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New Apache Attack Helicopter Makes Its Debut In The Field

The British Army’s new Apache AH-64E Attack Helicopter has made its first outing into the field.

A member of 3 Regt Army Air Corps refuels an Apache AH64-E.
The British Army’s new Apache AH-64E attack helicopter has taken its first outing into the field.
Exercise Talon Guardian has seen 3 Regiment Army Air Corps operate its AH-64Es from three separate locations on a two-week-long, 1,500km journey across the country.
Engineers have been keeping the aircraft in working order in the field, while aircrew have been planning and executing strike missions, supported by groundcrew running Forward Arming and Refuelling Points to keep the AH-64E’s fuel tanks and weapons pylons full.
3 Regt AAC is the first unit to field the AH-64E, which brings improved flying performance, sensors, weapons, and communications systems over the Apache Mk.1 it replaces.
The training is to rehearse 3 Regt AAC in its role to provide an aviation deep strike battlegroup to 3rd (UK) Division, the British Army’s war fighting division.

Exercise Talon Guardian has seen 3 Regiment Army Air Corps take a 1,500km road trip over two weeks, establishing itself at three separate locations across the country to plan and execute attack missions and maintain the state-of-the-art helicopters.

3 Regt AAC’s commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Simon Wilsey said: “Exercise Talon Guardian is a really significant step forward for the British Army’s AH-64E, which is the most advanced attack helicopter in the world. We’ve been working hard to learn how to fly and maintain the AH-64E; now we’re getting the aircraft out into the field, tackling the additional complexities of living, planning, maintaining and operating in an austere environment and developing how we fight with it.

“As befits a new aircraft with vastly improved capabilities, we’re not just going back to what we did before. We’re beginning to use all the new systems and capabilities, and looking at the lessons of current conflicts, adapting to ensure our relevance and survivability. It is all about the basic field craft in the air and on the ground. So, for how we operate on the ground, it’s dispersing and camouflaging our positions to prevent observation by drones and communicating by data and over long range; and aircrew must fly using natural cover and all the aircraft’s sensors to counter air defence systems and low-tech threats.

“We’ve learnt a lot and we’ll continue to learn as we look to exploit the full capabilities of this awesome aircraft.”

The exercise saw 3 Regt AAC preparing for its core role providing an aviation deep attack battlegroup, as part of 1st Avn Brigade Combat Team, to 3rd (UK) Division, the British Army’s war fighting division. In this role, the AH-64E will be a key element of how the Army fights in the coming decades, as set out in the Future Soldier programme.

The training started with the unit deploying from its base at Wattisham Flying Station in Suffolk to the rugged Otterburn Ranges in Northumberland. Amid the area’s trademark fog, rain and wind, aircrew tested themselves on the air defence ranges of RAF Spadeadam and hunted for artillery and armoured vehicles.

Staging through RAF Wittering in Cambridgeshire, the unit then moved to Bramley in Hampshire for the AH-64Es to hunt on Salisbury Plain for Challenger 2 tanks protected by air defence systems.

Apache pilot Captain ‘H’ said the switch to the AH-64E from the Apache Mk.1 it replaces was “like changing your mobile phone from a Nokia 3310 to an iPhone 14”.

“The aircraft may look the same from the outside, but everything’s changed inside to bring improved capabilities in sensors, flying performance, weaponry and communications,” he said. “We’re able to do our job so much better, because the new aircraft means an expansion of the area over which we can deliver effect – whether that’s detecting and engaging threats or sharing information with other aircraft or ground callsigns.”

Throughout the exercise, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers technicians kept the aircraft in working order, while ground crew ran isolated Forward Arming and Refuelling Points – the military equivalent of a Formula 1 pit stop – to keep the aircraft’s fuel tanks and weapons pylons full.

REME aircraft technician Lance Corporal Chris Voller said: “We’ve learnt in the hangars how to maintain the AH-64E for day-to-day flying, bringing it out into the field is the next step. We’ve had deal with working in all weathers and keeping our tools clean, while moving between locations means a lot of packing and unpacking kit. But the Apache is a battlefield aircraft, and this is where it’s designed to be – it’s been good to get out to train as we would fight.”

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