San Francisco Chronicle

Army reviving order for helicopter­s from Boeing

- 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, D-Pa., 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, DPennsylva­nia, 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 longterm 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.

 ?? Wojtek Radwanski/AFP/Getty Images/TNS 2022 ?? 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.
Wojtek Radwanski/AFP/Getty Images/TNS 2022 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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