Kenya acquires mitumba helicopters that were rejected by Afghanistan

Kenya acquires mitumba helicopters that were rejected by Afghanistan

Geza Ulole

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Image Credit: U.S. Air Force/Perry Aston
Afghanistan’s Newest Attack Helicopter a ‘Total Mess’?
Afghanistan’s most decorated pilot is critical of U.S. efforts to help build the Afghan Air Force.
thediplomat_2015-01-06_12-04-00-36x36.jpg

By Franz-Stefan Gady
September 28, 2015







Afghanistan’s most decorated pilot, Colonel Qalandar Shah Qalandari, recently questioned the usefulness of a new fleet of American-made light attack helicopter gunships, according to an interview published in the New York Times.

Among other things, Colonel Qalandari said that the new helicopters cannot reach areas where Taliban insurgents are normally operating, since the helicopter cannot cross the mountain ranges that surround Kabul, and that the aircraft is also dangerous to operate.
“It’s unsafe to fly, the engine is too weak, the tail rotor is defective and it’s not armored. If we go down after the enemy we’re going to have enemy return fire, which we can’t survive. If we go up higher, we can’t visually target the enemy,” he noted. “Even the guns are no good.”

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The helicopter gunship in question is the MD-530 F “Cayuse Warrior” light attack helicopters, some of which were recently involved in a combat mission south of Jalalabad. One pilot talking to the New York Times, however, noted that the helicopters lack gun sights for its two .50 caliber machine guns, making targeting very difficult.

“This plane is a total mess,” Qalandari said. “To be honest, I don’t know why we have this plane here.” One MD-530F recently crashed east of Kabul. “When my pilots fly in this, only God and I know what they’re going through,” the colonel told the New York Times. “And I don’t know whether they’ll make it back.”

As I reported last months (See: “Afghan Air Force to Receive 5 More Attack Helicopters”), the Afghan Air Force (AAF) is converting five unarmed MH-6 “Little Bird” aircraft into “Cayuse Warrior” light attack gunships bringing up the AAF light attack helicopter fleet to 16. The five MD 530F will be retrofitted with a so-called Enhanced Mission Equipment Package (EMEP) at a facility in the United States and return to Afghanistan for the 2016 fighting season.

Next to the machine guns, the five helicopters will be armed with 70 mm rockets, which will increase the gunships stand-off range from about 1,900 meters to about 8,000 meters.
One of the principal reasons for rushing MD-530 Fs to the frontlines is delays in the delivery of 20 Brasilian-made Embraer EMB 314 Super Tucanos, aka A-29s, fixed-wing aircraft specifically designed for counter-insurgency operations. The first A-29 is slated to enter service at the end of 2015.

However, as I noted in a previous piece (See: “When Will the Afghan Air Force Be Ready to Fight the Taliban?”), only a handful of aircraft will arrive in 2016, with the majority being delivered in 2017 and 2018.

Afghanistan’s Newest Attack Helicopter a ‘Total Mess’?
 
Ushaachana na yale ya usambazaji wa umeme Tz, na ndio kwa hasira ukaanzisha uzi mwingine? [emoji23][emoji23][emoji23] Holy Moses! These are the great thinkers across the border.
 
Ushaachana na yale ya usambazaji wa umeme Tz, na ndio kwa hasira ukaanzisha uzi mwingine? [emoji23][emoji23][emoji23] Holy Moses! These are the great thinkers across the border.
Fool, do simple maths the price of 30 brand new MD 530F Cayuse Warrior helicopters is $1.4 bln, so tell me how 12 of the same was acquired by KDF at $235 mln? Idiot I am not ur level I am smarter than all Kunyans in JF.
 
Fool, do simple maths the price of 30 brand new MD 530F Cayuse Warrior helicopters is $1.4 bln, so tell me how 12 of the same was acquired by KDF at $235 mln? Idiot I am not ur level I am smarter than all Kunyans in JF.
When you will become smarter there gonna be a great earthquake to be witnessed in history. Endelea kugeuzageuza na kulala uote tena.
 
Waulize juu ya Lamu Coal Power Station wananchi wa Lamu wanalia pamoja na matatizo mengine mengi walionayo na kuyaadress waziwazi katika nyanja muhimu za kumfanya binadamu aishi leo na kesho na kesho kutwa sema tuyaweke pembeni bado wamempa mchina kufanya yake kwenye project hii pia,haki ya nani sikio la kufa halisikii dawa.
 
