 Air Chief Marshal D.A. La Fontaine
PVSM, AVSM, VM
CAS, 03 July 1985 - 31 July 1988
Air Chief Marshal Denis Anthony La
Fontaine became the Air Chief on the sudden demise of Air Chief Marshal L.M. Katre. La
Fontaine was the Air Officer Commanding in Chief of the Western Air Command at that time.
La Fontaine was born in Madras on 17
September 1929. He was the son of Major Je La Fontaine of the Indian Army Medical Corps.
La Fontaine's family boasted a lineage of Army service. Both his Grandfathers served with
the Indian Army as officers.
Educated at St. Anthony's High School at
Lahore and at St. George's College at Musoorie, he enrolled into the Indian Air Force in
October 1947. He did his training on the Tigermoth aircraft, moving on the Harvards,
Spitfires and the Tempests aircraft. He was commissioned into the flying branch at Ambala
in April 1950.
La Fontaine's first posting was to the
No.7 Battle Axes Squadron flying the Tempests. When No.7 converted to the De
Havilland Vampires in 1951, La Fontaine was one of the first pilots in the Indian Air
Force to undergo training in flying the jets, which were the first jet fighters operated
by any country in Asia. Soon after, La Fontaine was selected to undergo the All Purpose
Instructors Course. Over the next three years, he spent his career imparting Beginner,
Intermediate and Operational Instructions in flying in a variety of aircraft including the
Tigermoth, the Harvard, Spitfire and Vampires.
In 1956, he returned to operational
flying, when he was posted to the No.2 Squadron flying the Toofanis. Then La Fontaine
moved onto No.29 Scorpions as a Senior Flight Commander. Command of his own unit
came in 1960, when he was promoted to Squadron Leader and was entrusted to raising a new
squadron, No.47 Black Archers. This Squadron, flying the Toofani, became the
first Fighter Combat Squadron to win the Mukherjee Trophy in its first year of raising.
After the upgradation of ranks of the Squadron Commanders of Fighter Squadrons, to Wing
Commander, La Fontaine took over command of No.14 Fighting Bulls Squadron at
Kalaikunda.
Flying the Subsonic Hawker
Hunter, he was involved in the Indo-Pak Ops of 1965. La Fontaine led a unfruitful
fighter interception sweep over the East Pakistani city of Jessore and an abortive
interception to Barrackpore. Aircraft from his unit did take on the Pakistani Sabres over
Kalaikunda and No.14 Squadron was the only Hunter unit in 1965 that encountered the enemy
Sabres and got the best of them and were still unscathed. Told to lay off operations
against targets within East Pakistan, La Fontaine and his team did not see much action
later on.
After the operations, as a Group Captain,
La Fontaine was the Chief Instructor with the Air Force Academy. He was responsible for
developing a system of graded performance standards that improved the quality of flying
training. At the outbreak of the 1971 War, he was deputed as a Senior Staff Officer to the
Maritime Air Operations Cell in Bombay to help out civilian airline operations. Throughout
the 1970s, he held a variety of staff appointments with Western Air Command. He was Ops 1,
Air 1 and later Senior Air Staff Officer (SASO) of WAC. In between these staff
appointments, he also held some operational appointments in the form of command of two
fighter bases.
As Air Marshal, he first was Air Officer
Commanding-in-Charge of Personnel in the Air Headquarters. The first AOC-in-C Command came
with the Central Air Command. Later shifted to command the Western Air Command. On the
untimely demise of the then CAS, Air Chief Marshal L.M. Katre, La Fontaine took over as
the Chief of Air Staff. After becoming CAS, he oversaw the IAF inducting
state-of-the-art defence fighters like the Mirage 2000 and the MiG-29. Both were procured
primarily to counter the Pakistani F-16 threat. The IAF was involved in operations for the
first time since 1971, when it undertook supply and relief sorties over Sri Lanka. Later
after the induction of the IPKF, the IAF was involved in supply and COIN operations.
However La Fontaine could not oversee the complete operations of the IPKF. He retired in
1988, succeeded by Air Chief Marshal S.K. Mehra.
In the course of his career he was
decorated thrice. He was a recipient of the PVSM, AVSM and VSM for distinguished service.
La Fontaine now leads a retired life in a farmhouse at Brahmanapally Village in Medak
District.
© JAGAN PILLARISETTI |