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PNS Hangor (S131)
Pakistan Navy's Dephne-class submarine
Pakistan Navy's Dephne-class submarine
| Field | Value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| section1 | {{Infobox ship/image | |||
| image | Hangorsail.jpg | |||
| image_caption | Hangor on 4 December 1971 | |||
| section2 | {{Infobox ship/career | |||
| country | Pakistan | |||
| flag | ||||
| name | Hangor | |||
| namesake | Shark | |||
| ordered | 1966 | |||
| builder | DCNS in France | |||
| launched | 28 June 1968 | |||
| commissioned | 20 December 1970 | |||
| decommissioned | 2 January 2006 | |||
| honors | *[[File:PAK Sitara-i-Juraat ribbon.svg | link= | alt= | 30px]]4× Sitara-e-Jurat |
| *[[File:Tamgha Jurat Ribbon.gif | link | alt= | 30px]]6× Tamgha-i-Jurat | |
| in_service | 1970–2006 | |||
| identification | S-131 | |||
| status | Preserved at the Pakistan Naval Museum in Karachi | |||
| notes | First submarine to sink an enemy warship after World War II | |||
| section3 | {{Infobox ship/characteristics | |||
| class | ||||
| length | 57.75 m | |||
| propulsion | Diesel-electric, two shafts, 1,600 shp | |||
| speed | * Snorkelling: 8 kn | |||
| range | Surfaced: 10000 nmi at 7 kn | |||
| endurance | 30 days | |||
| test_depth | 300 m | |||
| complement | 53, 7 officers, 46 enlisted | |||
| sensors | * DRUA 31 radar | |||
| EW | ARUR 10B radar detector | |||
| armament | * 12 × 550 mm torpedo tubes (8 bow, 4 stern) |
-
[[File:Tamgha Jurat Ribbon.gif|link=|alt=|30px]]6× Tamgha-i-Jurat
-
[[File:Sword of Honour @ Royal Military College of Canada.jpg|25px]]14×Sword of Honour
-
Surfaced: 12 kn
-
DUUA 2B sonar
-
DSUV 2 passive sonar
-
DUUX acoustic telemeter
-
12 torpedoes or missiles
PNS/M Hangor (S-131) (nicknamed: "Shark") was a diesel-electric submarine that served in the Pakistan Navy from 1969 until its decommissioning in 2006. It is the first submarine to sink a ship after World War II.
Hangor (S131) was the lead ship of her class, designed and constructed by France after a long and complicated negotiation which started in 1966. In 1969, Hangor was commissioned in the Submarine Command (SUBCOM) when she reported back to her home base in Karachi from Paris. Hangor, under the command of Commander Ahmed Tasnim, sank the Indian Navy's , an anti-submarine frigate, with one homing torpedo on 9 December 1971 during the western front of the third war with India in 1971.
This was the only recorded submarine kill after World War II until the Falklands War, when the Royal Navy's nuclear submarine sank the Argentine Navy cruiser . The strategic impact was even more significant as the Indian navy cancelled "Operation Triumph", the third missile attack, which was to be launched on 10 December.
Acquisition and initial deployment
After the second war with Pakistan in 1965, the Indian Navy underwent a rapid modernization and expansion, causing the Pakistan Navy's focus to shift towards strengthening their existing Submarine Command (COMSUBS) due to being unable to acquire fighter jets from the Air Force. In 1966, the Ayub administration began the development and acquisition of the from France. France renamed these submarines according to the Pakistan Navy's standards.{{Cite web
| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20110604173453/http://www.paknavy.gov.pk/daphne.htm#hangor | archive-date =2011-06-04 | url-status =dead
Training of the crew took place in 1968. Notably, Hangors officers that served in 1971 included:
- Commander Ahmed Tasnim, the commanding officer.
- Lieutenant-Commander A. U. Khan, second-in-command and the navigation officer
- Lieutenant-Commander R. A. Kadri, the electrical officer.
- Lieutenant Fasih Bokhari, the navigation officer.
The ship's first war-time deployment was in August 1971, gathering intelligence on the Indian Navy and clearing the Manora Island and Ormara Bay in the coastal areas of Pakistan. Hangor reported back to base in September 1971 but was again deployed in November 1971.
As Indian covert involvement in the East Pakistan grew, the Navy NHQ in Karachi deployed its only (albeit aging) long-range submarine, , under the command of Z.M. Khan, to pick up intelligence and track the aircraft carrier off the Bay of Bengal in November 1971.
According to Rear-Admiral R. A. Kadri in 1999, the assigned mission was considered quite difficult and dangerous, with the submarine squadron sailing under the assumption that the dangerous nature of this mission meant a great mortal risk to the submarine and her crew.
Legacy
Decommissioning and preservation
Over the successive years, it served in the Navy with distinction until decommissioning in 2006. In a ceremony on 2 January 2006, Hangor was decommissioned from the Pakistan Navy; it was soon converted to serve as a museum ship at Pakistan Maritime Museum.
In its memory, Pakistan remembers and celebrates 9 December as Hangor Day.
Honors and awards
In recognition of her service, Hangor was decorated with multiple gallantry and wartime awards and honors. She is regarded in the Navy as having the highest number of operational gallantry awards given to a single warship of Pakistan Navy.
| 4×Sitara-e-Jurat | 6×Tamgha-i-Jurat | 14×Sword of Honour |
|---|
In popular culture
Hangor has been featured in a number of Pakistani dramas and films. An example of this is the film Hangor S-131. It is featured in the 2026 Indian film Border 2 which is based on different theatres of the Indo-Pakistani war of 1971; Shahid Latif portrays Hangor captain Ahmad Tasnim while Mahendra Nath Mulla, captain of INS Khukri, is portrayed by Ahan Shetty.
References
References
- . (9 December 2020). ["PAKISTAN NAVY CELEBRATES 49TH HANGOR DAY"](https://ispr.gov.pk/press-release-detail.php?id=5963). *Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR)*.
- (6 December 2020). "Historical saga of heroics: PNS/M Hangor in 1971 war". News International, Capt. Zaheer.
- (1997). "No Easy Answers: The Development of the Navies of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, 1945-1996". Spantech & Lancer.
- (2013). "Seapower: A Guide for the Twenty-First Century". Routledge.
- Iqbal, Aamir. (December 9, 2019). "Remembering act of valour by PNS/M Hangor in 1971 war". THE NATION.
- (May 2001). "Remembering Our Warriors - Vice Admiral Tasneem". Defence Journal, Amin.
- (January 2000). "An Agosta Submarine for Pakistan". Defence Journal Lodhi.
- (2007-12-11). "KARACHI: Submarine Hangor on display in museum". DAWN.COM.
- (9 December 2018). "Pakistan Navy celebrates 'Hangor Day'". Daily Times.
- (9 December 2018). "Pakistan Navy celebrates HANGOR Day". The News International.
- Singh, Anurag. (2026). "[[Border 2]]". [[T-Series Films]], [[J. P. Dutta.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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