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by Ed Adamczyk Washington (UPI) Jun 14, 2019
Boeing Co. received a $30.7 million order to build Chinook helicopter components for the U.S. Army Special Operations Command, the Defense Department announced. The new delivery order comes after an announcement earlier this week of a $194.2 million contract to deliver six renew-build and one new-build MH-47G helicopters for the Command. The Pentagon cited an increased need for the aircraft in a statement. "The order is required to sustain U.S. Special Operations Forces heavy assault, rotary wing aircraft and to mitigate the impact of the MH-47G aircraft availability," the Pentagon said. Boeing has been contracted to supply eight additional special-use helicopters for the U.S. Army in the past year, bringing the Army's total to 69 special operations Chinook aircraft. In July 2018, Boeing was awarded a $131.1 million contract for four additional Chinook special operations helicopters for the U.S. Army. That contract marked the start of a production run for the Block II Chinooks that is expected to last for about a decade, Boeing said. "The MH-47G is the world's best, most reliable heavy-lift helicopter and will help Special Operations execute their difficult missions," Chuck Dabundo, Boeing MH-47 program manager, said in a statement on Thursday. "Nearly a quarter of the Special Ops fleet is now on contract for Block II, and we look forward to delivering this capability to them on schedule." The delivery order announced Thursday for components and parts includes orders for the United Kingdom, supplying $10 million in funding to acquire long-lead components and parts for its own part of the MH-47G Block II program. The majority of the work will be performed at Boeing facilities in Ridley Park, Pa. The U.S. Special Operations Command Headquarters in Tampa is the contracting agent.
Boeing to deliver 7 Chinooks for U.S. special ops in $194.2M deal Boeing will deliver six renew-build and one new-build MH-47G rotary wing aircraft, the Defense Department announced Wednesday. Because of increased operational demands, the Pentagon said in a news release "the order is required to sustain U.S. Special Operations Forces heavy assault, rotary wing aircraft and to mitigate the impact of the MH-47G aircraft availability." A final delivery date was not specified. Fiscal 2019 procurement, defense-wide appropriations in the amount of $77.4 million and Army fiscal 2019 aircraft procurement in the amount of $116.9 million were obligated at the time of award. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. In the past year, Boeing was contracted to supply eight additional special-use helicopters for the U.S. Army. Last July, Boeing was awarded a $131.1 million contract for four additional Chinook special operations helicopters for the U.S. Army. That contract marked the start of a production run for the Block II Chinooks that is expected to last for about a decade, Boeing said. And in November, Boeing was awarded a $43 million contract to build four MH-47G helicopters with the Pentagon citing an "urgent need" for special ops. The U.S. Army has 69 of the special operations Chinooks. The first model was delivered to Special Operations Command in 2014. The MH-47G is the special operations variant of Boeing's CH-47F Chinook multi-role, heavy-lift helicopter, containing a fully integrated, digital cockpit management system. The CH-47 series has been in use since its introduction in 1962 and was used in Vietnam. The Chinook is the Army's only heavy-lift cargo helicopter supporting combat and non-combat operations, including humanitarian roles, according to the Army. It is used to transport troops, weapons, vehicles and other equipment transportations. Its troop capacity is 36 and its load maximum is 50,000 pounds.
Turkey: Pentagon threat to remove F-35 program not in spirit of alliance Washington (UPI) Jun 12, 2019 The Pentagon's threat to remove Turkey from the F-35 program is not in line with the spirit of the two nations' alliance, the Middle East country's national defense minister said Wednesday. Acting U.S. Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan sent a letter on June 6 to Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar that Turkey would be pulled from the F-35 Lightning II jet program - including sales and the banning of Turkish contractors - unless Ankara decides not to go ahead with plans to purchase a Russ ... read more
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