En såkalt tender for nye helikoptre til Hæren og Spesialstyrkene har vært på markedet lang tid. Det er ikke satt av midler til nye helikoptre på -23 budsjettet til tross for at disse er sårt tiltrengte. (Red.)
US
Army nearly ready to make future long-range assault aircraft award
By Jen Judson
Oct 13, 09:00 PM
The shadow of a U.S. Black Hawk helicopter is cast on a field as it flies over an area in Iraq. (Karim Sahib/AFP via Getty Images)
WASHINGTON — The Army is just weeks
from revealing its choice for a future long-range assault aircraft, according
to the service’s acquisition chief.
The service aims to go public with the
winner of the FLRAA competition in October or November, Doug Bush told Defense
News in an interview ahead of the Association of
the U.S. Army’s annual conference.
But, he noted, the announcement is
“conditions-based. There’s a process that the source selection board goes
through to not just make the source selection but then, importantly, to kind of
audit themselves and have others audit them to make sure it was done the right
way before we announce it.”
“It does take a while,” he added, “but
we want to make absolutely sure that we do this the right way and that we got
what’s best for the Army.”
Bell and a Sikorsky-Boeing team are
competing for the Army’s FLRAA program. The two aircraft in the mix differ
greatly; Bell’s V280 Valor is a tiltrotor aircraft, and Sikorsky and Boeing’s
Defiant X features coaxial rotor blades.
“This is our largest and most complex
competitive procurement we have executed in the Army in the ... history of Army
aviation,” Maj. Gen. Robert Barrie, Army aviation program executive officer,
told Defense News. “That system is going to be with us a long time; it goes
without saying that we want to make sure everything is done correctly and in a
disciplined manner.”
The Army was initially expected to
make a decision around June, but that slipped to September. The award was then
again delayed.
“Source selection boards are
event-driven activities,” Barrie said. “We try and put estimated times when
they’re going to complete, but the reality is they’re complete when the various
sub-portions of the schedule are completed, and we’re working through it in a
very deliberate but also prudent speed.”
The award will be one of the Army’s
largest helicopter procurement decisions since the 1980s.
Both FLRAA demonstrator aircraft spent
several years logging test flights. They first flew in a joint multirole
technology demonstration followed by two phases of a competitive development
and risk-reduction effort.
FLRAA prototypes from the competition
winner are due to the service by 2025. FLRAA is expected to enter the fleet in
2030, around the same time as the Army’s future attack reconnaissance aircraft
is planned for fielding.
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