Iran hits U.S. Army CH-47F helicopter in Kuwait

Key Points
  • An apparent Iranian one-way drone strike damaged a U.S. Army CH-47F Chinook helicopter at Camp Buehring in Kuwait, with no casualties reported.
  • Published images show severe cockpit and front rotor damage, indicating the aircraft may be beyond repair.

A United States Army CH-47F Chinook transport helicopter was heavily damaged in what appears to have been an Iranian one-way drone strike at Camp Buehring in Kuwait in recent days.

Photos from the Camp show the helicopter’s cockpit area torn apart, with visible destruction to the forward rotor assembly and front blades. The extent of the damage suggests the aircraft was struck directly or by a blast close enough to cripple its most critical flight components.

No casualties have been reported.

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The Chinook is one of the Army’s main heavy-lift helicopters, used to move troops, equipment, ammunition, and supplies across the battlefield. Damage to the cockpit and front rotor is especially serious because these sections contain the flight controls, avionics, and structural components essential for safe operation.

Based on the images, the helicopter may be beyond repair. The forward fuselage appears to have suffered major blast damage, while the front rotor system shows clear signs of destruction. In cases where both the cockpit structure and rotor assembly are severely compromised, restoring the aircraft is often not practical.

Camp Buehring remains a key U.S. military hub in Kuwait, supporting troop deployments and logistics operations across the region. A strike on a parked transport helicopter at such a facility underscores the continuing vulnerability of high-value aircraft to one-way drone attacks.

These systems, often relatively inexpensive compared with the platforms they target, have increasingly been used to hit bases, aircraft, and infrastructure. Even a single successful strike can impose a heavy operational cost when it disables a major airlift asset such as the Chinook.

The absence of reported injuries suggests the aircraft may not have been occupied when the strike occurred.

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