Australian Aviation — January 2018

(Wang) #1

62 AUSTRALIAN AVIATION


F


lying low over storm-tossed seas
off Newcastle, NSW special forces
soldiers aboard a Navy Seahawk
helicopter launched from frigate
HMAS Stuart eyed their target and at
the chosen moment, fast-roped onto
the deck of the North Korean freighter
MV Pong Su.
At the same time, other special
forces boarded the ship from inflatable
boats. They speedily seized control,
ending a chase which started four days
earlier after police intercepted 125kg
of heroin dumped from the ship onto
the Victorian coast.
A year later, in April 2004, halfway
across the world, a Seahawk, also from
HMAS Stuart, assisted in the rescue
of a group of American sailors, whose
small boat had been blown up in a
maritime terrorist attack on Iraqi oil
facilities at the top of the Persian Gulf.
Then in 2011, a Seahawk – again
flying from HMAS Stuart which
certainly seems to partake in its share
of interesting operations – played
a central role in the rescue of three
crewmen of a Yemini dhow which had
been seized by Somali pirates.
That’s just three of the many
incidents in which Sikorsky S-70B-2
Seahawks have been involved in a
long and distinguished career in Royal
Australian Navy service.
Whether it’s bushfire and flood
in Australia, rescues at sea such as
the 1998 Sydney to Hobart yacht
race or interception of drug and
weapon smuggling vessels in seas
between Pakistan and east Africa, the
Seahawks have been there.
But before any pilot took the
controls of a Seahawk, he or she
learned to fly helicopters at the
controls of the Aerospatiale (now
Airbus Helicopters) AS350 BA
Squirrel, an aircraft which has served
in all three services in peace and war
for more than three decades.
Now both types have officially
retired from service, farewelled at
a ceremony conducted at HMAS
Albatross at Nowra, NSW on
December 1.
Seahawk ‘Bravos’ and Squirrels
conducted a flypast, along with their
replacement, the Sikorsky-Lockheed
Martin MH-60R Seahawk ‘Romeo’
and the Airbus Helicopters EC135.
This was a moving occasion for
the young and older pilots, engineers
and maintainers, for both types have
departed with proud records.
Sixteen Seahawks were purchased
and that’s how many are retiring.
“We have never lost one. Whilst
you will find those sorts of statistics

for VIP jets and utility machines
and the like I can’t find another
example with an aircraft that was
brought into service for combat
operations,” said Commodore Chris
Smallhorn, commander of the Fleet
Air Arm (COMFAA) and a former
commanding officer of 816 Squadron
which operated the Seahawks.
“You don’t need combat operations
to make mistakes at sea because it
is so very unforgiving, with a deck
moving around, particularly at night
time and at times in the most extreme
of weather conditions. Clearly that is
a credit to the airframe and its design
and Sikorsky. Importantly it is a credit
to the sailors, officers, public servants

The Squirrel would be
operated by all three arms of
the ADF.DEFENCE

Bravo Zulu

Free download pdf