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U.S. Introduces Armed Black Hawk Kits Enabling Precision Strike Without New Attack Helicopters.


Sikorsky Aircraft unveiled Armed Black Hawk kits at the Army Aviation Warfighting Summit in Nashville, adding precision strike and close-support capability to UH-60 helicopters. The upgrade expands U.S. and allied fleet combat roles without requiring new attack aircraft procurement.

The modular kits allow operators to convert standard UH-60 Black Hawk aircraft into armed platforms within roughly three hours, supporting missions from escort and ISR to precision strike. Available through Foreign Military Sales or direct commercial channels, the systems integrate with existing avionics and reflect growing demand for multi-role, rapidly deployable aviation assets.

Related topic: U.S. Army Orders 10 UH-60M Black Hawk Helicopters in $65M Sikorsky Deal to Sustain Combat Airlift.

Sikorsky’s new Armed Black Hawk kits add close-support and precision-strike capability to existing UH-60/S-70 helicopters, giving operators a faster and more affordable way to expand combat roles without buying dedicated new attack aircraft (Picture source: Lockheed Martin).

Sikorsky’s new Armed Black Hawk kits add close-support and precision-strike capability to existing UH-60/S-70 helicopters, giving operators a faster and more affordable way to expand combat roles without buying dedicated new attack aircraft (Picture source: Lockheed Martin).


Sikorsky says operators can choose two production-ready kit paths, reconfigure missions in about three hours, and buy them through either Foreign Military Sales or direct commercial sale, with U.S. integration support or installation at PZL Mielec in Poland. That gives the offer immediate relevance for current Black Hawk users seeking faster force growth, especially after Sikorsky highlighted prior armed-Black-Hawk experience in the Middle East.

The concept works because the Black Hawk is already a strong base airframe for expeditionary warfare. The UH/HH-60M is the U.S. Army’s primary front-line medium-lift utility helicopter, with a 22,000-pound maximum gross weight, room for 11 fully equipped troops, advanced digital avionics, armored or redundant critical systems, and the ability to perform assault, command-and-control, MEDEVAC, sustainment, and rescue missions in all weather, day or night. Lockheed Martin also describes the current Black Hawk family as offering twin GE T700 power, a reconfigurable cabin, and 9,000 pounds of cargo capacity, which means the platform already brings lift, endurance, and battlefield utility before weapons are added.

The armament architecture is more sophisticated than a simple bolt-on gun package. Sikorsky’s previously qualified digital weapons system integrates with the Black Hawk’s existing avionics and allows either pilot to employ forward-firing guns, rocket pods, and laser-designated air-to-ground missiles with high accuracy against static or moving targets. On the dual-wing configuration, four external stations can carry combinations of fixed forward 12.7 mm guns, 7- or 19-shot Hydra 70 rocket pods, or Hellfire missiles, while pilot-controlled or flex-fire 7.62 mm miniguns can be mounted at the cabin windows. The company says the system uses an electro-optical/infrared sensor, ballistic computation, and continuously updated helmet-display symbology so crews are not just carrying weapons, but employing them through a coherent fire-control chain.

That matters operationally because the two kit paths map cleanly to two different kinds of battlefield demand. The close-support configuration is optimized for suppressive fire, armed escort, landing-zone preparation, and fire support to troops in contact, where rocket pods and forward-firing guns matter more than maximum standoff range. The precision-strike configuration is more about deliberate engagement of vehicles, fortified points, and high-value targets, using missile-based effects that let the helicopter contribute to anti-armor or interdiction missions from safer distances. Lockheed Martin’s current Armed Black Hawk material also points to a growth path up to 16 Hellfire or JAGM missiles, which is strategically important because it keeps the Black Hawk tied to an active precision-missile ecosystem rather than a dead-end niche weapon set.

What these kits really enable is mission compression. An operator can move an assault element, carry door gunners, retain sling-load utility, embark medical stretchers or ISR packages, and still field a credible armed escort or strike option from the same fleet. Lockheed Martin’s own material describes air-assault loads with 11 troops and two gunners, as well as utility configurations for external cargo, medical evacuation stretchers, and ISR sensor packages. For forces that operate over deserts, islands, mountains, or long border belts, that means fewer specialized aircraft on the ramp and more aircraft that can launch with mixed-purpose tasking.

There is, however, an important analytical distinction. These kits do not turn the Black Hawk into an Apache-class dedicated attack helicopter; they create a medium-attack utility helicopter with far more organic lethality than a standard transport variant. In practice, that means the armed Black Hawk is especially attractive for escort, armed reconnaissance, convoy overwatch, special operations support, self-protected MEDEVAC, and dispersed assault missions where flexibility and rapid re-role matter more than the heavier armor, deeper sensor specialization, and pure hunter-killer focus of a purpose-built gunship. For many armies, that is not a compromise so much as a better match to real mission density.

This is where the case for kits over brand-new helicopters becomes strongest. Sikorsky is explicitly marketing multirole capability, lower acquisition and sustainment burden, rapid reconfiguration, and lifecycle savings, and the logic is hard to ignore for operators that already own or plan to own Black Hawks. A force that adds armament kits to an existing fleet keeps one pilot pipeline, one maintainer base, one spare-parts ecosystem, and one training architecture, while still gaining close-support and precision-strike capacity. That advantage is amplified by the scale of the Black Hawk community itself: Lockheed Martin says more than 5,000 Hawk-family aircraft have been built for 36 nations, and Sikorsky now projects Black Hawk operations beyond 2070. Common fleets reduce risk in procurement, sustainment, and coalition interoperability.

There is also a broader industrial message in this launch. The 2026 kits are not an overnight idea; they build on a 2018 military-standard weapons qualification effort and years of export-focused refinement, including a 2019 single-station pylon concept from PZL Mielec that Lockheed Martin said could carry fuel, guns, rockets, and air-to-ground missiles while reducing cost, drag, and installation time. At the same time, Sikorsky is still modernizing the underlying aircraft with higher-output engines, digital architecture, and MATRIX autonomy work on Army Black Hawks. In other words, the company is not merely selling weapon mounts; it is extending the relevance of the Black Hawk as a modular combat system.

The significance of the Armed Black Hawk kits is clear: Sikorsky is trying to turn one of the world’s most widely fielded utility helicopters into a more scalable battlefield instrument at a time when many militaries need mass, versatility, and affordability more than another exquisite fleet category. The most successful customers will be those who see the kits not as a substitute born of budget pressure, but as a deliberate way to combine lift, protection, precision fire, and rapid mission change in one enduring airframe. On today’s battlefield, that kind of modular combat aviation can be more valuable than buying a small number of brand-new helicopters built for only one job.


Written by Evan Lerouvillois, Defense Analyst.

Evan studied International Relations, and quickly specialized in defense and security. He is particularly interested in the influence of the defense sector on global geopolitics, and analyzes how technological innovations in defense, arms export contracts, and military strategies influence the international geopolitical scene.


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