Apache also on the table
Evren Deger
[email protected]
22 September 2006
The last phase of the assault helicopter tender, a major defense industry project for the country, has started. Two choices were placed on the shortlist for the final stage of the tender. One is South African company Denel's Rooivalk, and the other is Italian Agusta's Model A129.
Defense Industry Undersecretary Murat Bayar, in an interview last week, said the final decision on the tender would become clear at the Defense Industry Executive Committee meeting scheduled for next month.
Under the program, the committee will meet on Oct. 18. The committee, consisting of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Chief of General Staff Gen. Yasar Buyukanit and Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul, will come to a final decision after the presentations.
The shortlist decision for the ATAK helicopter tender, which was initiated to meet Land Forces' need for an attack and tactical reconnaissance helicopter -- with 30 decided and 20 additional -- and is expected to cost $2 billion, was reached in the committee's July meeting.
However there have been some claims coming out of defense industry circles regarding the meeting held in July.
According to backroom talk, then Chief of General Staff Gen. Hilmi Ozkok complained to Defense Ministry bureaucrats, saying, "I hope you don't oblige us to the Italians."
Also according to these sources, Gen. Ozkok at the same meeting said the French company that was not included on the shortlist declared that the South African company was using their engines and threatened not to allow their engines to be used if the South African company won the tender.
We raised these claims with Defense Industry Undersecretary Bayar. He said, "No, there wasn't any talk like that regarding the Italians. However there were some claims about the Eurocopter, as the media also reported. South Africa was manufacturing general purpose helicopters, a version of the Puma, under license from Eurocopter. Later, taking the engine transmission of this helicopter, the South African company developed the attack helicopter. First of all, nearly all companies get their engines from somewhere. No one makes their own engine. The French engine comes from Turbo Meka. This is another company. The Italians' engine also comes from another company. So the helicopter manufacturers don't make engines. And dynamic systems are produced under the Eurocopter license. That license is legally valid. South Africa's Denel submitted its offer and letter of guarantee. Those companies are all assemblers. We consider the incident a competition tactic. We have the offer of a trustworthy company. In October the tender will be finalized by the decision of the committee."
Bayar expressed optimism about the short list and said that the final decision will be reached in next month's meeting, but also added:
"There is an ongoing process. We will have a result out of this. But if we can't come to a conclusion we will consider Apache and the other alternatives. Apache has an alternative offer. We have also invited them to this tender. However they didn't enter the tender. They were eliminated because their price was even higher than the one they submitted in the previous tender."
Bayar, on one hand, is saying he is satisfied with the shortlist but on the other is sending signals to other companies. He says the Apache offer can be taken into consideration. However he severely criticizes them with these words:
"Apache had a performance failure in Iraq. International defense magazines claim this. Apache's most important feature is its longbow radar system. Its key features are the millimeter wave seeker, ability to engage multiple targets, ability to fire anti-tank missiles at multiple targets, and ability to locate enemy targets even from behind cover. It's an ATAK helicopter weighting 11 tons. Its Longbow radar was dismantled in Iraq in the field because it couldn't use it in that environment. Secondly it was too heavy and slow for that environment. There were men hiding all around and they were sending an 11-ton helicopter at them."
Through these remarks Bayar is pursuing a competition tactic. Time moves on. Next month will determine the result! ...