Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Amy Butler
The U.S. Air Force is mulling its options for the military weather satellite system that it will build in lieu of the failed Npoess program. The Pentagon is calling the new program the Defense Weather Satellite System, according to a defense official. During a Defense Acquisition Board (DAB) meeting at the Pentagon last month, procurement czar Ashton Carter gave the Air Force 45 days to review satellite bus design options. The launch goal is Fiscal 2018.

Anantha Krishnan M.
BENGALURU, India — The Helicopter Academy to Train by Simulation of Flying (Hatsoff), the joint venture owned equally by Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL) and CAE, is finally ready in Bengaluru. The facility’s 412 full-mission simulator has been certified to Level D, the highest qualification, by India’s Directorate General Civil Aviation (DGCA) and the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA).

By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL—NASA managers July 1 decided to delay the last two missions of the space shuttle program to allow more time to prepare a final load of spare parts for the International Space Station. To cover shuttle operating expenses beyond Sept. 30, NASA will dip into an expected $600-million cushion promised by legislators and tap savings that managers have been accruing from the program’s roughly $200 million monthly allotments.

Amy Butler
More questions than answers seem to be arising from the U.S. Navy/Air Force Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) for “coordination of synergy” efforts on their respective high-altitude reconnaissance unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). Signed June 12 by the services’ chiefs of staff, the goal is to produce operational and financial efficiencies in the Global Hawk and Broad Area Maritime Surveillance programs, both of which are in development (though the USAF Global Hawk has had the advantage of a head start of several years on its younger cousin).

Frank Morring, Jr.
Japanese space managers are planning a second sample return mission to an asteroid, following the Hayabusa asteroid probe’s spectacular return from a 6 billion km. trip to the space rock known as Itokawa. Experts in Sagamihara, Japan, are using a state-of-the-art curation facility to evaluate the contents of the Hayabusa sample canister (Aerospace DAILY, June 15, 21).

AVIATION WEEK MRO Military Europe September 29-30, 2010 ExCeL • London, UK Increased pressure on defense budgets means that assets must be maintained longer. Sustaining aircraft for extended periods and prolonging lifecycle requires planning and forethought. Are you prepared? MRO Military Europe is an important event for anyone with a stake in this dynamic industry sector.

Bettina H. Chavanne
Germany, Israel and Taiwan top the list of countries interested in Sikorsky’s new CH-53K, now scheduled for first flight in 2013. The heavy lifter, which is headed for service with the U.S. Marine Corps, has suffered from delays, including a slip in initial operational capability of three years, to 2018. The delays seem not to faze the Marines and the CH-53K program office at Naval Air Systems Command (Navair). The extra time “buys [foreign countries] time to make an informed decision,” says Capt. Rick Muldoon, program manager.

Staff
Canadian scientists and engineers will use funds from the Canadian Space Agency to work on three different proposals for the next NASA New Frontiers mission to another body in the Solar System. Under separate $500,000 contracts from the CSA, Canada’s MDA and the University of Calgary will work with science teams developing the finalist proposals.

Anantha Krishnan M.
BENGALURU, India — India’s minister of state for defence, Pallam Raju, reviewed a series of helicopter projects underway at Bengaluru-based Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL) on July 1. “He was given an update on Dhruv, Light Combat Helicopter [LCH], Light Utility Helicopter, Chetak, Chetal and Cheetah,” a defense ministry official tells AVIATION WEEK. “The minister was keen to know about the serviceability and operational requirements of all the choppers.”

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — A contract awarded by India’s Home Affairs Ministry to MKU, an India-based supplier of body armor, will include Honeywell’s Gold Shield and Spectra Shield composite materials for ballistics protection. Modernizing India’s police forces has been a top priority following the Mumbai terrorist attacks. The Indian homeland security budget is set to grow by 25% this year, making India one of the fastest-growing markets for homeland security equipment in the world.

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Michael Fabey
Logistical delays and poor use of air support and intelligence contributed to a bloody battle at a remote outpost in Afghanistan eventually abandoned by U.S. forces, a recent Pentagon Inspector General (IG) investigation confirmed.

