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U.S. Army Apache and Chinook Helicopters Train in Germany to Secure NATO Heavy Lift Air Mobility.
U.S. Army AH-64E Apache and CH-47F Chinook helicopters from the 12th Combat Aviation Brigade conducted aviation maneuver and sustainment training in Germany alongside allied forces. The exercise reinforced how attack and heavy lift aviation protect and enable NATO air mobility during high-tempo operations.
Imagery released on DVIDS on February 3 and February 5, 2026, shows U.S. Army AH-64E Apache helicopters from 2-159th Attack Battalion and a CH-47F Chinook from 1-214th General Support Aviation Battalion, both assigned to the 12th Combat Aviation Brigade, taking part in Aviation Maneuver Training Exercise Center 26-01 in Germany. The first photographs, dated February 2, capture Apaches departing Katterbach Army Airfield in formation en route to the exercise. A second series, dated February 4 and taken in Celle, shows a Chinook conducting sling load validations while an Apache is staged nearby during training with Dutch allies.
U.S. Army AH-64E Apache and CH-47F Chinook helicopters trained together in Germany, rehearsing how attack and heavy lift aviation protect and sustain NATO air mobility during allied operations (Picture Source: DVIDS)
This sequence is more than routine training documentation. The photographed movement from Katterbach to Celle illustrates a repeatable rehearsal of how U.S. attack aviation can be repositioned rapidly across Germany within a NATO training framework. In geostrategic terms, this matters because Germany remains the primary hub through which allied combat power, logistics, and reinforcements would flow toward NATO’s eastern flank in a crisis. The visible relocation of Apaches under allied observation is therefore a demonstration of intra-theater mobility as much as a participation in an exercise.
The AH-64E Apache element is central to this logic. In its current configuration, the aircraft is built around digital connectivity, manned-unmanned teaming, and data exchange capabilities that allow crews to receive targeting and situational data from ground units, UAVs, and allied platforms, and to redistribute that information across the force. In practical European scenarios, this transforms the Apache from a pure strike platform into a networked armed reconnaissance and escort asset. It provides overwatch for air assault, protects logistical movements, and offers rapid anti-armor response in terrain where road convoys may be constrained, monitored, or threatened.
The CH-47F Chinook activity visible in Celle represents the other half of this operational equation. Sling load validation is not a symbolic drill but a prerequisite for real missions in which heavy equipment must be moved when road infrastructure is damaged, congested, or under threat. With a center hook sling capacity of up to 26,000 pounds, the Chinook can realistically transport 155 mm artillery pieces, ammunition pallets, fuel bladders, engineer bridging sections, air defense components, or recovery equipment. These are the assets that sustain dispersed units in the field. When paired with Apaches, the concept becomes clear: Chinooks move the weight that keeps units fighting, while Apaches protect those movements in potentially contested airspace.
The presence of Dutch forces adds a layer of operational depth that goes beyond standard interoperability language. The Royal Netherlands Army operates both Apache attack helicopters and Chinook heavy lift helicopters. Training together is therefore not a matter of familiarization but of rehearsing identical procedures, sling configurations, escort tactics, airspace coordination, and safety margins between units equipped with the same categories of aircraft. In a NATO contingency, such familiarity allows mixed U.S. and Dutch aviation elements to function as a single integrated package rather than an ad hoc coalition.
The repeated reference in the captions to the validation of the Aviation Maneuver Training Exercise Center is also significant. AMTEC is a dedicated facility designed for rotary-wing maneuver, load operations, and complex aviation training. By emphasizing this validation, the exercise effectively anchors a NATO-relevant rotary-wing training pipeline inside Germany, where allied aviation units can certify tactics tied directly to mobility and sustainment. From a deterrence perspective vis-à-vis Russia, the signal is not the presence of Apaches in Germany but the fact that U.S. Army Europe’s aviation brigade is rehearsing the enabling tasks that make reinforcement, dispersion, and sustainment credible under pressure.
This also reflects a broader evolution in how attack aviation is expected to operate in Europe. The proliferation of drones and layered air defenses in recent conflicts has increased the vulnerability of predictable ground logistics. In such an environment, the force that can relocate, refuel, rearm, and resupply from the air retains greater survivability. Training that explicitly links Apache escort roles with Chinook heavy lift logistics illustrates how this adaptation is being internalized at the tactical level. The sling load beneath the Chinook and the Apache overhead are two parts of the same survival mechanism for dispersed forces.
What appears in the DVIDS imagery as a routine training moment is therefore a compact demonstration of how NATO intends to sustain and protect dispersed forces under contested mobility conditions in Europe. Attack aviation is shown not only as a strike tool but as a guardian of air-moved logistics, while heavy lift aviation is practiced as the backbone of operational continuity when ground routes cannot be relied upon.