Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Fabey
The U.S. military services have been failing to follow Defense Department acquisition rules for work done under a Department of Energy (DOE) interagency buying program, according to the Pentagon Inspector General (IG). “DOD has significant contracting problems when using DOE,” the IG says. “DOD requesting activities continue to use DOE for assisted interagency acquisitions while DOE has not certified that it will comply with Defense procurement requirements.”

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — Bharat Electronics Ltd. (BEL) has delivered the Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) Interrogator to Boeing for installation on the Indian navy’s P-8I long-range maritime reconnaissance and anti-submarine warfare aircraft. Boeing will install the system during P-8I final assembly at its facility in Renton, Wash. The P-8I is a variant of the P-8A Poseidon developed for the U.S. Navy.

Staff
International Launch Services is preparing for a Dec. 27 liftoff of a Proton Breeze M with Eutelsat’s Ka-Sat high-throughput broadband satellite, following a go-ahead from the Russian State Commission investigating the Dec. 5 Proton failure on a Glonass launch mission.

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — As international defense providers look to honor their offset commitments in India, partnerships to help tap the country’s vast titanium reserves could emerge as an attractive proposition. The main sources of titanium in India are beach sands in its southern and eastern states that contain monazite and ilmenite. But despite these resources, titanium still must be imported because of a lack of indigenous capability to convert titanium ore into metal.

U.S. Government Accountability Office
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Michael Fabey
Whether the dual-block buy for the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) makes long-term economic sense could depend on how the U.S. Navy develops the LCS combat systems, analysts say. The Senate approved legislation supporting the dual-block buy Dec. 21. The expectation is that the House will also approve the measure and President Obama will sign it into law.

Staff
NEW DISHES: NASA has awarded a $40.7 million contract to General Dynamics SATCOM Technologies of San Jose, Calif., for two additional 34-meter (112-ft.) Deep Space Network (DSN) antennas at Canberra, Australia. This is part of Phase I of a plan to eventually retire the network’s aging 70-meter (230-ft.) antennas. DSN consists of communications complexes in Goldstone, Calif., Madrid and Canberra. The 70-meter antennas are more than 40 years old and are showing signs of surface deterioration from constant use.

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — NASA’s Mission Control exercised the Canadian Space Agency’s Dextre robotic manipulator on Dec. 23, establishing its readiness to unload cargo from Japan’s second unmanned H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV) cargo transport, Kounotori, which is scheduled for a late January liftoff. The exercise followed a Dec. 22 reboost of the orbiting science laboratory using the thrusters of the Russian 39 Progress.

Staff
KIOWA MILESTONE: The U.S. Army’s OH-58F Kiowa Warrior passed its Milestone B review Dec. 21, officially entering its Engineering and Manufacturing Development phase. The OH-58F includes a Cockpit and Sensor Upgrade Program as well as Level 2 Manned Unmanned Teaming, a Common Missile Warning System, Health and Usage Monitoring systems, and enhanced weapons functionality via 1760 digital interface, according to the Army. The OH-58F upgrade program uses funds reprogrammed from the canceled ARH-70A Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter.

Amy Butler
The U.S. Air Force is continuing efforts to field new wide-area surveillance systems in Afghanistan, including the recent first combat sortie of the Blue Devil aircraft project there. The Blue Devil program consists of two segments — one is a small aircraft and another, under development, includes the use of a large airship, government officials say.

Amy Butler
Ashton Carter plans to resign his tenured position at Harvard University and continue his work as procurement czar at the Pentagon “as long as the president and the secretary of defense want me to keep doing what I’m doing,” he tells Aviation Week. Tenured Harvard staff members are given two years for a leave of absence for public service. Carter took his post as undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics on April 27, 2009. His time is near to cut ties there in order to stay at his Pentagon post.

Staff
Researchers who need microgravity to test new technologies may be matched with potential commercial suborbital-flight providers through a new solicitation by NASA’s Office of the Chief Technologist. Bidders will be able to propose technology payloads for parabolic atmospheric t rips and suborbital missions to help the U.S. space agency reduce risk as it expands its program of commercial spaceflight.

