Czech Republic to Receive Donated Attack/Utility Helicopters from U.S. – Defense Security Monitor

Czech Republic to Receive Donated Attack/Utility Helicopters from U.S. – Defense Security Monitor


The United States plans to provide eight helicopters from Bell to the Czech Republic as a means of helping accelerate the transformation of the Army of the Czech Republic (ACR) to field more NATO-standard equipment. The announcement by the U.S. Embassy in Prague on August 18 noted that the helicopters will be provided for free, with the only costs incurred by the Czech Republic stemming from their upgrades and transportation.

The helicopters in questions involve six AH-1Z Viper twin-engine attack helicopters and two UH-1Y Venom twin-engine medium-size utility helicopters (also referred to as the Super Huey). These are being provided under the U.S. Excess Defense Articles (EDA) program, which involves donating surplus U.S. military hardware to allied partners enabling them to modernize their respective inventories.

The Czech Republic entered the NATO Alliance in 1999 laden with Warsaw Pact-legacy, Soviet-era hardware.

Since then, Prague has very slowly looked to wean its armed forces off in order to modernize them, eliminate dependency on Russia for upgrading of these systems, and increase interoperability with its allies. The launch of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February prompted the Czech government to transfer stocks of its old weaponry and Russian-sourced systems to the Ukrainian military.

As a result, the Czech military requires backfilling lost capabilities. The latest donation will come on top of an earlier government-to-government order of 12 Bell H-1 helicopters (4 AH-1Zs and eight UH-1Ys) finalized on December 13, 2019. Deliveries of these helicopters will run from 2023 to 2024.

Under the two programs the ACR will eventually field 20 Bell H-1s, split equally among AH-1Z and UH-1Y configurations.





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