{"id":3327047,"date":"2026-07-01T15:32:20","date_gmt":"2026-07-01T13:32:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/the-v-22-osprey-why-congress-is-still-asking-questions\/"},"modified":"2026-07-01T15:32:20","modified_gmt":"2026-07-01T13:32:20","slug":"the-v-22-osprey-why-congress-is-still-asking-questions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/the-v-22-osprey-why-congress-is-still-asking-questions\/","title":{"rendered":"The V-22 Osprey: Why Congress Is Still Asking Questions"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
\"V-22
A Marine Corps MV-22B Osprey aboard a Navy amphibious assault ship. The tiltrotor has replaced the CH-46 Sea Knight in the assault role and the C-2 Greyhound in the carrier delivery role. (U.S. Navy \/ Wikimedia Commons)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

The Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey was supposed to revolutionise military aviation. A tiltrotor that takes off like a helicopter and flies like a turboprop, it promised speed, range, and versatility that no conventional rotorcraft could match. Thirty years after entering service, the Osprey has delivered on some of those promises \u2014 and failed catastrophically on others.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Since 2022, four fatal V-22 mishaps have killed twenty service members and injured twenty more. Congressional hearings have exposed declining readiness rates, systemic maintenance failures, and safety risks that went unaddressed for nearly a decade. The aircraft that Congress once championed as the future of vertical lift is now the most controversial platform in the American military inventory.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

A Concept Decades in the Making<\/h2>\n\n\n\n

The tiltrotor concept dates to the 1950s, but the V-22 programme began in earnest in 1981 when the Pentagon issued a requirement for a multi-service vertical-lift aircraft. Bell and Boeing won the contract in 1983. The idea was elegant: nacelles on each wingtip rotate from vertical for helicopter-mode takeoffs and landings to horizontal for airplane-mode cruise flight. In airplane mode, the Osprey can reach 280 knots \u2014 roughly twice the speed of a conventional helicopter \u2014 with a combat radius exceeding 400 nautical miles.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Development was anything but smooth. Two prototype crashes in 1991 and 1992 killed seven people. A third crash during operational testing in 2000 at Marana, Arizona, killed nineteen Marines \u2014 the deadliest single V-22 incident in the programme's history. Critics called for cancellation. Congress kept funding it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The MV-22B entered Marine Corps service in 2007, replacing the Vietnam-era CH-46 Sea Knight. The Air Force's special-operations CV-22B followed. The Navy's CMV-22B, designed to replace the C-2A Greyhound for carrier onboard delivery, began fleet operations in the early 2020s. The C-2 Greyhound flew off an aircraft carrier for the last time in June 2026, making the Osprey the sole carrier delivery platform.<\/p>\n\n\n\n