October 8, 2007:
China is developing a helicopter
gunship; the Z10, and recently released photos. Eight prototypes have been
built so far. Despite the Western arms embargo on China since 1989 (because of
the Tiananmen Square massacre), the Z10 is powered by a Canadian engine (two
Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6C-67Cs). The Canadian firm says it sold the
engines to China with the understanding that they were for a new civilian
transport helicopter.
Development of the Z-10 began during the early
1990s. China approached helicopter gunship manufacturers in South Africa and
Italy for technical assistance. The South Africans turned them down in 2001,
because all the Chinese apparently wanted was to buy a single Rooivalk gunship.
The manufacturer, Denel, refused, realizing that the Chinese, as they have so
often done in the past, simply wanted to reverse engineer elements of the
Rooivalk, without paying for any technology used. Italian manufacturer
Agusta/Westland was apparently more cooperative, and provided consulting
services, and perhaps more. This was done in secret.
Pratt & Whitney Canada will not sell any more
engines to China, which means that the Z-10 cannot enter mass production until
China develops a suitable replacement for the PT6C-67C engine. That might take
a few years, at least. Until recently, China refused to release any information
about the Z-10, but for the last few years, there have been increasing rumors
of Western firms secretly assisting in the gunship's development. The Z-10
appears to be similar to the Agusta/Westland A129, or the upgraded versions of
the U.S. AH-1 (especially the AH-1 SuperCobra). The 4.6 ton A-129 was the first
helicopter gunship designed and built in Western Europe, and was introduced in
the 1980s. The Z10 appears to have a FLIR (night vision device), radar and is
armed with a 23mm autocannon and hard points for up to eight missiles or a
larger number of unguided rockets. The
Z10 is a Western style gunship. The only gunships the Chinese had previously
were Russian designs. But even the Russians have since adopted the Western
style, as pioneered with the AH-1. China has been developing its own helicopter
for several decades. First they used helicopters and technical assistance from
Russia, but for the last two decades, most of the tech has come from Europe.
China will buy (license) technology when it can, but because China is a police
state, and often acts like one, most Western military technology is unavailable
for license. So China steals it, or buys
it in secret.