ARTI was AFTI for the Army at a time when all the services still thought they should each grab a piece of whatever new systems or doctrinal approach came along 'for trials' (The military industrial base sustains itself on false promises and exhorbitant, drawn out, development programs. They then sell the technology which was found to be 'too expensive' overseas, having had their R&D paid off by the U.S. taxpayer.).
We've seen this from the Atom Bomb to the F-teens and onwards.
Of course there is the opposed side of things which is that the USAF is a lousy CAS provider (average 25 minute lag between call and fast ambulance in OEF, as much as _17hrs_ if the call was not programmed into the daily frag list) and thus Key West, which killed the ideal 'reconaissance' platform, the AH-56, was and is a criminal as much as conscientious division of roles and missions.
The allocation of which 'turf' generally sets the funding thresholds and accessibility to new technology for everyone.
That said, tactical radar LO over the battlefield is an enormous technology-loss WASTE under all conditions. Watch the footage of the old geezer standing beside the AH-64D he shot down with a Carcano rifle bullet. Or look at the results for the 101st airborne's attack aviation after Najaf and dare to tell me I'm wrong.
The helo's number one defining operational limiter is that it _never leaves the threat envelope_. Period. And not simply the S-300 class but the wire across the river. The AHM field which is also a UGS network. The guy with an RPD or DShK. i.e. The cheap stuff.
In SEA, things got so bad that we went to 3-5K foot transits because we were tired of pulling helos out of the soup (4,427 IIRR) with small arms damage. Of course then they brought in SA-7s, forced the sugarscoop ideal on us and cost us 20% of our hot and high performance at the same time they created a veritable updraft of concentrated IR energy. Total waste of time, even beyond the stupidity of sending a teetering rotor AH-1/UH-1 setup against guided shoulderfire weapons.
At which point it should probably be mentioned that, at least /publically/, what drove the initial LHX spec were the Red Book announced performance figures of the then-new Mi-28 Havoc and particularly Ka-50 Hokum. The latter was not seen as a bumbling exercise in Russian macro industrialism that it was, fitting a non-rigid, close spaced, heavily articulated _ASW platform_ rotor system to a supposed-to-be agile mission threat. Rather, it was seen much as our own S-69 Advancing Blade Concept was: as a 300 knot platform whose speed could only be intended to provide airborne dominance of U.S. attack helicopter teams.
And with the AH-1 firmly rooted in the weeds and the AH-64 set to become a pig nuzzling for acorns in the bushes after dark, there was some justification. For the places you employ this type of time-critical CAS are in emergency 'fluid' conditions of breakout and deep maneuver containment. Such as the Soviets proclaimed they had perfected as an answer to the NATO 'seven belt' system. This makes you predictable with your snout in the dirt doing popups from forward hides and trying to avoid getting clipped by VSHORADS like the SA-8/9/13 and Zoos. Furthermore, since the Russians were already in the habit of doing 3D envelopment around things like forced river crossings (employing 70-100 helicopters and thinking nothing of losing half) just to get the guard tank division in a position to become an OMG, looking to get the higher ground and control the approaches on everything from helicopters to armor to TACP teams with MULE, it stands to reason that you would see a lot of them, even conventionally. And if a Hind rolls over your rotor disk while your NOE waiting for that guy in the OH-58 to stick his head out and zot the target for your hellfires, you're gonna get raped. Because USAF will not be there.
Now imagine how bad this is when you are holding at the preattack position as the scouts move forward and a 300 knot threat crosses the FLOT ten kilometers down and starts rolling up the flanks. It won't be one helo getting hit. It may well be an entire JAAT attack team.
Hence the 'super sleek' LHX which was supposed to duke it out with this monster of the East in mano a mano 'escort fighter' roles. Well, of course it doesn't work that way really well either. Because, contrary to conventional fixed wing air combat, the first thing a rotary wing fight does is MOVE UP. As each side tries desperately to deny optics, doorgunners and turret weapons a line of sight through the rotor disk. And as soon as that happens, you are right back to dodging ground threats as your A#1 priority "Where did THAT come from?" scare.
Furthermore, the weapons systems of the time would not allow even a dedicated air-sniper 'using stealth' to win most battles:
1. Because ATGW imposed severe maneuvering and designation limits, were smokey and too slow.
2. Because ATAS (then MLMS) couldn't hardly see nothin' below about 10-15` above the horizon and was particularly crippled in it's associative ability to accept handoff cues from the sensor package. The AIM-9L was only a very little better in terms of below horizon targeting and target cue and could not be fired below about 100 knots.
