them, and for his war leadership he was given a high medal
for valour, the Hilal-i-Jurat. In the post-war years he continued to
add to his reputation by excelling in other pivotal appointments
including that of chief of all air force operations.
By the late 1960s, Masud, now an air
commodore, was widely respected and regarded as a probable future air
force chief. In April 1970 he was assigned to Dhaka as the top PAF
commander in the eastern wing. In the twelve months he spent in East
Pakistan, Masud studied, with increasing distress, the rapidly mounting
military-political threat that none of the power wielders seemed able
or interested to resolve.
With Pakistan in deep crisis in the last
week of March 1971, Air Commodore Masud displayed an even higher
measure of courage than in 1965. For that audacity, he was relieved of
his command. Spurning other assignments, he preferred to leave the PAF.
The air force thus lost one of its finest leaders.
When Gen Yahya Khan visited Dhaka in
March 1971 to break the Mujib-Bhutto impasse, Masud demanded an
opportunity to brief the president. On March 15, Gen Tikka Khan's staff
at the Eastern Command headquarters were the first to present their
assessment of the civil and military situation to Yahya Khan and the
army's top generals accompanying him.
Air Commodore Masud then took the rostrum
and for well over an hour gave a candid, fact-filled evaluation of the
civil- military environment. He forcefully argued that the turmoil in
East Pakistan could never be resolved with military force. His military
experience and patriotism compelled Masud to argue for averting a
suicidally mismatched war with India and he appealed for a political
solution, even if that meant a loose confederation between the two
wings.
He said that in the prevailing military
imbalance, a semi- autonomous East Pakistan was far preferable to the
certainty of a military defeat in the event that India decided to
intervene. Coming from a relatively junior officer, this evaluation was
startlingly less-rosy than the army's presentation. It was also
irrefutably well-reasoned.
Yahya interjected several times to agree
with Masud's arguments, and at the end said: "You must surely know that
I too do not want a war and am doing my best to persuade Mujib and
Bhutto to find a way out of the crisis."
Masud was elated during the first few
days of Yahya Khan's stay in Dhaka but stunned when after a week, Yahya
ordered the military crackdown. As the president boarded his
Karachi-bound Boeing on March 25, Masud tried once again personally to
persuade him to change his mind. But Yahya's inner council had
convinced him that the East Pakistanis could be easily subdued and
normalcy quickly restored.
An angry and frustrated Masud could
clearly visualise the debacle that the president had set in motion.
Within the first few days of the launch of military suppression in East
Pakistan, Masud had decided on what was for him the only honourable
course, but one that he knew would end his career in the PAF. He would
not allow the combat aircraft under his command in East Pakistan to be
used in a police role, to kill civilians who were being incited to
rebellion by Mujib.
In his view, the application of such an
excessively destructive power to wipe out emotion-charged mobs would
violate the laws of war. He would rather conserve the scant PAF
resources that East Pakistan would desperately need in the impending
war with India.
The official history of the PAF records Masud's courageous stand in these words:
"At the end of March, when Operation
Blitzkrieg was in full swing, Masud was asked, as he had feared, to
mount an air strike against a mob of armed civilians on the outskirts
of Dhaka. For Masud it was the worst imaginable moment of truth: should
he allow the PAF to participate in what he believed to be a wholly
dishonourable operation? On the one hand was his revulsion at the
brutality of the proposed strikes when viewed against his concept of
the justifiable use of military force. On the ether hand was the oath
he had taken years before which now demanded his unquestioning
obedience..."
Masud later told me that he refused to
demand to send combat aircraft to kill rebellious Pakistani citizens
armed with spears and sticks because according to his interpretation of
military honour an unlawful demand was being made on him. Having
studied every detail of the 1970-71 debacle as well as the formally
defined norms of professional military ethics in various countries, I
remain convinced that Masud was right in refusing to assign his pilots
and aircraft to commit an unlawful and dishonourable massacre of
civilians. But more than Masud's strong integrity and cold logic, what
merits greater recognition is the courage that he brought into play as
he dealt with both a moral and personal challenge. I believe he set a
very high standard of courage and honour when he made his decision.
Unique in his style of command was
Masud's capacity of being both a demanding, almost harsh but fair
professional task master as well as a practitioner, after working
hours, of the joy-of- living among his friends and those he led. Always
quick to see the humorous side of any situation, his witticism always
sparkled with underlying intelligence. He left a deep impression on the
PAF with his integrity, creative brilliance and strong-willed
leadership.
Air Commodore Masud was very happily
married to his devoted wife, Elizabeth, for 45 years and their son
Salaar works as a software analyst in Europe. Elizabeth Masud, a German
lady, speaks Urdu fluently and has, despite her own frail health,
lovingly remained by her husband's side, including his long and
difficult battle with Parkinson's disease.
As a PAF commander's wife, she was a
leading member of the PAF Women's Association and made strong
contributions to the families' welfare schemes. She was especially
supportive of her husband's particular attention to the living
conditions of the lower paid employees. Many still remember fondly her
energy and enthusiasm in projects dealing with child care and
pre-school education at the PAF bases at which Masud served in various
capacities.
Those who knew Air Commodore Masud as
both friend and leader (as this writer did) were happy to see that the
Air Force never forgot him and his services to the nation. The PAF
attentively nursed him throughout his illness, and gave a fitting
farewell to one of its bright and courageous stars.