Greece has finalised a purchase of 35 UH-60M Black Hawk helicopters from Sikorsky, a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin, as part of a U.S. Foreign Military Sale.

The contract, secured after a government-to-government agreement in April 2024, includes training, equipment, and an initial provisioning package to support the Hellenic Army’s operational needs.

Hamid Salim, Sikorsky’s Vice President of Army and Air Force Systems, commented on the longstanding relationship, stating, “Our partnership with Greece spans decades, and we are pleased to see the nation’s continued trust in Sikorsky helicopters as Greece will benefit from an integrated Hawk family of aircraft supporting national security and humanitarian missions.”

Costas Papadopoulos, Lockheed Martin’s Executive Director of International Business Development for Greece, highlighted the Black Hawk’s role in Greece’s expanding fleet, adding, “The Black Hawk helicopter is the workhorse of multi-mission medium lift aircraft and will enable Greece to perform key operations in the region. These helicopters will join Greece’s upgraded F-16Vs, new MH-60Rs, existing F-16s, C-130s, and S-70Bs, as well as future F-35s.”

The company say that the UH-60M Black Hawk helicopters, used by 36 countries globally, are valued for their versatility and capability in challenging conditions. With this acquisition, Greece becomes the 12th European nation to operate Black Hawks.

George Allison
George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison

23 COMMENTS

  1. Includes training and spares, reportedly at just shy of $2bn. About $56m each.

    Originally NMH was expected to have whole life costs of £1.1bn for 44 helicopters (£25m each). Over this last year this went up to £1.3bn after it was delayed for three years, then following a reduction in the numbers to around 30 almost all the bidders dropped out. The comparison with Greece shows we expect to get too much for too little, and even when we have a great deal we screw it up with delays and number reduction, turning the process into a procurement death spiral.

  2. Our numbers of Puma2 today and future medium lift helicopter are woefully inadequate to the needs of its core customer. The Black Hawk is a fantastic airframe.

    • I agree – I’d take the BH for our NMH requirement any day. It’s tried and tested and maybe we could look at some refurbished/gently used ‘one careful owner’ airframes from the US given money is extremely tight. We’d get more of them and get them in service a lot quicker that way too.

      Sometimes off the shelf is the way to go – cheaper and in service quicker and I think the MoD really would benefit from adopting this approach more often. There definitely is a time and place for bespoke tailor made solutions but not always – the NMH project being one.

      • Agree – used throughout NATO so commonality in training, spares as well as TTPs. Flew with them on a number of tactical instruction exercises – superb. Why go anywhere else?

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