3. Because the avionics also did not support the mission. Both offensively as stated (in Europe, in winter, optics are about 60% constrained, even during daylight). And defensively. Because the ALQ-136 was expensive and unreliable (not installed in most aircraft nominally stated to have it) and the ALQ-144 was so bad that it not only gave zero FQ coverage but could actually act as a beacon. Flares then being outlawed because they started fires under the airframe and chaff of limited use due to the small number of buckets and combined EO/Radar packages of most threat ADV.
It was around this time (mid-80s) that the USMC held an advanced helo air combat tactics course and aside from proving the that AH-1 was indeed a lead sled and the AH-64 powerful but porcine vs. nearly ANY _civilian_ rotorcraft (the top contenders proved to be the H-500 and H-76 civil helos with their better rotor systems, cleaner fuselage and more balanced layout); it was discovered that short of a look down radar that could see into hills and gullies, almost all rotary wing air combats happened purely by chance. And at ranges where the definition of technologic vs. positional dominance was very marginal indeed.
A fact being born out in the Iran/Iraq war where PC-7 were found to be the most useful killer of Iranian AH-1T to the extent that the Iranians copied the logic and bought the PC-9. See Key West for what the U.S. thinks about that.
With these conditions as nominal, your best anti helo weapon is a combination of artillery deliverable AHM and UGS, coupled to a MALI type (converted target drone/decoy) long range turbojet hunting missile. There are those that say that, before it was sold to Israel to become the HARPY, the German KDAR/PAB drone was in fact exactly that: a lethal attack system _for use against helos_. Not radars.
Okay, so air to air is useless within the given mission platform constraints. Which brings us to the 'scout' element of the mission. The best way to scout is to turn the helicopter sideways, pop up to about 1,500-3,000ft and either focus a 20" optical barrel (the Mi-24K does exactly this as an artillery spotter platform) about 20km off in the distance. Or sweep the area with about a 10ft long radar array (UH-60 SOTAS). Here, ironically, radar LO may actually do you some good as an angled side profile will deflect radar and the longer you can remain up, without having to bunt and quick-shift elsewhere (a real problem with the suspended SOTAS in particular), the more useful your mission becomes. This is where the UTIL mission should have seen real emphasis as a platform function that would also have held the high ground vs. the coming wave of Eurochoppers. As indeed programs like the ACAP looked set to do, a full decade before composite construction became standard in the Ecureil and BK-117 followons.
The point remains however that you DO NOT want to close with the enemy to take freakin' pictures. It's not only stupid in a limited airframe force, it's also _pointless_ because the best way to kill armor in breakout is with ATACMS and a snootfull of TGSM. Not Hellfires. Those are the FIRES platforms which can in fact stand back 100km from the FSCL and shoot both the 2E/FOF and the main assault columns all to pieces. And they can do it to _either side_ of their position, faster than a helo or fixed wing systems can respond. Indeed, Pave Mover, which was SOTAS with a bigger budget was specifically designed to include a side-channel capable of providing multiple midcourse updates to tactical missile systems.
Now comes the sucker punch. The MQM-105 Aquila and the DARPA Amber programs were doing essentially the same mission as the Hunter/Outrider/Shadow class 'divisional/maneuver' UAVs, almost 25 years ago. And they were doing it with radiometric and later active radar (precursor to the APY-8 Lynx and all weather capable) as well as electrooptical systems that had _sufficient accuracy_, pre-GPS, to put artillery into splash on point targets.
Indeed, it was the terror of the manned macho-muchacho military that overloaded Aquila to the point where it could no longer accomplish the mission. Just like they did to the J-UCAS (U-system fear is universal among all the service unions).
And why does this matter? Because you can take cheap CCD technology and flood the battlefield with it. Using a set number of channels and an IP system to send drones wherever the hell you like to take very close range snaps. Lose one? Fine. Call up another (airframe code) to the same channel and move it forward. You can even 'stream' UAVs to overlap spectrum coverage and show things like where the leading drone got shot down.
And if you can afford to lose a few to guided fire because they are _too small_ to be seen by the unaided eye (at 5-10K feet), then you can also do something else: use straight shot routing.
Whereby a scout helicopter that has to do NOE at 60-90 knots through a SERIES of waypoints that might, or might not, contain a desired target. A simple drone moving at 90-100 knots can beat it to any given point because it is doing an as-the-crow-flies. Not the airborne equivalent of low-crawl. And since, at roughly $564,120.00 vs. $42,600,000.00 you can afford about 75 Aquila (Ex-Drone, Brave etc.) level units for each RAH-66, you can do a lot of tooling about for no gain and still come out ahead in the kinds of high intensity combats for which both were designed and each would like face it's destruction by an atomic warhead or a T-72 running over it's basing mode.
