Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Andy Savoie
ARMY Oshkosh Corp., Oshkosh, Wis., was awarded a $101,920,000 firm-fixed-price indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contract on Feb. 7, 2011. The award will provide for 2,080 underbody improvement kits to support the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected All-Terrain Vehicle. The work will be performed in Oshkosh, with an estimated completion date of May 31, 2012. Five bids were solicited with five bids received. The U.S. Army TACOM LCMC, Warren, Mich., is the contracting activity (W56HZV-09-D-0111).

Robert Wall
LONDON — Saab is hoping that efforts to streamline operations will boost earnings margins this year as the Swedish aerospace and defense company confronts declining sales.

Graham Warwick
The U.S. Navy plans to change the airframe of the Northrop Grumman MQ-8 Fire Scout unmanned helicopter to extend endurance and payload to meet an urgent special operations requirement for a sea-based medium-range surveillance platform. Funds are requested in fiscal 2012 to buy the first 12 MQ-8Cs, based on the Bell 407 commercial helicopter rather than the smaller Schweizer (now Sikorsky) S-333 on which the MQ-8B is based.

Amy Butler
As the U.S. government and Lockheed Martin continue restructuring the $382 billion, multinational F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program, the parties are preparing for negotiations on the next production lot and to reset the original development contract in light of a recent cost overrun and delay. Lockheed Martin is expected to submit its proposal for the fifth low-rate, initial production (LRIP) lot of F-35s to the government in the next couple of weeks, kicking off another round of negotiations.

By Bradley Perrett
SINGAPORE and BEIJING — Japan is planning to issue a request for proposals (RFP) in March for new fighter aircraft under its F-X program. The country plans to order about 50 aircraft to replace its fleet of McDonnell Douglas F-4EJs. Industry executives say the defense ministry is working to get the RFP out next month so there will be enough time to evaluate proposals from vendors and come to a decision this calendar year.

Michael Bruno
Amid a heated debate about federal deficits, national security and domestic employment, the U.S. House of Representatives voted against continuing the General Electric/Rolls-Royce F136 alternate engine for the Joint Strike Fighter midday Feb. 16.

David A. Fulghum
The Russian military will deploy advanced air defenses and other reinforcements to the Kuril Islands just north of Japan’s northernmost main island of Hokkaido, according to a new report out of Russia. The weaponry will include the S-400 Triumf, according to RIA Novosti (the Russian International News Agency), quoting an unnamed high-ranking Russian General Staff official.

Anantha Krishnan M.
BENGALURU, India — BrahMos Aerospace chief A. Sivathanu Pillai says the joint Indian-Russian BrahMos supersonic cruise missile has “a firm order book of $10 billion for the next 10 years,” including weapons for both India and Russia.

Graham Warwick
Alternative ways of providing night-vision capability in the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, at least initially, are being considered because of performance issues with the aircraft’s helmet-mounted display (HMD). Developed by Rockwell Collins and Elbit Systems’ joint venture, Vision Systems International (VSI), the visor-projected HMD is performing adequately in daylight flights but falling short of requirements in night-vision mode, says U.S. Navy Vice Adm. David Venlet, head of the JSF Joint Program Office (JPO).

Michael Bruno
BOTTOM LINE: U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates is warning lawmakers that the Pentagon needs at least $540 billion in baseline funding for the fiscal year that ends Sept. 30, but that he knows it is unlikely the Defense Department will receive the full $549 billion it requested for fiscal 2011. The federal government, including the Defense Department, has been funded by an extension of 2010 appropriations since fiscal 2011 began Oct. 1, 2010.

U.S. Department of Defense
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Graham Warwick
Restructuring of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program dominates the U.S. Defense Department’s fiscal 2012 aircraft procurement plans, but disguises several adjustments as the Pentagon tries to reinvest savings in modernization. The U.S. Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps all see cuts following the Pentagon’s decision to reduce F-35 procurement by 124 aircraft over the fiscal 2012-16 future years defense plan (FYDP), in part to pay for a $4.6 billion increase in development costs.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS — Additional charges and provisions for overruns on several big programs, including the Airbus Military A400M airlifter, drove down profits at Thales last year. However, orders were better than expected and the company now feels it has removed the uncertainties on the affected projects, positioning the company for a return to profitability.

