#NH90
NEWS | NH90 TTH in FR Aviation Légère de l'Armée de Terre

Six Years for French NH90 in the Sahel

Since November 2014 the NH90 TTH Caïman (Cayman) of the French Army Aviation (ALAT) 1st Combat Helicopter Regiment (RHC) are deployed in the African Sahel region

Under Operation Barkhane France sent military detachments to Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Mauritania in anti-terrorist missions since August 2014





Six Years for French NH90 in the Sahel
Airbus Helicopters, April 23, 2021 - The first two NH90 Caïmans from the 1st Combat Helicopter Regiment (RHC) of the French Army Light Aviation (ALAT) unit arrived in Gao in November 2014 to take part in Operation Barkhane.

Since then, these aircraft have had an increasingly valuable role in a mobile war being played out in an extremely difficult natural environment.

“We are therefore totally independent in our management of air combat missions, with every tactical innovation opportunity that the Caïmans offer,” outlines Lieutenant Colonel Brice, Chief of Operations and Instruction, 1st Combat Helicopter Regiment.

“The use of commandos transported by the Caïmans and support from the Tigers enables us to take aggressive action against an enemy that is difficult to locate. By manoeuvring very quickly day and night we can keep up the pressure on the enemy and force them to make mistakes.”

Quick, reliable, with great autonomy and a large payload capacity even in the heat of summer (a dozen commandos despite temperatures above 45°C), the Caïmans operate really far from their bases.

“With very little notice, on the basis of information received, we can deploy our Caïmans to secure a suspicious area,” adds Lieutenant Colonel Brice.

Speed is an asset often mentioned by operators: the Caïman is capable of moving in harmony with the Tiger and surprising the enemy by coming in very fast and very low.

The commandos are on the ground before the enemy has the time to understand where the threat is coming from. If necessary, the helicopters can pick the commandos up and drop them off again a few kilometres away in the blink of an eye, repeating the manoeuvre as many times as necessary. This leapfrogging makes it possible to outpace an enemy that often travels by motorbike and is renowned for quickly disappearing into the landscape.

“The most remarkable thing is that the Caïman allows us to conduct these offensive actions in the middle of the desert, through the darkest of nights,” Lieutenant Colonel Brice adds.

“The 4-axis autopilot, fly-by-wire flight controls and forward looking infrared (FLIR) navigation in the TopOwl helmet-mounted display combine to deliver assault landing capacities unique to an aircraft of this category. In fact, we’re still learning to take full advantage of its huge potential.”

One target for action includes battlefield digitalisation: today, the crew of a Caïman on their way to a combat zone can receive real-time updates of the tactical situation on their screens, then inform the commandos on board by intercom. The fluidity of the manoeuvre is already impressive, but in future, when commandos can plug their digital tablets directly into the onboard network to share information, it will be even more so.






Six Years for French NH90 in the Sahel





Location : ML Gao

  See also


NH90 TTH in FR Aviation Légère de l'Armée de Terre
1 RHC FR 1 Regiment D'Helicopteres de Combat Aviation Légère de l'Armée de Terre     French Army Light Aviation
Operation Barkhane




Win Air

HeliTSA

Viewpoint

entrol


az








Helicopters for sale
Accidents
Acronyms
Airshows
Future helicopters
Flying a helicopter
Helicopter stories
TV and movies

Helicopter books
Helicopter patches
Helicopter model kits


Win Air

HeliTSA

Viewpoint

entrol


az