Of course it only took about 22 years to reach this conclusion but as I recall, one of the last nails in the Comanche Coffin was in fact an attempt to make a 'scout for the scout' TRIPLE tier system (remembering that the LHX was itself to replace the OH-58 as an aircraft able to 'keep up with' the 130 knot Apache...). One of the programs was called 'A-MUST' for Advanced Manned/Unmanned Systems Technology. And the competing program was called, hmmmm, 'ALERT' I think it was. The latter being a final recognition of how exceptionally dated even the Comanche mission equipment package had become since it's 1983 mission spec had been hardened as the attempt was to take the EOTASS sensor (which was a linear bar scan system based on the limited performance of period SFPAs, long since surpassed by Arrowhead and Hawkeye technology) and turn it from a 'snapshot' (horizon line) imager to a real time, wide-FOV interpretative intelligence gathering device.
More or less along the same lines as they are now wunderwaffen promoting for EOTS/DAS on the F-35.
They couldn't make it happen. Or at least not without vastly escalating the already astronomical price target (1983 price for LHX-SCAT was to be around 6.3 million, it died a ca. 42 million dollar airframe...).
And so chilluns, the dragon known as RAH-66 died a deserved death at the hands of Nunn McCurdy and Anti-Deficiency laws, long after the successors to the generals whose retirement had come and gone during the program's extended lapse could no longer gain more than exasperated indifference from a Congress that had FINALLY (for a little while) seen how readily helicopters can be killed. And how little area they really cover compared to the logistics footprint required to keep them moving up with the ground combat elements.
BHD, Najaf, Takur Gar and other places have essentially proven what everyone with a thinking brain has known since the nazis flew the damn things: good for emergency lift. Lousy for frontline or 'patrol' (across FLOT) combat work.
From March 2003 to February 2009, we have lost approximately 127 helicopters vs. only 23 fixed wing aircraft in Iraq. Even at a 4:1 price ratio of say 12.5 vs. 50 million averaged cost, you are talking a difference of 1.58 billion vs. 1.15 billion dollars. We can better spend the difference (430 million dollars) on a system that doesn't have to point it's nose at a target to see or DROP weapons upon it. Indeed, that's approximately 30 MQ-9B Reapers and a 1,000 GBU-39 which are collectively better than either an attack helicopter or a fighter jet.
GLAR
P.S. The problem with a BAT (Bell Attack Tiltrotor) or any similar system is that, to make it aerodynamic and light enough to fly agilely, you have to reduce it's fuselage profile considerably. This means you cannot stuff the belly with a weapons bay, particularly on those variants which in fact went with a single T800 turboshaft on the centerline and left the wingtip pods empty. While you can theoretically use superior dropfire technology weapons from these wings, the combination of stiffening for pylons (re-adding weight and roll inertia, outboard) and the fact that clearing the proprotor disks in anything but clean and level flight becomes somewhat 'sporty', tends to argue against the type.
My favorite, though always an outsider (and offered rather late), was the MP-18 Dragonslayer and MP-36 Dragon. These employed a large central fan bay under the fuselage, a dorsal inlet (with protective screens) for the turbojet and a complex conch-geometry plenum which could both vent centrally and provide a ready source of RCS and directional stabilization before transitioning to forward flight. Principle takeoff mode was ESTOL. It was relatively small, having only two wing pylons plus tip mounts for sidewinder class weapons. But it was capable of 500 knots and a 30,000ft ceiling which means it could drop X8 GBU-39 from overtop any practical (CAS) threat floor. In forward flight, principle maneuver was through airplane moded aerodynamic control and active leading and trailing edge flaperons. A USB lift flap came into play during transition, lowering approach speeds and providing a duct seal to begin venting through the plenum. i.e. No anti torque mechanical takeoff losses. No dead weight ala VTDP. Good design. Key West.
Lastly, if you want to bring the helo into the target terminal area, you have to be able to do two basic things:
1. Scout under/behind any masking terrain before commitment. A system like Silent Eyes or Finder could theoretically accomplish this.
2. FLY beyond the threat terminal _acquisition_ range with a cheap weapon. JASSM was never cheap. But PAM could have been. With a thermobaric warhead and good trajectory control on a 20km powered flight, you only really need about a 10m CEP. The AH-64s that got their heads handed to them at Najaf did so ONLY AFTER the town had been warned (by blinking the lights) of their approach and they continued into the attack over builtup terrain. They were thus taken under fire by small arms from rooftops because the enemy knew that they would pass nearby.