The Army said that after a "sober assessment of the modern
battlefield" it would instead increase investment in uncrewed
aircraft.
"We are learning from the battlefield - especially in Ukraine -
that aerial reconnaissance has fundamentally changed,” Army
Chief of Staff General Randy George said in a statement.
The Army began the FARA program in 2018 and two years later
picked designs by Textron's Bell unit and Sikorsky, a division
of Lockheed Martin Company.
Sikorsky said in a statement that its X2 aircraft, designed for
the FARA program, offered "speed, range and agility that no
other helicopter in the world can match."
"We remain confident in X2 aircraft for U.S. and international
mission needs now and in the future," Sikorsky said. "We are
disappointed in this decision and will await a U.S. Army debrief
to better understand its choice.”
The Army said that in addition to ending development of FARA, it
would cease production of the UH-60V version of the Black Hawk.
After the announcement, Virginia Rep. Rob Wittman, Republican
vice chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said he
would hold a hearing on the Army's aviation plans.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; additional reporting by Mike Stone;
Editing by Stephen Coates and Gerry Doyle)
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