Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

David A. Fulghum
JERUSALEM — Top planners are using the intellectual anarchy of teenagers to supercharge decision-making for Jerusalem’s military, industry and government.

Michael Bruno
ISRAELI APPROPRIATIONS: The U.S. House defense appropriations subcommittee is recommending $217.7 million for U.S.-Israel missile defense programs, an increase of $95.7 million over the original request, according to member Rep. Steve Rothman (D-N.J.). “Given the concern and attention that we are focusing now on every dollar ... it is a mark of the importance of these projects that they were all funded so robustly and fully by our subcommittee,” he said.

Robert Wall
LONDON — Despite concerns about defense cutbacks in the U.K. and flattening U.S. defense spending, Ultra Electronics sees sufficient opportunities globally to continue its business strategy.

Staff
China’s satellite navigation constellation gained another spacecraft over the weekend with the launch of a Beidou (Compass) spacecraft on a Long March 3A lifting off from the Xichang space center in Southwest China. The use of the Long March 3A suggests that the satellite is one of the 30 that will operate in low Earth orbit. A Long March 3C launched the third of the five geostationary satellites planned for the system Jan. 17, and the fourth June 2 (Aerospace DAILY, Jan. 20, June 4). All told there are now five active Beidou spacecraft in orbit.

Andy Savoie
MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY

Michael Fabey
No one government agency claims the Landsat remote sensing system as its own, and that void has knocked the program’s development off track, a recent Congressional Research Service (CRS) report says. “The lack of a permanent agency home for Landsat was a major factor in the impending data gap in the Landsat series, and planning for a follow-on instrument after the five-year-life of Landsat Data Continuity Mission (LDCM-1 spacecraft) is still in limbo,” CRS says in its report. Joint ops

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — India’s Defense Research & Development Organization (DRDO) is increasingly looking at technology partners for various projects to give its homeland security-related development work some thrust, and is talking with Saab and EADS for assistance.

By Guy Norris
LOS ANGELES — The third Boeing P-8A Poseidon aircraft, T3, is being prepared for transfer to U.S. Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Md., following the completion of its first flight in Seattle on July 29.

Andy Savoie
ARMY Longbow LLC, Orlando, Fla., was awarded on July 22 a $39,509,964 cost-plus-fixed-fee contract for the award of engineering services for the Hellfire and Longbow missile requirements. The work is to be performed in Orlando (50%); Baltimore (25%); United Arab Emirates (10%); and Taiwan (15%), with an estimated completion date of Sept. 30, 2012. One bid was solicited with one bid received. U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command, AMSAM-AC-TM-H, Redstone Arsenal, Ala., is the contracting activity (W31P4Q-10-C-0256). NAVY

Aerospace Daily & Defense Report
Aerospace & Defense Earnings Snapshot (for quarter ended June 30, 2010) Aerospace & Defense Earnings Snapshot (for quarter ended June 30, 2010) Company Revenues (vs. year ago) Operating Income (vs.

Mark Carreau
NASA has selected Raytheon Technical Services Co. for a potential $119.9 million, five-year contract to operate, maintain and provide sustaining engineering for the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory and Space Vehicle Mockup Facility at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Andy Savoie
The third and final attempt to flight test the Boeing HyFly hypersonic missile demonstrator has failed. The booster did not ignite and the missile fell into the Pacific Ocean after release from an F-15E on July 29. HyFly is a U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) program to demonstrate technology for a tactical missile with a cruise speed exceeding Mach 6 and a range of 400 nm. from an air launch and 600 nm. from a surface launch.

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — Around-the-clock preparations were underway in NASA’s Mission Control on Aug. 2 for the first of two spacewalks over the next week to replace the International Space Station’s external cooling loop pump module that shut down over the weekend, triggering a power-down of two control moment gyroscopes and other space station subsystems. Station flight engineers Doug Wheelock and Tracy Caldwell Dyson are scheduled to float from the U.S. airlock on Thursday, Aug. 5, just before 7 a.m. EDT, to begin the repairs.

Robert Wall
To smooth the way for the Iraqi Air Force (IqAF) to field F-16 fighters, the U.S. and Iraqi government have signed an agreement to provide training for the first batch of IqAF F-16 pilots. A deal for the purchase of 18 Block 52 F-16s has not yet been finalized, but the two sides nevertheless have decided to assure the IqAF will have personnel trained and ready to operate the fighter. Under the terms of the agreement, 10 pilots will undergo 12-17 months of training, depending on their skill level.

Andy Savoie
AIR FORCE CAE USA Inc., Tampa, Fla., was awarded a $10,643,648.00 contract to purchase seven C-5 avionics modernization program training devices and five reliability enhancement re-engining program training devices for the C-5 aircrew training system for the following users: Air Material Command, Air National Guard, and Air Force Reserve Command. At this time, $10,643,648.00 has been obligated. GHMKA, Hill AFB, Utah, is the contracting activity (F8223-10-R-3000/2). NAVY

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — The Indian Air Force is looking to modernize 27 base repair depots and equipment depots located all over India, and has invited industry to express interest in bidding.

Staff
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David A. Fulghum
TEL AVIV and JERUSALEM—Non-state groups have ballistic missiles, distant neighbors are refining weapons-grade uranium, long-range rockets can now hit anywhere in Israel and there are few governments that can be held responsible for any act of war or terror in the Middle East. With that kind of environment, planning a defense budget takes on nightmarish qualities since any misplaced priority can have effects that stretch for years.

Graham Warwick, Amy Butler
Ultimate procurement numbers for the U.S. Navy/Marine Corps Small Tactical Unmanned Aircraft System (Stuas) will depend on whether the Insitu Integrator can operate from cruisers and destroyers now equipped with the Boeing subsidiary’s smaller ScanEagle unmanned aircraft.

Staff
The U.S. Air Force will consolidate its fifth-generation F-22 fighter force in Alaska, Virginia, Nevada and Florida, deactivating a squadron at Holloman AFB, N.M., along the way, according to one of many basing decisions announced July 30. One squadron at Holloman will be split up to equip other F-22 units, with six more of the Lockheed Martin aircraft in turn going to Elmendorf AFB, six to Langley AFB, two to Nellis AFB, and one additional squadron to Tyndall AFB.

David A. Fulghum
NAVAL AIR STATION PATUXENT RIVER, Md. — The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter’s mission is to penetrate the threat ring of the world’s best anti-aircraft defenses and survive, but its formula will work only if the right improvements and upgrades are in place, including the Next Generation Jammer (NGJ).

Staff
QUICKER UNDERWAY: A continuous series of production and process improvements has enabled General Dynamics Electric Boat to deliver the to-be Missouri, the fifth and latest Virginia-class submarine, nine months ahead of schedule and 21 months ahead of the lead ship of the class, the company claims. On July 29, Electric Boat delivered the nuclear-powered attack submarine (SSN-780) to the U.S. Navy in a record 65 months and 8% under target cost.

Frank Morring, Jr.
A NASA Advisory Council (NAC) subcommittee is echoing frustrated members of Congress in asking the U.S. space agency to provide more detail and justification for its plan to substitute commercial space taxis for the Orion crew exploration vehicle and its Ares I launcher as a route to the International Space Station (ISS) for astronauts. The subcommittee met July 29th to preare its findings and recommendations for a meeting of the full NAC at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory Aug. 5-6.