Boeing
wins bid for Germany’s multibillion-dollar helo program
Jun 1, 05:38 PM
U.S. Army soldiers hold on to the cargo during a sling load operations training exercise with a Chinook helicopter, Feb. 9, 2022, at Fort Carson, Colorado. Germany is in line to buy 60 of the helicopters. (Scyrrus Corregidor/Army)
WASHINGTON
— The German government will purchase 60 Boeing Chinook heavy-lift helicopters
to equip the armed forces in a deal reportedly worth upwards of $4 billion,
according to a Ministry of Defense announcement on Wednesday.
The
CH-47F Block 2 “Standard Range” variant aircraft are refuelable during flight,
a key requirement for the German armed forces, the statement said. They are
slated to replace the Bundeswehr’s fleet of aging CH-53, made by Lockheed
Martin’s Sikorsky.
Lockheed
also had put in a bid for the contract, offering its CH-53K King Stallion. The
Chinook’s lower per-unit price made the difference, according to the Ministry
of Defense, as it would allow Berlin to buy the maximum number of aircraft out
of a range previously billed as 45 to 60 copies. That, in turn,
would increase “operational flexibility” with a helicopter type used widely
among NATO partners.
Officials
stressed interoperability benefits with the Netherlands, in particular. The
Bundeswehr already works closely with the neighbor’s armed forces across a
variety of operational domains.
Citing
government planning data, Reuters reported Wednesday the Boeing deal would be
worth roughly $4.3 billion, with deliveries starting in 2023 and lasting
through 2029.
The
Chinook pick caps a years-long saga for Germany to buy a new Schwerer
Transporthubschrauber, or STH, as the heavy-lift chopper program is called in
German. Officials initially wanted a no-frills workhorse to support troops, but
developmental frills were nevertheless added, resulting in offers so expensive
that the government walked away and initiated a redo in 2020.
The strategy since then has been to prepare a purchase that
would require little to no national modifications. Officials have previously
said they want to award a contract by the end of the year. Spending money on
off-the-rack hardware from the United States could help quickly turn an expected spike of defense cash into modernized equipment
with little risk, according to analysts.
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