The National Interest on MSN
When Will the US Army Retire the AH-64 Apache Helicopter?
There are no current plans for the Army to replace the Apache. Instead, modernization is the strategy—using periodic upgrades to keep the helicopter flying into the 2040s, and possibly beyond.
Wes O'Donell on MSNOpinion
Are Attack Helicopters Still Relevant in 2025?
In this video, I break down how the AH-64 Apache and other iconic attack helicopters will struggle in the drone-saturated ...
24/7 Wall St. on MSN
The Modern Cavalry: America’s Apache Attack Helicopter Still Reigns Supreme
The AH-64 Apache has been the U.S. Army’s go-to attack helicopter since entering service in 1986 (first flight in 1975).
Yonhap News Agency on MSN
(LEAD) N. Korea appears to be ready for nuclear test once Kim makes decision: defense intelligence
North Korea appears to be ready to promptly carry out what would be its seventh nuclear test should leader Kim Jong-un make a ...
The widow of a U.S. Army aviator who died when his AH-64 Apache attack helicopter crashed on a training mission claims her husband would still be alive if Boeing had simply been honest about the ...
Chief Warrant Officer 2 Dustin K. Wright died in an AH-64 Apache helicopter training accident at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, on June 11. (U.S. Army) The Army has identified the soldier who died in an ...
A lead Army official said testing to date of the GE Aerospace-built T901 engine on a Black Hawk helicopter has been “very successful,” while the engine program’s future is still […] ...
The origins of military helicopters go back to the 1940s when the U.S. Army appointed aviator Igor Sikorsky to build a more advanced version of the VS-300, his first model. This new aircraft, known as ...
DRAWSKO COMBAT TRAINING CENTER, Poland – U.S. and Polish military forces came together at the Drawsko Combat Training Center for the third Polish Apache Initiative Summit, highlighting the integration ...
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