By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL — Efforts to update infrastructure at Kennedy Space Center, Fla., to accommodate a mix of commercial and government rockets is off to a slow start under the Obama administration’s $18.7 billion spending plan for NASA for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. The Florida spaceport would receive $128 million to kick off its 21st Century Launch Complex program and a total of $470 million over five years, the president’s new budget shows. Obama last year requested $500 million in 2012 and $1.9 billion over five years for the project.

Kristin Majcher
The U.S. Defense Department has increased its baseline fiscal 2012 operations and maintenance (O&M) request by about $1 billion, as well as shifted $19 billion from the shrinking overseas contingency operations (OCO) account into the baseline account. According to budget documents released Feb. 14, the $295.2 billion requested in O&M funding for 2012 includes a baseline budget request of $204.4 billion and an OCO request of $90.8 billion.

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy sees its SSBN(X) ballistic missile submarine replacement fleet basically as an improved model of the current SSBN boats leveraging Virginia-class sub advancements and refined construction methods. “The initial plan is for 16 tubes, a new-design reactor plant, [and] similar antennas and design to the Trident- and Virginia-class submarine,” Rear Adm. Joe Mulloy, deputy assistant secretary of the Navy for budget, said Feb. 14 during his briefing on the service’s fiscal 2012 budget proposal.

Anantha Krishnan M.
BENGALURU, India — The Indian air force (IAF) has begun preparations to form the first Tejas Light Combat Aircraft squadron here. The No. 45 Sqdn. will be known as the Flying Daggers (the same as MiG-21/MiG-21BIS squadron). Air Cmdr. B.R. Krishna, chief test pilot at the Aircraft Systems Testing Establishment (ASTE), tells Aviation Week that ASTE has identified two pilots to fly the Tejas as part of the IAF’s user evaluation, following the initial operational clearance (IOC) granted on Jan. 10.

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — An installation-by-installation look at the proposed 2012 NASA budget reveals that Johnson Space Center in Houston is perched high atop the financial pyramid, where it can expect to manage nearly $5 billion, or just more than 25%, of the agency’s spending. Most of the Texas funding, nearly $3.3 billion, will go for space operations to sustain the International Space Station, the human activity that seems to have the greatest domestic bipartisan as well as global backing; the tail end of shuttle operations; and some commercial support.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS — EchoStar Corp. has agreed to acquire Hughes Communications in a move that will recast the battle for control of the fast-growing broadband satellite service sector. The transaction for around $2 billion — including the refinancing of Hughes debt — was announced Feb. 14. It will give EchoStar control of Hughes’s main operating company, Hughes Network Systems (HNS), as well as its manufacturing unit, which is a leader in broadband and high-speed mobile satellite service (MSS) technologies.

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy plans to use multiyear contracts and other contracting strategies to refocus on a core mission set — building and operating the ships that move above and beneath the oceans. The Navy’s fiscal 2012 budget request and planned budget priorities over the coming five years show the service’s strong interest in its surface and submarine fleets — the service plans to buy another 55 ships by fiscal 2016, five more than initially planned during that time.

David A. Fulghum
Electronic warfare (EW) and cyber operations remain the bright spots in planning for the 2012 U.S. defense budget, even though there were no major increases compared to the 2011 request — which has still not cleared Congress.

Amy Butler
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency is requesting $8.6 billion in fiscal 2012, just slightly more than the $8.4 billion requested in fiscal 2011, to continue developing and fielding area, medium-range and long-range defenses against ballistic missile attack. This budget reflects about $2.4 billion that was removed from the MDA’s profile from fiscal 2012-2016 as the Pentagon trimmed its overall topline and sought efficiencies.