Baltimore Sun

Boeing beats Lockheed Martin to replace Hueys

- By Aaron Gregg

The U.S. Air Force says it will turn to Chicago-based defense giant Boeing to replace its aging fleet of UH-1N Huey helicopter­s, which are used to protect the U.S. military’s groundbase­d ballistic missiles, in a stunning upset against its Bethesda, Md.-based rival, Lockheed Martin.

The Air Force announced this week it has awarded Boeing’s Arlington, Va.-based defense division the first phase of a $2.38 billion contract to procure 84 of Boeing’s MH-139 helicopter­s, the first of which is to be delivered in 2021. Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson hailed the contract as a win for taxpayers.

“Strong competitio­n drove down costs for the program, resulting in $1.7 billion in savings to the taxpayer,” Wilson said in a statement.

The UH-1N replacemen­t is seen as an important procuremen­t, because the military uses them to protect U.S.-based nuclear missile launch sites from attack and guard nuclear warheads as they are transporte­d across the country. They would also probably be used to transport top officials out of Washington, D.C., in the event of a nuclear disaster.

Like much of the U.S. nuclear infrastruc­ture, however, the service’s Huey models are getting old. The UH-1N helicopter dates to the 1970s, when thousands of them were deployed in Vietnam.

Loren Thompson, a defense consultant with the Lexington Institute, said the Air Force’s language in the announceme­nt suggests it had focused closely on driving down prices rather than tacking on fancy new capabiliti­es.

“The Air Force has become infamous among military contractor­s for driving bidders to the lowest possible price on major procuremen­ts,” Thompson said.

Lockheed Martin and Sierra Nevada had each pitched souped-up versions of the UH-60 Black Hawk.

It was the second major aircraft procuremen­t in the past month to fall in Boeing’s favor. Just weeks earlier, the company won an $805 million contract to build the Navy’s MQ-25 aerial-refueling drone, a contract for which Lockheed also competed.

If Boeing is successful in its bid to build the Air Force’s next fleet of pilot training aircraft — an estimated $18 billion procuremen­t that both companies are pursuing — it could tip the scales among the world’s two biggest defense contractor­s for the first time in recent memory. The Air Force has said it will announce its decision on that program by the end of September.

The Huey award is seen as a major upset for Lockheed Martin, which has become the world’s largest defense contractor and the manufactur­er of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. Lockheed was widely expected to win the helicopter replacemen­t.

“We are disappoint­ed in the U.S. Air Force’s decision but remain confident the HH-60U Black Hawk is the strongest, most capable solution for the UH-1N Huey Replacemen­t Program’s critical no-fail mission of protecting our nation’s nuclear missile silos and supporting the continuity-ofgovernme­nt mission,” Lockheed spokeswoma­n Sharon Parsley said in an email.

 ?? JIM HOLLANDER/AP 2001 ?? The U.S. military’s Huey helicopter­s are getting old, dating back to the 1970s.
JIM HOLLANDER/AP 2001 The U.S. military’s Huey helicopter­s are getting old, dating back to the 1970s.

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