Generalmajoren kunne ha lagt til Norge når det gjelder land som har problemer med NH90 leveringen. Undertegnede har i flere år ment og gitt uttrykk for at vi bør anskaffe Seahawk og Black Hawk som erstatning for NH90 og Bell 412SP. (Red.)
Exclusive: MAJGEN King sets record straight on
Black Hawk acquisition
LAND & AMPHIBIOUS
|
10
MARCH 2023
By: Liam Garman
MAJGEN Jeremy King, Head Land Capability at the Department of Defence, sits down with Defence Connect’s Liam Garman to dispel the myths surrounding the Australian Army’s acquisition of the UH-60M Black Hawk.
Since the Commonwealth confirmed the
long-speculated acquisition of the Sikorsky made UH-60M Black Hawk in
mid-January, media pundits have charged the Australian Defence Force with
failing to develop an adequate model to sustain the retiring MRH-90 Taipan
fleet leaving the capability unfit for service.
The accusations have surfaced
despite the shortcomings of the NH90 helicopter - the original NATO Helicopter
Industries troop-carrying capability from which the MRH-90 Taipan was modified
- being detailed to no end the world over.
Just over the ditch, the New Zealand
Defence Force has been mired in a decade long debate over the viability of the
product and its ability to operate in the Pacific theatre.
In 2012, then New Zealand
Auditor-General Lyn Provost laid bare the failings of the aircraft against
requirements. Complaints included its inability to operate in the snow as well
as the tendency for the aircraft to suffer damages.
Since then, the Swedish Armed Forces
has mulled the future of the aircraft while the German Bundeswehr’s fleet was
in the spotlight for availability concerns.
Considering these openly reported
failures which can be found with little more than a Google search, perhaps the
Commonwealth and the Australian Army deserve warm commendation for having the
foresight to address the MRH-90 issue front on.
Speaking to Defence Connect, Head
Land Capability at the Department of Defence, Major General Jeremy King
detailed the Commonwealth and Australian Army’s decision criteria for replacing
the MRH-90 Taipan with the UH-60M Black Hawk, dispelling the media myths that
have surrounded the acquisition.
Having served as an engineer across
both Black Hawks and MRHs, MAJGEN King explains that no other country has
achieved the flight hours on the Tactical Troop variant (TTH) of the MRH
the Australian Defence Force has; at last count more than 55,000 hours.
Such familiarity with the product
provides the ADF with unique insights into the operational limitations of the
capability.
“We sit somewhere between 10,000 and
15,000 hours ahead of any other nation in the world that has flown the MRH-90,”
MAJGEN King explained.
“So it’s not from a lack of trying
to make that platform meet our contracted requirements and our operational
requirements.
“Army, Navy and Australian industry
have worked enormously hard to make the MRH platform effective.”
One of those critical limitations
according to MAJGEN King is the MRH-90’s cost restrictions. He predicts that
the Black Hawk could reduce costs to a third of their current cost per flying
hour of the MRH-90 in Australia.
“We need a capability that meets our
preparedness requirements. It needs to include both availability and
affordability.
“The cost per flying hour of the MRH
is well documented. We believe that we can achieve levels of cost per flying
hour on the Black Hawk that are commensurate with what the US Army is getting.
“That will be around $10,000 to
$14,000 per hour, or a third of what we’re paying now.”
While the cost has hampered the
ability for the Australian Army to employ the capability at scale, MAJGEN King
explained that the MRH-90 was unable to fully support to Australia’s special
operations capability.
“We have done everything we can to
make the MRHs as fit for purpose as we can for the range of special force’s
mission profiles,” MAJGEN King explained.
“However, there are well documented
aspects such as our inability to conduct roping whilst operators engaged the
MRH gun.”
A parliamentary research paper
released in 2021 detailed that not only could warfighters not leave the
helicopter when “then guns are in use,” but that the seats and harness “cannot
accommodate personnel wearing combat gear.”
“We have simply been unable to
perform some of special operations roles as well as we would like.”
Issues have not just been limited to
Army, with the MRH-90 delayed in reaching FOC for the Royal Australian Navy
with a range of concerns including the cargo hook.
In turning to the UH-60M Black Hawk,
MAJGEN King explained that the mature capability can rapidly enter service with
limited modification.
This includes Australian special
operations tasks which can already be undertaken on the Black Hawk, with
special operations teams already having a history of tactics, techniques and
procedures on the UH-60M.
However, MAJGEN King also flagged
the the limited transportation options to deliver the MRH-90s to theaters of
operation.
“We can only fit a single MRH in a
C-17, whereas we can fit three Black Hawks inside a C-17,” he explained.
Amid media speculation surrounding
the acquisition, the head of land capability encourages a frank and sober
assessment of Australian defence requirements.
“We can’t afford to be emotive or
misty eyed around platforms that we’ve currently got in service that we need to
replace,” he explained.
The first three Black Hawks are
scheduled for delivery in June of this year to support the special operations aviation
task unit in Holsworthy.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.