Sikorsky has just turned the world’s most-built combat helicopter into a gunship.
The Connecticut-based Lockheed Martin subsidiary has unveiled what it is calling the Armed Black Hawk — a clean-sheet conversion kit that bolts external pylons, sensor turrets, and weapons onto a standard UH-60M airframe and turns it into a light-attack helicopter capable of carrying everything from rocket pods to Hellfire missiles to laser-guided 70mm rockets. The kit is designed to be installed and removed in the field, which means a single Black Hawk can fly a routine troop-transport mission in the morning and a Hellfire-armed escort run in the afternoon.
That flexibility is the headline. There are roughly 4,000 Black Hawks in service worldwide. None of them are gunships. Sikorsky just made all of them gunship-capable, on demand, with a kit Sikorsky says can be installed in hours.
Quick Facts
Aircraft: Sikorsky UH-60M Armed Black Hawk
Conversion: Bolt-on weapons kit (field-removable)
Hardpoints: External Stores Support System (ESSS) pylons
Weapons options: Hellfire, AGM-179 JAGM, Hydra 70 / APKWS, miniguns, .50 cal
Sensor: Optional electro-optical / infrared turret
Worldwide UH-60 fleet: approx. 4,000
Why a flexible kit instead of a dedicated gunship
The U.S. Army already has a dedicated attack helicopter — the AH-64 Apache — and the Marine Corps has the AH-1Z Viper. Both are excellent gunships. Both are also expensive, in short supply, and unsuited to a lot of missions where what you actually need is a transport helicopter that happens to have teeth.
Insert escort. Convoy protection. Light reconnaissance-strike. Counter-drone. Counter-insurgency in places where the Apache fleet is too thin to rotate through. These are the missions Sikorsky is targeting. The Armed Black Hawk is not meant to replace the Apache. It is meant to give every UH-60 operator on Earth — the U.S. Army, every NATO partner, every Latin American and Asian Black Hawk customer — the option to put fangs on a transport helicopter when the mission demands it.

The Latin American precedent
This is not, technically, a new idea. Colombia’s Air Force has flown the Sikorsky Arpía III — an armed export variant of the UH-60L — for years, with rocket pods, gun pods, and an EO/IR turret bolted to the same External Stores Support System (ESSS) Sikorsky now offers as an open kit. Mexico, Brazil, Saudi Arabia and a handful of others have flown similar conversions in smaller numbers.
What Sikorsky has now done is industrialise the concept. Instead of a one-off depot-level modification for a specific customer, this is a catalogue product, sold off the shelf, certified for the latest UH-60M airframe. If you operate a Black Hawk and you have the budget, you can buy the kit.

Hellfire from a Hawk
The most striking weapons option is the AGM-114 Hellfire. The Hellfire is the Apache’s signature missile — laser-guided, fire-and-forget, capable of killing a tank or a building or a single moving truck — and putting it on a Black Hawk is something the U.S. Army has, until now, only done in the special-operations community. The newer AGM-179 Joint Air-to-Ground Missile is also on the menu.
For lighter targets, Sikorsky offers Hydra 70mm rockets in seven-shot or nineteen-shot pods, with the option of laser-guided APKWS rounds for precision work. There are pintle mounts in the cabin doors for the standard M134 minigun and a podded gun option on the wings.
Why now
The timing is not subtle. The U.S. Army has just retired the OH-58 Kiowa Warrior scout-attack helicopter. Its replacement, the Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft (FARA), was cancelled. There is a real, unfilled gap in the armed-helicopter inventory. Filling it with a kit on existing UH-60 airframes is fast, cheap, and exportable.
The export piece matters. NATO partners, Pacific allies, and increasingly the Ukrainian armed forces all operate Black Hawks. Sikorsky now has a product to sell them that is not a brand-new helicopter — it is a way to make their existing fleet do more.
Four thousand Black Hawks just got a little less defenceless.
Sources: Lockheed Martin / Sikorsky press release, Defense Blog, Aviation Week.




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