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Posted by admin in PAKISTAN'S HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES on September 4th, 2013
The Bombing of Waziristan
In this rugged hiding place, outlaws like Talibans are rarely run to ground. The British learned that lesson in 1939.
From this fort at Miram Shah in what is Pakistan today, Royal Air Force squadrons policed the unruly border between British India and Afghanistan.A formation of Westland Wapitis flies over the mountainous landscape of the North-West Frontier Province. In 1933, a Wapiti became the first airplane to fly over Mt. Everest.The Waziristan that the world knows today as the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan was in the early 20th century the site of warfare between British forces and local tribes.At Miram Shah, prop wash stirs dust around the tail skids of 39 Squadron’s Hawker Harts, which pilots flew in the 1930s on air policing missions.UA Bristol Fighter is readied for a policing mission in the 1920s.Pilots of 5 Squadron set out from Miram Shah in a Westland Wapiti. Between 1937 and 1939, pilots in Wapitis and Hawker Harts bombed villages as reprisals for tribal ambushes.Harts stood ready for action at the North-West Frontier base at Risalpur in 1932. Today the city is the home of the Pakistan Air Force Academy.Mirza Ali Khan led a series of uprisings against British garrisons in the North-West Frontier and Waziristan in the 1930s.By 1939, 39 Squadron, then flying Bristol Blenheims, had moved on from Waziristan to Singapore.