Anantha Krishnan M.
BENGALURU, India—India test-fired two nuclear-capable Prithvi-II short-range ballistic missiles on Dec. 22 from Launch Complex-3 at the Interim Test Range at Balasore, off the Orissa coast. The test of the 350-km.-range (220-mi.) missile was part of user trials conducted by the Indian army. Personnel from India’s elite Strategic Force Command (SFC) launched the first missile at 8:15 a.m. local time and the second at 9:15 a.m.

Kristin Majcher
START ANEW: The U.S. Senate voted Dec. 22 to ratify the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (Start) with Russia, at a final vote of 71-26. The pact, signed by President Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev April 8, limits strategic nuclear warheads on deployed ICBMs and SLBMs to 1,550, down from the 2,220 limit allowed by the 2002 Moscow Treaty. The treaty also will allow the U.S. and Russia to resume on-site inspections of each others’ nuclear stockpiles, which ceased when the original Start treaty became defunct in December 2009.

Michael Fabey
While lawmakers may feel as if the U.S. Navy has backed them into a corner with its proposal for a dual-block buy of the service’s Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) fleet, approving the deal was probably the best play on the Hill. The Senate approved legislation supporting the dual-block buy Dec. 21. The expectation is that the House will also approve the measure and President Obama will sign it into law.

Staff
Workers at Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne (PWR) have completed the second of two propellant turbopumps for NASA’s J-2X rocket engine, setting the stage for final assembly and hot-fire tests of the Saturn-heritage engine early next year. The J-2X fuel turbopump, which PWR says could drain a 20,000-gal. swimming pool in 2 min., moves liquid hydrogen through the engine to cool its combustion chamber and nozzle before mixing the fuel with liquid oxygen to burn for thrust.

GAO
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Graham Warwick
Operational test flights of the RQ-4B Global Hawk Block 30 have been completed, paving the way for a decision on full-rate production as Northrop Grumman and the U.S. Air Force are in talks to drive down costs on the unmanned aircraft. Initial operational test and evaluation (IOT&E) flights of the Block 30M carrying the Airborne Signals Intelligence Payload (ASIP) were completed on Dec. 14.

Michael Fabey
Congress wants the U.S. Navy to submit a report by March 31 to show how the service plans to incorporate its ship-based ballistic missile defense requirements with its force structure needs, according to the recently passed defense authorization legislation. The report should include : • An analysis of whether the requirement for sea-based missile defense can be accommodated by upgrading Aegis ships that exist as of the date of the report or by procuring additional combatant surface vessels.

Staff
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Frank Morring, Jr.
Congressional action to fund the government through March 4, 2011, leaves NASA pretty much right where it started in February when the Fiscal 2011 budget came out, with everything—from an extra space shuttle flight to early use of commercial replacements for the shuttle—uncertain.

Michael Fabey
Last weekend’s successful Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System (Emals) at Lakehurst, N.J., did more than just save the future of the next-generation aircraft carrier. The Dec. 18 catapult shot of an F/A-18E Super Hornet using Emals also may have secured future Navy aviation, saved the job of more than one admiral and made Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding a much-more viable and valuable property should the unit be spun off as a stand-alone company.

Amy Butler
The Pentagon remains willing to slow F-35 Joint Strike Fighter production to shore up problems in the development and testing portion of the single-engine stealthy fighter program, says Ashton Carter, who oversees procurement for the U.S. Defense Department.

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — NASA will aim for a Jan. 26 Flight Readiness Review to formally assess the troubleshooting of small cracks in a pair of stringers on the external tank (ET) of the shuttle Discovery and a possible launch of the STS-133 mission during a window lasting Feb. 3-10. Discovery’s mission, the final flight of NASA’s senior orbiter, has been on hold since Nov. 5, when an unrelated hydrogen leak forced a scrub in the launch of the 11-day assembly and supply mission to the International Space Station.