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Army Cancels High-Speed Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter Program

The Army's decision to cancel the Future Attack Recon Aircraft program is part of a larger shakeup in its future aviation plans.

Updated

Raider X cancelled
 Sikorsky

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The U.S. Army says it is cancelling itsFuture Attack Recon Aircraft (FARA) program which had been centered on the acquisition of a new typeof high-speed armed scout helicopter. This is part of a larger restructuring the Army plans for its future fleets of helicopters and other crewed and uncrewed aircraft.

Sikorsky’s Raider X, advanced compound helicopter design seen at the top of this story, andBell’s 360 Invictus, a more traditional helicopter design seen below,have been competing for FARA since 2020. The Army firstannounced the FARA program in 2018. FARA had ostensibly been seeking a new a helicopterto supplant AH-64 Apaches that had been assigned to certain units following the retirement of the OH-58D Kiowa Warrior scout helicopter. The use of Apaches in this role had, in turn, followedyears of failed attempts to secure a directreplacement for the OH-58D.

Bell

The FARA cancellation is part of what the Army is currently calling the Aviation Investment Rebalance. The service says it will delay production ofthe General Electric T901 turboshaft engine developed under the Improved Turbine Engine Program (ITEP), whichhad been heavily tied to FARA, as part of this plan. The immediate focus will now be on integrating T901s onto existingAH-64 Apache attack helicopters andUH-60 Black Hawk utility helicopters.

A prototype T901 engine.GE

The service says it remains committed to acquiring of new tilt-rotor aircraft based onBell’s V-280 Valor design as part of the Future Long Range Assault Aircraft (FLRAA), but more on that later.

Bell V-280 Valor Multi Domain Operations

As another part of its new aviation plans, the Army will stop upgrading older UH-60 Black Hawksto the V configuration in favor of buyingmore new production UH-60Ms. It will also push to finally begin purchases of improvedBlock II CH-47F Chinook heavy transport helicopters. Both of these decision were driven in large part by a desire to sure up the associated industrial base for both the UH-60 and CH-47 series,according to the Army.

A US Army CH-47F Chinook comes in to land behind one of the service’s UH-60 Black Hawks.USAF

The Army will also move to divest all of its remainingRQ-7 Shadow andRQ-11 Raven drones. In turn, the service will “increase investments in research and development to expand and accelerate the Army’s unmanned aerial reconnaissance capability includingfuture tactical unmanned aerial systems andlaunched effects,” according to an official release.

Still, the end of FARA is by far the biggest part of the Army’s newly announced rebalancing of its aviation programs.

“We are learning from the battlefield – especially in Ukraine – that aerial reconnaissance has fundamentally changed,” Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Randy George said in a statement accompanying the announcement. “Sensors and weapons mounted on a variety of unmanned systems and in space are more ubiquitous, further reaching, and more inexpensive than ever before. I am confident the Army can deliver for the Joint Force, both in the priority theater and around the globe, by accelerating innovation, procurement and fielding of modern unmanned aircraft systems, including the Future Tactical Unmanned Aircraft System, Launched Effects, and commercial small unmanned aircraft systems.”

It is certainly true that the conflict in Ukraine has put a new and significant spotlight on theutility of various tiers of drones on the battlefield, as well asthe threats they pose, all thingsThe War Zone routinely highlights. The Army was already looking toacquire a host ofnew aerial drones, including air-launched types thatcan operate as networked swarms, before Russia launched its all-out invasion, too.

Army Aviation Launches Autonomous Pack Hunters

What Gen. George’s comments don’t mention is that the war in Ukraine has also strongly called into question the general surivability of conventional helicopters on future high-end battlefields.Both Ukrainian and Russian forces havesuffered significant helicopter losses in the course of the fighting andhave adopted tactics thatare focused squarely on keeping those platforms as far away from potential threats as possible.

The U.S. military would only be faced with even more serious air defense threats in any future large-scale conflict,especially one againstChina in the Pacific. In that scenario, traditional helicopters could be of even more limited utility given their lack of range necessary to operate in a useful wayacross very large areas, much of which would be covered in water.

The Army’sselection of a costlier, but longer-range and higher-performance tilt-rotor as its future FLRAA platform, a decision thathas continued to be a subjectof significant debate, would seem to reflect these realities. The losing FLRAA entry, the Defiant X, came from Sikorsky and Boeing and was another advanced compound helicopter like the Raider X for FARA. It is possible that an armed FLRAA variant or derivative may now supplant the FARA program.

DEFIANT X: U.S. Army Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft

FARA’s cancellation will also impact the future of the Army special operations aviation fleets. Last year, U.S. Special Operations Command said that FARA, or a variant or derivative thereof, wasexpected to be the replacement for theAH-6/MH-6 Little Birds that the Army’s elite 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment currently operates.

An MH-6 Little Bird laden with special operators. AH-6s are instead configured as light attack helicopters. SOCOM

It is also worth pointing out that the Army’s decision regarding FARA is in line with reductions to the Marine Corps hasbeen making to its helicopter fleets in recent years. On the Marine side, this is part of a larger restructuringof the service’s entire force structure around newexpeditionary and distributed concepts of operations, which have a heavy focus on preparedness for afuture major conflict in the Pacific.

There is the possibility that the Army could still be blocked from cancelling FARA by Congress. A delegation of members of Congress from Connecticut, where Sikorsky is headquartered,has already issued a statement decrying the decision.

“We are extremely disappointed that the Army has decided to walk away from the FARA program,” the statement, which also explicitly mentions Sikorsky, says. “We have been told on multiple occasions by the Army that FARA was their number one priority. This is a complete reversal of that position.”

“We are disappointed in this decision and will await a U.S. Army debrief to better understand its choice,” Lockheed Martin, Sikorsky’s parent company, also said in a statement.

At the time of writing, Bell, which as noted won the competition for the still-ongoing FLRAA program, does not appear to have issued a statement.

Regardless, the Army decision now axe FARA can only raise more questions about the future of helicopters more generally within the U.S. military and other armed forces, which is somethingThe War Zone is looking to delve into deeper in the future.

Contact the author:joe@twz.com

Joseph Trevithick Avatar

Joseph Trevithick

Deputy Editor

Joseph has been a member ofThe War Zone team since early 2017. Prior to that, he was an Associate Editor atWar Is Boring, and his byline has appeared in other publications, includingSmall Arms Review,Small Arms DefenseJournal,Reuters,We Are the Mighty, andTask & Purpose.

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Cancelling The Future Attack Recon Helicopter Was The Right Choice By The Army

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