The Air Force quietly scaled back its planned MH-139A Grey Wolf helicopter buy. Congress is just as quietly pushing back. Lawmakers have written language into the draft fiscal year 2027 defence bill adding four Grey Wolf helicopters on top of the four the Air Force requested — a pointed rebuke of a service plan to cap the fleet at 56, down from the 80 originally planned.
The MH-139 is not glamorous. But what it guards is: 400 Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles, scattered across the Great Plains, waiting for an order that has not come for 60 years.
Quick Facts
Aircraft: Boeing MH-139A Grey Wolf — based on Leonardo AW139
Replacing: 1960s-vintage UH-1N Twin Huey ICBM security helicopters
Original plan: 80 helicopters across three missile wings
Air Force revised plan: 56 helicopters (after a 2024 proposal for just 42)
Congressional response: Four additional helicopters in the May 2026 NDAA draft
Air Force Global Strike Command has long made the case in stark terms: the Vietnam-era UH-1N Hueys guarding the missile fields are older than most of the airmen flying them, and replacing them is a baseline requirement for nuclear security, not a luxury.
Why the Grey Wolf Matters
The Air Force operates three ICBM wings — Minot in North Dakota, Malmstrom in Montana, and F.E. Warren in Wyoming. Each wing is responsible for roughly 150 silos spread across 25,000 square kilometres of farmland. Security forces patrol that geography in helicopters. The current fleet of UH-1Ns dates back to the Vietnam War era and has been due for replacement for years.
The Grey Wolf is a militarised version of the AgustaWestland AW139 — a fast, modern, twin-engine medium-lift helicopter widely used in the offshore oil industry. It carries more troops, has better night-vision capability, more range, and is dramatically more reliable than the UH-1N. It is also, importantly, a real helicopter that flies today — not a programme in development.
Critics in Congress see a contradiction in cutting the Grey Wolf buy while simultaneously asking the Air Force to secure a modernised ICBM fleet: you cannot recapitalise the Sentinel programme, they argue, and neglect the helicopters that protect the silos.
Why the Air Force Wanted to Cut
The cuts — first to 42 airframes in 2024, then partially walked back to a 56-aircraft programme of record — were framed as a rebalancing of priorities. The Air Force is under intense pressure from its top-line budget. F-35 sustainment costs continue to climb. The Sentinel ICBM replacement programme has tripled in cost. The KC-46 still needs a vision-system retrofit. Something had to give.
The MH-139 was a tempting target: the helicopters are politically less protected than the F-35 or the next-generation bomber. Cutting them was the path of least resistance.
Boeing and Leonardo, for their part, point out that the MH-139 is based on the AW139, one of the most successful medium twin helicopters in the civil market — a proven platform rather than a developmental programme.
Why Congress Wants Them Back
Congressional opposition has been bipartisan. Members of the House Armed Services Committee have led the push to add aircraft back. The argument is straightforward: the ICBM force is one leg of the nuclear triad, the Sentinel replacement is years away, and security forces protecting the existing Minuteman silos cannot wait for a politically convenient moment.
A scaled-down MH-139 fleet would force the three missile wings to share airframes. That sharing arrangement does not work for security operations, where geography is fixed and response times are measured in minutes. Either you have enough helicopters at each base, or you don’t.
For now, the draft NDAA language is just that — language in a draft. But the politics are clear. The Air Force is unlikely to win this one.
Sources: Air & Space Forces Magazine, US House Armed Services Committee statements.




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