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LET THE SPECULATION AND WET DREAMS BEGIN
;D
IDNUMBER 200706140165
PUBLICATION: The Toronto Star
DATE: 2007.06.14
EDITION: Met
SECTION: News
PAGE: A19
BYLINE: Bruce Campion-Smith
SOURCE: Toronto Star
COPYRIGHT: © 2007 Torstar Corporation
WORD COUNT: 293
http://veritas.mil.ca/showfile.asp?Lang=E&URL=/Clips/National/070614/f02929NA.htm
http://www.thestar.com/article/225291
Air force to beef up its helicopters; Existing Griffons will be refitted with machine guns, rockets until gunships arrive
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Canada's air force wants to buy a fleet of gunship helicopters to protect its new transport choppers as they haul troops and equipment in enemy zones.
But until these new attack choppers arrive, the air force plans to outfit its existing Griffon helicopters with machine guns and rockets to do the job.
The danger facing the big transport helicopters was driven home last month when insurgents downed a U.S. Chinook chopper in Afghanistan, killing all seven people onboard, including a Canadian military photographer.
"We have officially recognized that there is a requirement to have a helicopter that would accompany the medium- to heavy-lift helicopter ... in a battlefield type environment," said air force spokesperson Capt. Jim Hutcheson.
Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor last summer unveiled the Conservatives' $4. 7 billion plan to buy 16 medium-to-heavy lift helicopters, likely the Boeing Chinook.
While the twin-rotor Chinooks will have their own anti-missile gear and other defensive aids, air force officials say they're still too valuable an asset to fly around a battlefield unguarded.
The Chinooks are about the size of a transport truck and can haul more than 30 soldiers.
"They're obviously an attractive target and you want to do everything you can to protect it and its occupants," Hutcheson said.
As a result, the air force has launched a program to outfit some of its Griffon choppers to serve as flying bodyguards to the Chinooks when they arrive in the air force fleet in 2011.
Under the program, it's expected the Griffons, already able to carry machine guns, will be outfitted with extra armament as well as infrared and optical sensors to spot enemy forces on the ground.
In the long-term, the air force hopes to buy helicopters designed as flying gunships.
"Further down the line, they would be looking at a helicopter that was more specifically dedicated and designed for that role," Hutcheson said.
The air force was making plans for this new capability before the downing of the Chinook last month. But Hutcheson said the crash drives home the need to give the Chinooks some protection.
"Certainly we can learn lessons from the experience in Afghanistan," he said.
Edited by Vern to correct typo in topic title.
;D
IDNUMBER 200706140165
PUBLICATION: The Toronto Star
DATE: 2007.06.14
EDITION: Met
SECTION: News
PAGE: A19
BYLINE: Bruce Campion-Smith
SOURCE: Toronto Star
COPYRIGHT: © 2007 Torstar Corporation
WORD COUNT: 293
http://veritas.mil.ca/showfile.asp?Lang=E&URL=/Clips/National/070614/f02929NA.htm
http://www.thestar.com/article/225291
Air force to beef up its helicopters; Existing Griffons will be refitted with machine guns, rockets until gunships arrive
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Canada's air force wants to buy a fleet of gunship helicopters to protect its new transport choppers as they haul troops and equipment in enemy zones.
But until these new attack choppers arrive, the air force plans to outfit its existing Griffon helicopters with machine guns and rockets to do the job.
The danger facing the big transport helicopters was driven home last month when insurgents downed a U.S. Chinook chopper in Afghanistan, killing all seven people onboard, including a Canadian military photographer.
"We have officially recognized that there is a requirement to have a helicopter that would accompany the medium- to heavy-lift helicopter ... in a battlefield type environment," said air force spokesperson Capt. Jim Hutcheson.
Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor last summer unveiled the Conservatives' $4. 7 billion plan to buy 16 medium-to-heavy lift helicopters, likely the Boeing Chinook.
While the twin-rotor Chinooks will have their own anti-missile gear and other defensive aids, air force officials say they're still too valuable an asset to fly around a battlefield unguarded.
The Chinooks are about the size of a transport truck and can haul more than 30 soldiers.
"They're obviously an attractive target and you want to do everything you can to protect it and its occupants," Hutcheson said.
As a result, the air force has launched a program to outfit some of its Griffon choppers to serve as flying bodyguards to the Chinooks when they arrive in the air force fleet in 2011.
Under the program, it's expected the Griffons, already able to carry machine guns, will be outfitted with extra armament as well as infrared and optical sensors to spot enemy forces on the ground.
In the long-term, the air force hopes to buy helicopters designed as flying gunships.
"Further down the line, they would be looking at a helicopter that was more specifically dedicated and designed for that role," Hutcheson said.
The air force was making plans for this new capability before the downing of the Chinook last month. But Hutcheson said the crash drives home the need to give the Chinooks some protection.
"Certainly we can learn lessons from the experience in Afghanistan," he said.
Edited by Vern to correct typo in topic title.