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Morocco Receives Second Batch of U.S. AH-64E Apache Helicopters Expanding Combat Strike Capability.
Morocco has taken delivery of six additional Boeing AH-64E Apache attack helicopters, bringing its operational fleet to 12 aircraft and establishing a credible attack aviation capability.
The April 7 delivery advances a 24-unit acquisition signed in 2020 and moves the fleet into sustained operations, including pilot training, maintenance rotation, and initial combat readiness. Equipped with Longbow radar, advanced sensors, and networked targeting, the AH-64E enables coordinated precision strikes across dispersed battlefields, strengthening Morocco’s ability to project force and respond rapidly to emerging threats.
Morocco’s second batch of AH-64E Apache helicopters strengthens the Royal Moroccan Air Force’s precision strike, reconnaissance, and close air support capabilities, marking a major step in Rabat’s shift toward a modern, networked attack aviation force (Picture source: Moroccan MoD).
Moroccan media reported on April 7 that the second lot consists of six helicopters, with serials in the 2407–2412 range, under the phased delivery of the 24-aircraft order signed with Boeing in 2020, alongside an option for 12 more. Operationally, that matters because moving from six aircraft to a reported 12 begins to create real fleet density: enough for crew conversion, maintenance rotation, training, and the first sustainable combat-ready detachments.
The armament package behind Morocco’s Apache program is what makes this acquisition strategically important. In its 2019 notification, the U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency listed 36 AH-64E helicopters for the broader potential sale package, including 551 AGM-114R Hellfire missiles, 60 AGM-114L Hellfires, 588 APKWS precision-guided rocket kits, 200 AIM-92H Stinger missiles, 93,000 rounds of 30 mm ammunition, 81 M261 rocket launchers, 78 M299 missile launchers, 36 M230E1 automatic guns, 36 M-TADS/PNVS sensor suites, 18 AN/APG-78 Longbow fire-control radars, MUMT-2 kits, and six Link 16 terminals. Boeing’s current AH-64E data shows a two-crew aircraft with a maximum operating weight of 23,000 pounds, speed above 150 knots, a 20,000-foot service ceiling, and a standard heavy load of 16 Hellfires, 76 rockets, and 1,200 rounds for the chain gun.
That weapons mix gives Morocco options across the full tactical spectrum. The 30 mm M230 allows rapid engagement of exposed troops, technicals, and light fortifications; Hellfire provides precision anti-armor and hardened-target strikes; APKWS provides a cheaper precision effect against dispersed vehicles and positions; and Stinger adds limited self-protection and counter-helicopter or low-slow air-threat capability. Combined with M-TADS/PNVS and Longbow radar, the AH-64E can search, classify, and attack targets by day or night and in degraded weather, rather than depending on visual conditions or a narrow target set.
The Apache matters because it compresses the kill chain. It can mask behind terrain, pop up briefly to acquire targets, distribute data across networks, and then engage with precision before repositioning. Boeing also emphasizes unmanned-aircraft control, digital connectivity, and performance improvements in hot-and-high conditions through more powerful T700 engines and transmission upgrades, all of which are highly relevant to Moroccan operations across desert, mountain, and littoral environments.
For Morocco, these capabilities are not abstract. They fit missions such as convoy escort in the Sahara, rapid reinforcement of isolated positions, armed overwatch for mechanized forces, anti-armor response, and interdiction against mobile threats in sparsely populated terrain. The Apache’s maritime-enabled fire-control radar is also important for a country with both Atlantic and Mediterranean coastlines and a strategic interest in protecting coastal approaches. In a broader fires architecture, the helicopter complements Morocco’s requested HIMARS launchers and its F-16 Block 72/V modernization, providing Rabat with a fast-reacting precision-strike layer between artillery and fixed-wing airpower.
This is also a sharp break from what Morocco has actually fielded until now. Multiple defense reports note that Morocco lacked a dedicated modern heavy attack helicopter force and instead relied mainly on aging SA342 Gazelles, historically used in anti-tank and reconnaissance roles and associated with HOT missile employment. Those aircraft were useful for light scouting and limited strike tasks, but they do not offer Apache-level armor protection, payload, sensor reach, target processing, or all-weather hunter-killer performance. Put simply, Morocco is moving from a light anti-armor helicopter tradition to a true contemporary attack aviation capability.
The Apache program also reflects the depth of Morocco’s defense relationship with the United States. Morocco is a major non-NATO ally, Washington and Rabat adopted a defense cooperation roadmap through 2030, and Morocco remains a central host of African Lion, AFRICOM’s largest annual exercise. The Utah National Guard’s state partnership with Morocco has already included Apache familiarization and interoperability work, which is important because platform delivery alone does not create capability; doctrine, sustainment, and training do.
The regional context is impossible to ignore. Morocco and Algeria remain strategic rivals; their border has been closed since 1994, Algeria cut diplomatic relations in 2021, and the Western Sahara dispute remains the central political and military fault line, with Algeria backing the Polisario Front. U.S. policy has reinforced Rabat’s sense of strategic alignment: Washington recognized Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara in 2020, and U.S. support for Morocco’s autonomy framework was reaffirmed again in 2025. In that environment, every major Moroccan procurement carries both operational and signaling value.
That does not mean the Apache suddenly overturns the regional balance; U.S. officials explicitly said the sale would not alter the basic military balance. But it does give Morocco a qualitatively different rotary-wing strike instrument at a time when Algeria has long invested in Russian-built attack helicopter capability, including Mi-28NE orders. What Morocco gains is not just lethality, but Western-standard interoperability, better sensor-to-shooter integration, and a platform built to work inside an increasingly U.S.-centric Moroccan force design.
The real significance of this news is that Morocco is no longer merely buying prestige hardware. It is building a credible attack aviation arm with the sensors, munitions, training pipeline, and joint-force relevance to matter in a real contingency. The second Apache batch signals that Rabat’s modernization is shifting from announcement to executable combat power.