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IAF’s 1965 War hero Denzil Keelor dies at 91

New Delhi, August 28 Indian Air Force (IAF) fighter pilot Air Marshal Denzil Keelor (91), who attained fame for shooting down a Pakistani Air Force F-86 Sabre jet in the 1965 War, has died of natural causes. After retirement, he...
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Denzil Keelor
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New Delhi, August 28

Indian Air Force (IAF) fighter pilot Air Marshal Denzil Keelor (91), who attained fame for shooting down a Pakistani Air Force F-86 Sabre jet in the 1965 War, has died of natural causes.

After retirement, he made Gurugram his home. Air Marshal Keelor, who was flying a Gnat aircraft, brought down the much superior F-86 plane in a midair duel on September 19, 1965, for which he was awarded the Vir Chakra.

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The Vir Chakra is the third highest war-time gallantry award. In 1978, he was awarded the Kirti Chakra — the second highest gallantry award in peacetime.

SN Prasad, in his book ‘The India-Pakistan War of 1965’ — an authorised account from the Ministry of Defence archives — says, “Despite the fact that this was the first-ever war where an unprepared and technologically inferior IAF had been involved in aerial combat, its men fought heroically.”

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Air Marshal Keelor’s elder brother, Wing Commander Trevor Keelor, is credited as the first Indian pilot to have ‘shot down an enemy plane in mid-air’. He was also awarded the Vir Chakra.

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