Det var en veldig kort periode på slutten av 80-tallet at sivile helikoptre med mannskaper trente i militært forband. Undertegnede var flyger ved 752 skv. oppsatt med S-61N, og vi bodde i svensketelt i felten. Våpentrening foregikk i Vatneleiren ved Sandnes. Vi gjorde en god jobb med troppetransport og løft av tungt materiell inkl. feltkanoner. Våre mer eller mindre innbitte fredstanker har ikke tenkt på at krig kan oppstå på nytt. Dagens kaotiske utenrikspolitiske situasjon bør bringe på banen ny tenkning. Det betyr i korthet at samfunnet må ta på seg kostnadene ved å være bedre forberedt enn vi er i dag. I dette ligger klargjøring av sivile helikoptre for krig. Jeg mener at mannskaper må være mobiliseringklare slik vi engang var, og helikoptrene må klargjøre for oppheng av eksempelvis våpenet presentert i artikkelen under. Føsrst noen bilder fra Operasjon Vipe i oktober 1989.
(Red.)
What’s
the advantage of militarizing commercial helos
post-sale?
By Agnes Helou
Nov 17, 10:36 PM
At the 20210 Dubai Airshow, Emirati pilots stood beside a Bell 407 commercial helicopter on display, but it looked nothing like an aircraft for commercial use. (Agnes Helou/Staff)
DUBAI,
United Arab Emirates — As the aerospace industry attempts to financially
recover from the pandemic, some helicopter companies are militarizing
commercial variants.
“As
Bell, we don’t always sell commercial products to the militaries, but [in] the
time of COVID, there are countries that can’t necessarily afford purpose-built
military platforms,” Steven Mathias, vice president of global military sales
and strategy at the American company, told Defense News at the Dubai Airshow
this week. “Hence, they started turning more to commercial platforms for
military uses that can be very quickly adapted because of the technologies that
can be integrated into them like sensors and weapons.”
He
said militarizing a commercial platform is less expensive for customers than
buying a war-ready variant — plus the commercial version is more easily
exportable and lighter.
“Countries
are turning into that more and more. Some of this is because they can’t afford
a military platform and because the time needed for approval is decreased
considerably,” Mathias said, noting this workaround is legal.
It’s
quicker for a government defense agency to approve the sale of individual
weapons systems that can outfit a commercial helicopter than for it to OK the
sale of a military aircraft. That’s especially the case if the weapon system
was previously exported to the customer.
At
the air show, Emirati pilots stood beside the Bell 407 commercial helicopter on
display, but it looked nothing like an aircraft for commercial use. It was
armed and painted for battle.
The
helo is already operational with the United Arab Emirates’ Joint Aviation
Command. A static display of a mounted machine gun, rockets and missiles showed
part of Bell’s HOSS armament platform, used to transform commercial aircraft
into military platforms.
“This
activity is all part of the changes to the U.S. arms sales structure in order
to speed up the process,” said Theodore Karasik, a senior adviser at the
U.S.-based geopolitical consultancy Gulf State Analytics. “There had been
complaints about the process, which resulted in these changes for efficiency.
[The] defense industry and clients seem to have worked out a better system for
effective sales.”
He
explained that with potential legal problems addressed, the process of selling
a commercial aircraft that can later receive military kit becomes critically
important for future operations.
“What
we’re seeing now are the benefits of such a system for sustainability in the
post-COVID era. This is a [Fourth
Industrial Revolution] environment where rewiring for efficiency is
an absolute requirement,” he told Defense News.
Mathias
said the company is prepared to “militarize any of the commercial platforms.”
“If
they [the customers] need a small attack aircraft, then arming Bell 407 is the
choice. If they need twin-engine aircraft, the 429 is suitable. Or maybe
customers just need to add sensors on the platform for ISR with the vertical
lift capability,” he said. “Any weapon system that is on the AH-1 Zulu can be
added to the commercial aircraft, like Hellfire, APKWS [laser-guidance kit,
and] rockets.”
He
said he expects that next year the company will see the process — which began
in mid-2021 — gain speed to allow commercial platforms to be used for training,
light attack, close air support, ISR and search and rescue missions.Corrado
Cok, a defense expert at Gulf State Analytics, told Defense News
commercial-turned-military aircraft is a useful means by which customers can
dodge political pressure.
“We
live at a time of increasing parliamentary scrutiny and growing public
criticism against arms sales,” he said. “This is especially the case for
fighter jets, helicopters and precision-guided bombs, particularly when sold to
Gulf countries which are involved to some degree in the war in Yemen.”
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