Bettina H. Chavanne
Virginia Sen. Jim Webb (D), long opposed to homeporting a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in Mayport, Fla., has latched onto a recent Pentagon cost-cutting initiative as justification against using the Florida base.

Staff
ORBITAL AWARD: NASA has picked Orbital Sciences Corp. to launch the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) spacecraft in December 2012 aboard a Pegasus XL rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. IRIS is a NASA Small Explorer (SMEX) mission to measure the flow of solar energy through the dynamic region in the Sun’s corona and heliosphere to help scientists better understand the effects of solar energy release on Earth.

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — The U.S. is expected to receive a letter of request from the Indian government for a proposed Foreign Military Sale (FMS) of the Javelin man-portable anti-tank missile system. Built by a joint venture of Raytheon and Lockheed Martin, the Javelin has been demonstrated to the Indian army and was brought last October to a joint Indo-U.S. training exercise aimed at sharing experience in peacekeeping, humanitarian/disaster relief and counter-insurgency/counter-terrorism operations.

Staff
In observance of the U.S. Independence Day holiday, Aerospace Daily & Defense Report will not publish an issue on July 4. The next issue will be dated July 5.

Robert Wall
BRUSSELS — The German military is boosting its unmanned aircraft capacity in Afghanistan with the deployment of additional vehicles and new sensors.

Graham Warwick
Northrop Grumman hopes to demonstrate a week-long flight by a Global Hawk unmanned aircraft using autonomous aerial refueling at high altitude from another Global Hawk acting as a tanker. The week-long flight is an option under Northrop’s 24-month, $33 million contract from the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Project Agency for the KQ-X unmanned tanker demonstration. This is a follow-on to an autonomous aerial refueling demonstration conducted by Darpa in 2006 using a NASA F/A-18 and a 707 tanker.

U.S. Department of Defense
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Robert Wall
LONDON — The Luftwaffe’s efforts to renew its airborne signals intelligence capability have moved one step closer to realization with the first flight of the Euro Hawk unmanned aircraft. The Euro Hawk, a derivative of the Global Hawk Block 20 the U.S. Air Force is buying, flew on June 29 from 10:32 a.m. to 12:24 p.m. local time from Palmdale to Edwards AFB, Calif., where the initial checkouts are taking place. The air vehicle reached 32,000 ft.

Madhu Unnikrishnan
As expected, the World Trade Organization (WTO) ruled that some launch aid subsidies Airbus received from European governments for its aircraft programs are “actionable”—a ruling the European Union (EU) says it may appeal.

Michael Bruno
STATUS QUO: Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments President Andrew Krepinevich warns that one unintended consequence of fiscal pressures on national security could be even less inherent technology development. With no other superpowers like the former U.S.S.R. jockeying with the U.S. for military supremacy, and financial restraints pushing down on the Pentagon, the U.S. military is increasingly looking toward recapitalizing existing forces rather than modernizing them. For example, Krepinevich says, the Navy looks to build more DDG-51s than costlier DDG-1000s.

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Army Ground Combat Vehicle (GCV) will be one of the first test cases for Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ acquisition reform push. Contractor teams recently submitted bids for the GCV, which the Army plans to use to replace the stalwart Bradley. But the Army wants more than just an upgraded Bradley. Thanks to lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan, the service wants a vehicle designed from the ground up to withstand blasts from improvised explosive devices.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The U.S. Joint Strike Fighter program office is developing options to allow the Netherlands to withdraw from the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter initial operational test and evaluation phase. A Dutch delegation recently met with U.S. officials to discuss the issue. The Dutch participation in the IOT&E phase is in limbo as a result of a combination of factors: a parliamentary move prior to recent general elections and the uncertainty over the country’s leadership owing to no clear election outcome.

Graham Warwick
The Obama administration plans to create a single, independent licensing agency as part of its drive to modernize and streamline U.S. export controls. The move would merge the licensing activities of the State, Commerce and other departments. “The administration supports the creation of an independent entity,” National Security Advisor James Jones told a Senate Aerospace Caucus lunch in Washington June 30.