Fool, do simple maths the price of 30 brand new MD 530F Cayuse Warrior helicopters is $1.4 bln, so tell me how 12 of the same was acquired by KDF at $235 mln? Idiot I am not ur level I am smarter than all Kunyans in JF.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 You have nailed it.👏👏👏👏👏👏👏Geza wewe sio mtu wa mchezo😂😂😂😂😂😂 Kunyaland ni nchi yakupewa vitu vibovu na vya zamani kama treni za SGR😂😂😂
 
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 You have nailed it.👏👏👏👏👏👏👏Geza wewe sio mtu wa mchezo😂😂😂😂😂😂 Kunyaland ni nchi yakupewa vitu vibovu na vya zamani kama treni za SGR😂😂😂
Hawa najua kunyamazisha uropokaji wao! Mijitu baada ya kuona aibu inajitapa humu ndani!
 
Ala! Watu ya Bagamoyo port, ghost pipeline na JWTZ inayochapwa kichapo cha mbwa msikitini na child soldiers waliojiami na mapanga wamekuwa military experts tena?

Si nilisikia ule mbunge wenu akisema mapato yenu kwa mwaka ni trillioni 14, 7 kulipa mishahara, 9 kulipa deni za nje, deficit of 2 trillion?...Nchi ya ajabu kweri.
 
Fool, do simple maths the price of 30 brand new MD 530F Cayuse Warrior helicopters is $1.4 bln, so tell me how 12 of the same was acquired by KDF at $235 mln? Idiot I am not ur level I am smarter than all Kunyans in JF.
So Geuza Ulale is smarter than all Kenyans Us Army, Malaysia and Lebanon?
The US Congress controls and vets all Military hardware sale. The 1.4 Billion you are yapping about is what US army paid for 150 helicopter for use by “US Army and partner countries” The 3 counties authorized by US govt, Kenya, Lebanon and Malaysia all customized their copters to their terrain. Meaning different modifications to the helicopters.
Soma hapa uelewe. Dimwit, emptyhead

New Attack Helicopters for Lebanon and Kenya
by David Donald
October 2, 2018, 12:24 PM


MDHI's MD 530G demonstrator is seen undergoing reloading trials. The machine carries FN Herstal's RMP pod that combines an M3P 0.5-inch machine gun with three rocket pods. (photo: MD Helicopters)


On October 1, MD Helicopters (MDHI) announced an order for six MD 530G Scout Attack Helicopters from the Lebanon Air Force, days after it had announced an order for the MD 530F from Kenya. Included in both deals are initial logistics support, ground support equipment, and associated services.

The MD 530G to be received by Lebanon is the latest version of the family, with various improvements over the MD 530F, including advanced avionics. The “glass” cockpit is based on two IDU-680 six- by nine-inch LCD displays from Genesys Aerosystems, with the Pathfinder mission management and Ares weapons management systems from Tek Fusion Global presenting data on two side-mounted mission displays. Thales Scorpion helmet-mounted cueing systems are installed, and the helicopter has an L3 Wescam MX-10 electro-optical turret. Lebanon’s aircraft will feature Harris Falcon III RF-7850A-MR multi-channel airborne networking radios with advanced encryption.
The cockpit is protected against ballistic threats of up to 7.62 mm caliber, and the aircraft has a crashworthy fuel system. Weaponry includes the DillonAero MCAS (mission-configurable armament system) that can mount various stores, including HMP 0.50 caliber gun pods from FN Herstal, and M260 seven-round rocket pods that can be armed with BAE Systems APKWS 2.75-inch laser-guided rockets.
Lebanon is the second country to acquire the MD 530G, Malaysia having ordered the type in a direct sale from the manufacturer. Lebanon’s aircraft are being purchased as part of a five-year IDIQ (indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity) contract that MDHI has with the U.S. Army’s Contracting Command at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. Worth around $1.4 billion, the contract provides for about 150 MD 530s for U.S. and partner nations. A U.S. Army airworthiness release is expected in December 2019, with the Lebanese aircraft to be delivered by the end of 2020.
Afghanistan was the first beneficiary of the IDIQ, ordering a new batch of 30 MD 530F Cayuse Warriors in September 2017. The first five of them were delivered in August 2018. They feature a newly certified enhanced cockpit. Days before the Lebanon announcement, MDHI detailed another order received via the IDIQ contract, covering six MD 530Fs for the Kenyan Defence Forces. Kenya is no stranger to the MD 500 family, having operated the earlier MD 500 Defender generation for some years. Deliveries should begin in April 2019 and be complete by August. With the two recent orders the number of helicopters through the IDIQ rises to 42.
Kenya’s machines will have the “glass” cockpits based on the Garmin G500 system, a crashworthy fuel system, FN Herstal weapon management system, DillonAero MCAS and fixed-forward sighting system, armor protection, HMP 400 machine gun pods, and M260 rocket pods. The communications system includes the Harris RF-7850A tactical radio and HF-9000D from Rockwell Collins
 
