Times Colonist

Military procuremen­t chief stands by Cyclones

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — The Defence Department’s top procuremen­t official says he would feel safe flying on the military’s new Cyclone helicopter­s, and that he is more concerned about an “urban myth” emerging about the aircraft than its actual airworthin­ess.

Assistant deputy minister of materiel Troy Crosby made the comments in an interview with the Canadian Press as military officials and Sikorsky Aircraft, which builds the Cyclone, work to address several issues with the naval helicopter­s.

They include a software problem that caused one of the Cyclones to crash off the coast of Greece last year, killing all six Armed Forces members on board, and tail cracks that were recently discovered on virtually the entire fleet.

Despite the issues, and several other incidents since the Cyclones came into service in 2018 after nearly two decades of developmen­t, Crosby insisted the issues are unrelated and the helicopter­s remain safe for military crews to fly.

“Aviation always does, of course, come with some risk,” he said. “But my concern is that the narrative that can be created by knitting together unrelated issues that do need to be addressed can start to create an urban myth.”

Like Royal Canadian Air Force commander Lt.-Gen. Al Meinzinger, Crosby credited the air force’s technician­s and inspection protocols for finding the tail cracks on 21 of the military’s 23 Cyclones before a serious incident.

The cracks are now being repaired, Crosby said, even as the military and Sikorsky continue working on a solution to the autopilot problem that saw the Cyclone known as Stalker 22 crash into the Ionian Sea on April 29, 2020.

Master Cpl. Matthew Cousins, Sub-Lt. Abbigail Cowbrough, Capt. Kevin Hagen, Capt. Brenden MacDonald, Capt. Maxime Miron-Morin and Sub-Lt. Matthew Pyke died in the crash — the largest single-day loss of life for Canada’s military since its mission in Afghanista­n.

Several experts have called for urgency in fixing the software issue that led to the conflict between the pilot and autopilot responsibl­e for Stalker 22’s crash, but the Defence Department says it won’t have a solution until spring.

Time is required to make sure any remedy doesn’t result in new problems, Crosby said.

“The process needs to be worked through to look at all those potential scenarios and mitigate the risks the best you can,” he said. “It takes a methodical effort to go through that. Not a rush, not to check boxes and tell everybody it’s done. It needs to be done well.”

While Crosby acknowledg­ed both issues need to be fixed, he said it would be a mistake to suggest they are somehow linked or that the Cyclone fleet is a threat to its crew.

Rather, he said, issues always pop up whenever a brand-new piece of military equipment enters service.

“So the question is: Is this helicopter where you approximat­ely would expect it to be given … it’s relatively new?” Crosby said. “I think the answer is yes.”

The Cyclones are typically deployed on Canadian frigates and used for search and rescue, surveillan­ce and antisubmar­ine warfare. They first started flying real missions in 2018 after nearly two decades of developmen­tal problems and delays.

Sikorsky has yet to deliver all 28 helicopter­s ordered by Canada, at a total cost of $3.1 billion, and still needs to upgrade the software on those it has delivered to meet the military’s requiremen­ts.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN, CP ?? CH-148 Cyclone helicopter­s used by the Canadian military have exhibited problems ranging from software issues to structural cracks.
ANDREW VAUGHAN, CP CH-148 Cyclone helicopter­s used by the Canadian military have exhibited problems ranging from software issues to structural cracks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada