Attack helicopters are often found in the ugliest situations on Earth, and angular and bristling with weapons and sensors, the helicopters themselves are appropriately ugly.
Combining armour, an automatic cannon, rockets, and guided missiles, they are often tasked with the perilous role of taking out main battle tanks, as well as supporting ground forces down low in the face of multiple guns and surface-to-air missiles – and any other weapon an enemy can point upwards.
Much feared as they are, the attack helicopter’s mission is extremely dangerous, and nap-of-the-earth flying, hiding behind terrain, and the latest countermeasures are all necessary to keep an attack helicopter crew alive above the modern battlefield. Let’s take a look at the best:
10: Eurocopter Tiger

Europe’s attempt to create an attack helicopter has suffered extreme bad luck throughout its programme, despite it being created by a collaborative team with immense experience from France and Germany. Some of the trouble was sown from its conception in 1984, with the partner nations requiring different roles from the helicopter.
So, despite a relatively small production run, the type is available in different variants, one specialised for fire support and another for the anti-tank role. As well as the complications caused by these differences, the project development started in the Cold War and ended in the post-Cold War period when military spending was reduced.
10: Eurocopter Tiger

Despite a first flight in 1991, the aircraft did not enter service until in 2003, though for the sake of fairness, it should be noted the earlier AH-64 Apache had a gap of 11 years between prototype and service entry. The Tiger is best known for its appearance in the 1995 James Bond film Goldeneye.
It has been sold to Spain and Australia. Its Australian career has been dogged by technical issues as well as issues with parts supply. Despite all these issues, the Tiger has matured in French and German service into a capable machine well known for its high levels of agility.
9: HAL Prachand

The Indian aerospace industry has had a dramatic twenty years, with work going on in every conceivable sector from space travel, via proposed stealth fighters to light uncrewed aircraft. The Prachand (‘Giant’) is India’s move into the world of attack helicopters.
The Prachand is a light multirole attack helicopter intended to perform well in ‘hot and high’ conditions. It features a turret-mounted French 20-mm autocannon, the M621. It will armed with the indigenous Dhruvastra anti-tank guided missile, with provision to carry air-to-air missiles.


















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