So Geuza Ulale is smarter than all Kenyans Us Army, Malaysia and Lebanon?
The US Congress controls and vets all Military hardware sale. The 1.4 Billion you are yapping about is what US army paid for 150 helicopter for use by “US Army and partner countries” The 3 counties authorized by US govt, Kenya, Lebanon and Malaysia all customized their copters to their terrain. Meaning different modifications to the helicopters.
Soma hapa uelewe. Dimwit, emptyhead

New Attack Helicopters for Lebanon and Kenya
by David Donald
October 2, 2018, 12:24 PM


MDHI's MD 530G demonstrator is seen undergoing reloading trials. The machine carries FN Herstal's RMP pod that combines an M3P 0.5-inch machine gun with three rocket pods. (photo: MD Helicopters)


On October 1, MD Helicopters (MDHI) announced an order for six MD 530G Scout Attack Helicopters from the Lebanon Air Force, days after it had announced an order for the MD 530F from Kenya. Included in both deals are initial logistics support, ground support equipment, and associated services.

The MD 530G to be received by Lebanon is the latest version of the family, with various improvements over the MD 530F, including advanced avionics. The “glass” cockpit is based on two IDU-680 six- by nine-inch LCD displays from Genesys Aerosystems, with the Pathfinder mission management and Ares weapons management systems from Tek Fusion Global presenting data on two side-mounted mission displays. Thales Scorpion helmet-mounted cueing systems are installed, and the helicopter has an L3 Wescam MX-10 electro-optical turret. Lebanon’s aircraft will feature Harris Falcon III RF-7850A-MR multi-channel airborne networking radios with advanced encryption.
The cockpit is protected against ballistic threats of up to 7.62 mm caliber, and the aircraft has a crashworthy fuel system. Weaponry includes the DillonAero MCAS (mission-configurable armament system) that can mount various stores, including HMP 0.50 caliber gun pods from FN Herstal, and M260 seven-round rocket pods that can be armed with BAE Systems APKWS 2.75-inch laser-guided rockets.
Lebanon is the second country to acquire the MD 530G, Malaysia having ordered the type in a direct sale from the manufacturer. Lebanon’s aircraft are being purchased as part of a five-year IDIQ (indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity) contract that MDHI has with the U.S. Army’s Contracting Command at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. Worth around $1.4 billion, the contract provides for about 150 MD 530s for U.S. and partner nations. A U.S. Army airworthiness release is expected in December 2019, with the Lebanese aircraft to be delivered by the end of 2020.
Afghanistan was the first beneficiary of the IDIQ, ordering a new batch of 30 MD 530F Cayuse Warriors in September 2017. The first five of them were delivered in August 2018. They feature a newly certified enhanced cockpit. Days before the Lebanon announcement, MDHI detailed another order received via the IDIQ contract, covering six MD 530Fs for the Kenyan Defence Forces. Kenya is no stranger to the MD 500 family, having operated the earlier MD 500 Defender generation for some years. Deliveries should begin in April 2019 and be complete by August. With the two recent orders the number of helicopters through the IDIQ rises to 42.
Kenya’s machines will have the “glass” cockpits based on the Garmin G500 system, a crashworthy fuel system, FN Herstal weapon management system, DillonAero MCAS and fixed-forward sighting system, armor protection, HMP 400 machine gun pods, and M260 rocket pods. The communications system includes the Harris RF-7850A tactical radio and HF-9000D from Rockwell Collins
Tuna angalia value of money. Kiufupi mme nunua toys😂😂😂
 
Fool, do simple maths the price of 30 brand new MD 530F Cayuse Warrior helicopters is $1.4 bln, so tell me how 12 of the same was acquired by KDF at $235 mln? Idiot I am not ur level I am smarter than all Kunyans in JF.
[emoji1][emoji1][emoji1] If you are smart you really wouldn't have to say it, atleast not in such a crude and angry way. You would also have used the 10+ years you have wasted on Kenyan News and Politics section, spewing bile and mindless vitrol, in a more wiser way. Maybe write numerous books or come up with life changing inventions, just saying!
 
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