San Antonio Express-News

Army shifts to upgraded Chinooks, drones

- By Joseph N. Distefano

In a move that elected officials say could keep the assembly line at the Boeing plant in Ridley Park, Pa., busy for 20 years, the U.S. Army has canceled a proposed attack helicopter by rivals Lockheed Sikorsky and Bell Textron and transferre­d funds to upgrade Boeing’s Chinook helicopter­s and smarter drones.

The Army said Thursday that it is discontinu­ing work on the Future Attack and Reconnaiss­ance Aircraft — often called scout helicopter­s — and shifting funds to speed a long-delayed upgrade of up to 425 Boeing Chinook CH-47S. It also will begin building new attack helicopter­s by 2030, along with next-generation unmanned aircraft.

The Army cited “lessons learned and a sober assessment” of recent battlefiel­ds in Ukraine and elsewhere, where “agile” drone aircraft have been used to combat convention­al forces from far away at low cost.

The move reverses a Pentagon decision in 2019 that slowed planned Chinook upgrades. At the time, military leaders said they expected to need fewer Chinooks — which haul tanks and other heavy equipment into battle zones — or other equipment used in Vietnam, Afghanista­n, and Iraq. Instead, the focus would be on long-range artillery,

space and software weapons, and other programs useful against Russia or China.

That decision threatened a shutdown of the Chinook assembly line at the 4,000-worker plant and its suppliers in the region. In response, the region’s congressio­nal delegation crossed party lines to plead for the Chinook program.

On Friday, Sen. Bob Casey, DPA.,

praised the Army’s reversal, noting it “supported thousands of good-paying jobs in our region, as well as our national security.”

James Rugh, a leader of UAW Local 1069, which represents assembly workers at the plant, credited Casey and U.S. Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-PA., for helping “secure the future” for workers.

The Army will replace the canceled scout helicopter­s with new-generation drone aircraft and space-based systems, while phasing out older Shadow and Raven unmanned craft, the Army said in a statement.

“Sensors and weapons mounted on a variety of unmanned systems and in space” are “further reaching and more inexpensiv­e than ever before,”

Gen. Randy George, Army chief of staff, said in a statement.

Last year, Boeing leaders, including Vice President Kathleen “KJ” Jolivette, general manager of the company’s helicopter program, had warned it could suspend production of the Chinook if long-term orders weren’t guaranteed by Congress.

The plant also assembles Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft, which officials warned could also face a slowdown due to a lack of orders.

On Friday, Jolivette called the decision to buy more Chinooks “a reflection of (Army) confidence in our heavy-lift program,” which hauls tanks and other heavy equipment to war zones. She also thanked members of Congress for pushing for the program.

Philadelph­ia-area helicopter makers, including Boeing, Piasecki in Essington and Coatesvill­e, and Leonardo in Northeast Philadelph­ia, have sought Pentagon funding for unmanned aircraft, as well as electric, hybrid, and hydrogen-fueled models.

Leonardo and Boeing have said they are also developing ways to deploy drone forces from manned helicopter­s.

Secretary of the Army Christine Wormuth in a statement called these changes part of the Army’s “most significan­t modernizat­ion effort” since at least the early 1980s.

 ?? Afp/getty Images file photo ?? An Air Force CH-47 Chinook helicopter sits at an airport in Jasionka, Poland. The Pentagon is reversing a decision that slowed planned Chinook upgrades.
Afp/getty Images file photo An Air Force CH-47 Chinook helicopter sits at an airport in Jasionka, Poland. The Pentagon is reversing a decision that slowed planned Chinook upgrades.

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