By JAY PRICE
McClatchy Newspapers
CAMP LEATHERNECK, Afghanistan — The Marines are hoping to resuscitate the image of the MV-22 Osprey in Afghanistan, where the aircraft made its debut into major combat on Friday.
The Osprey, which can take off and land like a helicopter but fly like a fixed-wing plane, is being put to the test in an operation dubbed Cobra’s Anger — which began Friday in Helmand Province and is the first major operation in Afghanistan since President Barack Obama announced that the U.S. was sending more troops.
The Osprey is built by Boeing Co. and Bell Helicopter. Bell makes components for the Osprey in Fort Worth and assembles the aircraft in Amarillo.
The Osprey suffered through a star-crossed development period that took more than 20 years and included several fatal crashes and huge cost overruns. After production models entered service in Iraq in 2007, the complicated aircraft was panned by the Government Accounting Office and critics in Congress.
In a report released June 23, the GAO said that it wasn’t worth the cost and questioned its ability to fly at high altitudes and to carry the needed number of troops with their gear.
At a hearing on the day the report was released, Rep. Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., said: "It has problems in hot weather, it has problems in cold weather, it has problems with sand, it has problems with high altitude, and it has restricted maneuverability. The list of what the Osprey can’t do is longer than the list of what it can do."
The Marines countered that the aircraft can do extraordinary things because of its speed and range, and that it does better at higher altitudes than critics say.
Afghanistan, with its great distances and challenging terrain — and more likelihood that the aircraft will face combat — could start to clarify whether the Marines are right and the MV-22 is worth the cost, now more than $120 million each.
"If it saves lives or somehow wins a battle, maybe people will say that it is," said Richard Whittle, author of the upcoming book The Dream Machine: The Untold History of the Notorious V-22 Osprey.
Ten Ospreys arrived about a month ago and are being flown by Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 261 (VMM-261) of Marine Corps Air Station New River in North Carolina. They officially went operational last week.
If this deployment goes well, it could start to repair the Osprey’s tarnished image. The aircraft hasn’t suffered a fatal crash since 2000, and the Marines think they’re starting to get a handle on the maintenance problems, which in many cases involved shortages of relatively minor parts such as connectors and wiring insulation that had been expected to last longer and therefore weren’t stockpiled.
"With the right parts, these planes will be as reliable as anything out there," said Gunnery Sgt. Jake Korkian, 36, of Fort Worth, who has worked with the Osprey program since 1996 and is in charge of the squadron’s maintenance of the airframe, hydraulics and other systems.
Among the parts that have to be replaced more often than expected are certain hydraulic lines — which on the Osprey are built of light but expensive and brittle titanium — and clamps for them.
"It’s just nuisance stuff, like bushings," Korkian said. "It’s nothing major, it’s just that these guys don’t know what to stock, so you either waste money and build up a stock of stuff you don’t need, or you let the supply system learn what it needs, and that’s what it’s doing right now.
"The next unit that comes out here won’t have as many problems as us, and the unit that comes after that won’t have as many problems as them."
In Afghanistan, where required flying distances can be much greater than Iraq, the additional speed and range the Osprey offers will boost what the Marines and other units can do.
For one thing, it will allow them to react to information about the enemy much quicker. The aircraft is so fast, in fact, that it can sometimes make two trips back and forth in the time it takes a helicopter to make one trip.