*
*

*
*

*A picture of the tail rotor of the chopper that the Navy Seals' Team Six
detonated revealed unfamiliar features. Reports say it could be a new,
secret helicopter.*

*
*

*When the Team Six members reached Osama bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad
one of the choppers made a "controlled but hard landing," according to
reports, probably due to higher than expected temperatures.*

*
*

*Temperatures affects the density of the air, and low density makes it
harder for the rotor to sustain the weight of the chopper, especially if it
was near its maximum weight (being packed with soldiers and fuel to fly in
from Afghanistan). Abbottabad is about 1200 meters above the sea level, and
altitude also affects air density.
*

*
*

*So what machine exactly experienced the hard landing described above? Short
answer: we don't know for sure. Long answer: It seems that the tail rotor
visible in the picture belongs to a highly modified version of the H-60, the
chopper of choice of the special forces for more than 30 years. Aviation
Week doesn't beat around the bush, claiming: "A previously undisclosed,
classified stealth helicopter apparently was part of the U.S. task force
that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan on May 1."*

*
*

*Stealth technology on helicopters is not itself new, but the fact that a
previously unknown machine was used in this raid is yet another proof of the
degree of importance that this mission had for U.S. commanders.
*

*
*

*Aviation Week then goes techie and explains what we can see from that
picture: "Photos disseminated via the European PressPhoto agency and
attributed to an anonymous stringer show that the helicopter’s tail features
stealth-configured shapes on the boom and the tail rotor hub fairings, swept
stabilizers and a 'dishpan' cover over a five-or-six-blade tail rotor. It
has a silver-loaded infrared suppression finish similar to that seen on
V-22s."*

*
*

*Low radar visibility was essential, for the Pakistani air force would have
either scrambled its jets if an unknown threat to its airspace (and near the
country's best military academy!) was detected, or fired its surface to air
missiles. It's possibly more proof of the fact that Pakistan really knew
nothing about the mission - or at least its first wave of attack - until it
ended.
*

*This would explain why the Seals wasted critically precious time to blew up
the mysterious helicopter and why many experts had problems identifying its
remains. It's unclear what Pakistan could have made of the downed chopper,
but growing ties between Pakistani and Chinese armed forces could have made
the destruction of such new machine a must. China and Pakistan, over the
past two decades, have developed a multi role combat aircraft called
JF-17and an advanced trainer, the
JL-8.*

*
*

*The Navy Seals usually fly in the famed Sikorsky UH-60, popularized by the
movie Black Hawk Down, in which two UH-60 were shot down in Somalia,
resulting in the death of 18 men.*

*
*

*Black Hawk Down was a scenario, insiders say, that together with first
attempt to rescue the hostages held at the U.S. embassy in 1980 in Iran,
that's been evoked constantly in the planning phases leading to the May 1
raid, as examples of potentially disastrous outcomes.
*

* *

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