through the
Fulda Gap and the
North German Plains (according to the U.S. Army) During the mid-1960s, the
United States Army initiated the Advanced Aerial Fire Support System (AAFSS) program, which led to the development of the
Lockheed AH-56 Cheyenne for use in the anti-tank gunship role. The US Army pursued the
AH-1G HueyCobra as an "interim type" for the "jungle fighting" role. However, the Army's broader concern was the task of protecting Western Europe from the legions of
Warsaw Pact armor to the east. The main scenario used by
NATO throughout the
Cold War was that, if the
Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact forces were to conduct a massive tank offensive attack on Western Europe, they would probably cross either the
Fulda Gap (capturing
Frankfurt first and then aiming for the westward bend of the
Rhine south of
Wiesbaden: a total distance of just 85 miles), or cross the
North German Plain (see map). The Advanced Attack Helicopter was conceived from the need to defend against such an attack. In 1971, political friction increased between the Army and the Air Force over the close air support (CAS) mission. The Air Force asserted that the Cheyenne would infringe on the Air Force's CAS mission in support of the Army, which had been mandated with the
Key West Agreement of 1948. The Department of Defense (DOD) conducted a study which concluded that the Air Force's A-X program, the Navy's proposed
Harrier, and the Cheyenne were significantly different and that they did not constitute a duplication of capabilities. The Army convened a special task force under General Marks in January 1972, to reevaluate the requirements for an attack helicopter. In April 1972, the Senate published its report on CAS. The report recommended funding of the Air Force's A-X program, which would become the
A-10 Thunderbolt II, and limited procurement of the Harrier for the Navy. The report never referred to the Cheyenne by name and only offered a lukewarm recommendation for the Army to continue to seek to procure attack helicopters, so long as their survivability could be improved. The Cheyenne program was canceled by the Army on 9 August 1972. The helicopter's large size and inadequate night/all-weather capability were reasons stated by the Army for the cancellation. ==Requirements, proposals, and prototypes==