in ,

Pentagon admits that Russian military choppers outperform their American counterparts

Increasingly, the Russians are developing military components that far surpass the functionality of American made ones

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

Yet another piece of Russian military hardware is proving itself to be of a higher quality than those designed and built by American arms manufacturers.

Increasingly, the Russians are developing military components that far surpass the functionality of American made ones.

The most recent case is that of the Russian Mi-17 helicopter, which is being admitted by Pentagon officials as possessive of greater functional capabilities than the American Black Hawk helicopter.

What is interesting here is that this is an admission from the American DoD of this reality, rather than a statement made by the Russians or a Russian sympathizer with an interest in painting Russian military hardware as superior out of a sense of patriotism.

Sputnik reports:

While the US government would seem to be the last entity likely to declare Russian military equipment superior to the Made in the USA variety, that changed recently when the Pentagon’s watchdog found that Russian choppers can perform missions in Afghanistan that US-made choppers cannot.

The US Defense Department inspector general discerned that Lockheed Martin’s Sikorsky Aircraft Black Hawk helicopters “are unable to accommodate some of the larger items the Mi-17 can carry, and in general it takes almost two Black Hawks to carry the load of a single Mi-17.” The Mi-17, known under NATO reporting name “Hip,” is sold by Rosoboronexport.

While the US has been buying new Black Hawk helicopters for the Afghan Air Force, it turns out that some of a helicopter’s most pivotal duties — like carrying cargo — are performed better by Russian choppers, the inspector general found in the most recent quarterly assessment, published in May. May was also the first time a “Black Hawk was flown in an Afghanistan operation by the nascent air force,” Bloomberg News reported Thursday.

“Black Hawks do not have the lift capability” of the Mi-17s, DoD IG General Glenn Fine wrote in the assessment of US activities in Afghanistan. Bloomberg News appears to have been the first to notice the American general pointing out the Russian helicopter’s advantages over Lockheed Martin’s chopper.

In his assessment, Fine wrote that “unlike the Mi-17, Black Hawks cannot fly at high elevations and, as such, cannot operate in remote regions of Afghanistan where Mi-17s operate.”
Because of a politically motivated decision to stop buying Mi-17s in 2013, the Defense Department has started buying more Black Hawks, leaving the Russian helicopters to age. As those choppers grow older, the DoD plans to phase out all but 12 Mi-17s by 2022, down from 47 today.

But by phasing out the Russian aircraft in favor of the US aircraft, the aforementioned challenges “will become more pronounced,” according to the Pentagon’s inspector general.

The US purchases its arms from companies that seek first and foremost after the highest possible profit that it can acquire, and this oftentimes means that they cut corners in efforts to reduce costs and maximize profits, to the detriment of the overall quality of the products that it produces, while charging the US govt the highest prices that it can manage to justify, or lobby for.

This means that they invest must less into research and development, thereby updating designs with cutting edge capabilities, and also tend to make use of lower quality materials which are often cheaper. The outcome is that the US military ends up using hardware that simply doesn’t measure up in the current day military environment.

 

Report

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

What do you think?

14 Points
Upvote Downvote
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
7 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Vince Dhimos
Vince Dhimos
September 5, 2018

A Russian analyst recently pointed out that the US govt and its sock puppets in media, such as the National Interest, frequently publish info stating or suggesting that Russian military hardware is superior in an effort to boost “defence” spending.

regolo gellini
regolo gellini
September 5, 2018

Could it be a stunt to get more money for R and D and new aircraft ? They pulled that stunt in the eighties repeating to the press the same old lies that the ruskies had better weapons, missiles etc, all for the same reason, more money ! The truth came out afterwards !

NobodysaysBOO
NobodysaysBOO
September 5, 2018

selling JUNK to the US MILITARY is EASY,FUN,and VERY VERY PROFITABLE!!!!
Bell helicopters is an example they pushed for MANY MANY YEARS to push their JUNK twin rotor wing thing, that kills everyone aboard.

only NASA steals MORE!!!!

John Klein
John Klein
September 5, 2018

The article means nothing, same for the “admission”. If USA companies were directed by purchase order to design/build a helicopter which lifted X amount of weight (say more than the Russian one) they would do it. Article is a waste of print.

tibetan cowboy
tibetan cowboy
September 5, 2018

The president and administration have actually recognized they lost the arms race with both Russia and China due to rampant corruption and pay-offs, as reported (in book below cited). Bernie has sold out to the F-35 piece of shit being made in his state, like all these quid pro quo greedy traitors. They’d rather have a bigger bank account than a safe USA. In this book by John Michael Greer in 2015: “Twilight’s Last Gleaming”, he describes the final conventional war lost to China in 2025 due to inferior arms. The F-35 is specifically discussed as the USA is losing… Read more »

AM Hants
AM Hants
September 5, 2018

That is why Afghanistan insisted on Russian helicopters, then sanctions ruined that.

The world knows that Russia has the most powerful military, focuses on what is needed for the job in hand and not the MIC investors. It has made everything in the NATO arsenal obsolete. How come the Pentagon is just catching up, to what the rest of us know?

Russia Defence Budget $47 billion.
US Defence Budget $717 billion.

Nexusfast123
Nexusfast123
Reply to  AM Hants
September 5, 2018

Aside from the US fixation on finance/budgets much of the US budget goes on non war-fighting support. All those US bases are big static targets.

Russia calls for relaxation of UNSC nuclear sanctions on DPRK

Trump fosters market uncertainty and then complains about it