Lebanon’s cash-strapped army sells helicopter rides

A Lebanese Air Force Robinson R44 Raven II helicopter prepares for take off with journalists during a press tour at Rayaq military air base in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon on July 1, 2021. (JOSEPH EID / AFP)

HAMAT AIR BASE, Lebanon – Hit by the collapse of Lebanon's economy, the army has started selling rides on its helicopters to finance their maintenance, a measure of the depth of the financial troubles facing the country.

"The war we are in is economic and therefore requires unconventional means … and the idea we had was to do helicopter tours," Colonel Hassan Barakat, an army spokesman, said.

The war we are in is economic and therefore requires unconventional means … and the idea we had was to do helicopter tours … The cost of these trips secures the essential maintenance of the planes.

Colonel Hassan Barakat, Lebanese army spokesman

"The cost of these trips secures the essential maintenance of the planes." A 15-minute rides on an army Robinson R44 training helicopter costs US$150.

Lebanon is suffering from what the World Bank has described as one of deepest depressions in modern history. The currency has lost more than 90 percent of its value in less than two years and more than half the population has sunk into poverty.

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Army commander General Joseph Aoun warned last month that the crisis, caused by decades of corruption and waste in government, would lead to the collapse of all state institutions including the army, noting that the value of a soldier's monthly salary was now US$90.

A big recipient of US military support, the army has underpinned Lebanon's stability since the end of the 1975-90 civil war. Qatar announced this week it would provide the army with 70 tonnes of food per month.

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Journalists are given a press tour in a Lebanese Air Force Robinson R44 Raven II taking off from Rayaq military air base to Zahle in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon on July 1, 2021. (JOSEPH EID / AFP)

"It's a nice experience for my children to see Lebanon, and the beautiful Lebanese coast from the air," said Adib Dakkash, 43, visiting from Switzerland.

"I prefer to spend US$150 so that army helicopters continue to operate, so that the pilots and officers continue to fly, instead of spending it in a restaurant, on food or meaningless things."