After three decades of development and a development cost in excess of R8 billion, the South African designed and built Rooivalk attack helicopter has finally deployed operationally.
Now, not only has it been deployed operationally for the first time, but it has also fired its guns in anger.
Three Rooivalk helicopters, belonging to 16 Squadron based at AFB Bloemspruit near Bloemfontein, were airlifted to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) a week ago.
Darren Olivier, of African Defence Review, has reported that two SAAF Rooivalk helicopters flew the craft's first ever combat mission yesterday afternoon at approximately 17h00 Congolese time. They fired multiple 70mm rocket salvos against M23 bunkers near the mountainous Chanzu region, close to the Rwandan border.
Olivier notes that early reports from sources in the area indicate that the action was successful, with the Rooivalks' tactical approach through the clouds taking the M23 defenders by surprise and their rocket fire being accurate enough to disperse them and destroy one of the 14.5 mm anti-aircraft guns that had been previously used to fire at the Rooivalks and other helicopters.
The attack was combined with a renewed FARDC assault and subsequent claims by the DRC government that the remaining M23 senior commanders have now fled across the border into Rwanda. However this could not be independently verified.
The Rooivalk project started its design phase in 1984 and had its first flight in April 1990. The development and manufacturing programme only concluded in 2011 when the eleven remaining airframes were upgraded to the "Block 1F" deployment baseline standard.