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First Huey replacement helicopter delivered to US
Air Force
Aug 6, 2024, 08:15 PM
An MH-139A Grey Wolf lands at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, April 5, 2024. (Samuel King Jr./Air Force)
Boeing announced on Monday it has delivered the
first production MH-139A Grey
Wolf helicopter to the U.S. Air Force.
The helicopter will be stationed at Malmstrom Air
Force Base in Montana, Boeing said, where airmen will use it to patrol the
sprawling Minuteman III nuclear missile fields surrounding the base.
The MH-139 is a
militarized version of Italian aerospace firm Leonardo’s AW139 commercial
helicopter, and will replace some of the Air Force’s Vietnam-era UH-1N Hueys to
conduct security patrols at nuclear missile bases.
“This aircraft will directly support ongoing U.S.
Air Force modernization efforts,” Azeem Khan, Boeing’s MH-139 executive
director and program manager, said in a statement on Aug. 5. “Delivering this
asset for the MH-139A fleet is critical to the future of national security as
the Grey Wolf will play a crucial role in the U.S. nuclear triad for decades to
come.”
Boeing last year finished delivering six test
MH-139s to the Air Force, ending its research, development, test and evaluation
phase and shifting the program to production. The Air Force also in spring 2023
awarded Boeing and Leonardo a $285 million low-rate initial production contract
to start building the first 13 Grey Wolf helicopters.
The Air Force then awarded Boeing another contract
for seven more MH-139s, bringing the total number of the helicopters on
contract to 26.
But the Air Force has since dramatically slashed
its planned purchase of the helicopter, which is now leading to cost overrun
problems.
The service originally intended to buy 80 Grey
Wolf helicopters to patrol nuclear missile fields, transport senior officials
in the Washington area and conduct other missions.
Facing tight budgets, the Air Force decided to cut
its planned Grey Wolf purchase almost in half, and now expects to buy 42
helicopters. The service also plans to keep some older Hueys at the Air Force
District of Washington, Fairchild Air Force Base in Washington state, Kirtland
Air Force Base in New Mexico and Duke Field in Florida.
But the attempt to save money had consequences.
Because the service now plans to buy fewer MH-139s, the individual price of
each helicopter has gone up enough to trigger a cost overrun process known as a
critical Nunn-McCurdy breach.
This breach triggers a review that could result in
a program getting canceled, unless the Pentagon certifies to Congress that it
is essential to national security and has no other cheaper options to get the
job done.
The Pentagon also has to show the program is a
higher priority than other programs, which could feasibly be cut to pay for it
if its new cost estimates are reasonable and the management structure in place
can control further cost growth.
The Air Force said in April, when the Nunn-McCurdy
breach was announced, that the Grey Wolf’s quantity-related breach could be
resolved by Congress adding more MH-139s back into the budget.
To make the MH-139, Leonardo first produces the
underlying helicopter at its facility in northeast Philadelphia, Boeing said.
The aircraft are then modified by Boeing to install the necessary military
equipment.
Boeing said in January that it had finished
building the first production Grey Wolf in December 2023, and that it was
undergoing flight testing at Leonardo’s Philadelphia facility.
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