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Army helicopters train on ship landing
by Richard Tomkins
Uss Peleliu, Hawaii (UPI) Jul 28, 2013


Serco wins re-compete Navy medical contract
Reston, Va. (UPI) Jul 28, 2013 - A re-compete contract has been given to Serco Systems to support the U.S. Navy Expeditionary Medical Support Command.

Under the contract, Serco will provide NEWSCOM with deployable medical systems -- 10- to 150-bed deployable self-contained hospitals with equipment including Computerized Tomography, or CT, scanners and X-ray machines.

"At Serco, we take pride in our mission of service delivery excellence and embody that with every customer we serve," said Dan Allen, Serco Inc.'s chairman and chief executive officer. "We look forward to continuing to support NEMSCOM with its global responsibilities."

The contract has a one-year base period and four one-year option periods. If all options are exercised, the contract value will be $22.7 million.

Serco was awarded the original contract for deployable medical systems in 2009. A significant deployment of its system by the Navy occurred in 2010 for medical care in the aftermath of a major earthquake in Haiti.

AH-64E helicopters of the U.S. Army have conducted deck landing qualifications aboard the USS Peleliu, the first E variants to do so.

The U.S. Army said the landing qualifications were performed by helicopters from the 1st Armed Reconnaissance Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment, 25th Combat Aviation Brigade, 25th Infantry Division during a Navy exercise.

The qualification and related training is to build greater maritime flexibility for the U.S. military's Pacific joint commander, giving him more assets for use.

"With all the deck training, the reason it's interesting and different is because the Apache is a land-based piece of equipment," said Army Chief Warrant Officer 3 Matthew Gottschling, a company instructor pilot with 1-25 ARB. "By training us how to do the ship landings on a larger ship, it enables us to forward project our force by doing the cross training with the Navy and the Marines."

"It allows us to land on their ships, refuel, rearm and project power further forward as opposed to just being a land-based unit. In the event of conflict, we would be able to deploy our aircraft via a ship to land and be able to operate in a maritime environment."

Eight Army Apaches took part in the exercise and their crews are to undergo additional training at sea and on land, the Army said.

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