Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

DOD
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Michael A. Taverna
An initial purchase under a new U.S. Navy commercial satellite procurement program highlights a looming shift in the government’s bandwidth procurement setup, and what that means for satellite operators. The award, under a five-year indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (ID/IQ) arrangement, could ultimately be worth up to $542.7 million to the Intelsat General Corp. team that won it, and may lead to potential contract add-ons as well, according to Britt Lewis, VP of marketing and business strategy at Intelsat General.

Graham Warwick
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) will develop a next-generation, open-architecture ground control system (GCS) for its Predator and Reaper unmanned aircraft under a $26.6 million U.S. Air Force contract. The Block 50 Advanced Cockpit will address issues with human factors and proprietary interfaces in the existing GCS and provide for future flexibility and growth, including multi-aircraft control.

Andy Nativi Andy
GENOA, Italy — Selex Galileo will supply two Precision Approach Radars (PARs) to the Italian air force and five more to the Swiss air force under contracts worth a total of €31 million ($41.8 million).

Bettina H. Chavanne
OLD FAITHFUL: As the U.S. Army works on evaluating its Armed Aerial Scout requirement, the aging Kiowa Warrior helicopter fleet is preparing for a decision on a development start for a Cockpit and Sensor Upgrade, part of the ongoing Operational Service Extension Program that will extend the life of the fleet through 2025.

Douglas Barrie
LONDON — The U.K. appears to have shelved — at least for now — the notion of acquiring additional airlifters as a gapfiller until the anticipated 2015 entry into service with the Royal Air Force (RAF) of the Airbus Military A400M.

Robert Wall
LONDON — Germany is still assessing whether it needs to cut its A400M military transport aircraft buy, but the U.K.’s decision to trim its purchase effectively limits the scope of a German reduction. What is more, Berlin is still trying to figure out how to buy its commitment of 60 of the military transports.

Graham Warwick
The U.S. Navy’s “Great Green Fleet” goal grabbed a bit more attention March 31 when President Barack Obama used a so-called “Green Hornet” as a backdrop to his announcement on offshore drilling.

DOD
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Bettina H. Chavanne
MINI ME: The U.S. Air Force recently received an “operationally significant quantity” of Raytheon’s Miniature Air Launched Decoy (MALD), according to the company. MALD is a modular, air-launched, programmable flight vehicle weighing less than 300 pounds with a range of about 500 nautical miles. MALD is currently integrated on the B-52 and F-16 and can be certified on any aircraft with a 14-inch suspension carriage, according to the company. Raytheon says it hopes to deliver a jamming variant of the MALD to the Air Force in 2012.

By Joe Anselmo
Triumph Group’s move to acquire Vought Aircraft Industries Inc. from Carlyle Group for $1.4 billion in stock and cash is certainly bold. The transaction, which is expected to close in July, would propel Triumph up the aerospace supply chain in one big step, bolstering its core aircraft systems and aftermarket services business with a major aerostructures provider for the Boeing 747-8, 777 and C-17, and Airbus A320 and A340.

Staff
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Bettina H. Chavanne
The first flight of the U.S. Marine Corps’ heavy lifter CH-53K helicopter has slipped two years to 2013, while its initial operational capability (IOC) has slid three years to 2018, officials have confirmed to AVIATION WEEK.

Graham Warwick
As recognition grows that cyber-attacks are a threat to national and economic security, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) is looking to a future in which all systems must be designed, tested and certified for security. Darpa’s contribution to the U.S. government’s Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative to protect federal networks is to build the National Cyber Range, an automated and instrumented site for large-scale testing to assess the readiness of cybersecurity technologies and systems.

By Guy Norris
HARTFORD, Conn. — Pratt & Whitney will continue to fight support of a second engine for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, President David Hess says. “The customers who might use a second engine don’t want it — they don’t want to spend the money,” he says. “I take the same position as the taxpayer. It will take another $2.9 billion over the next five to six years to complete development of a second engine.”

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS — Telesat of Canada says it has signed up an anchor customer that will enable it to purchase and launch a new direct-to-home spacecraft. The customer, Canadian digital TV service provider Shaw Direct, will lease 16 extended Ku-band transponders for the full, 15-year life of the new satellite, which will be inserted at a slot at 107.3 W. Long. The spacecraft, to be called Anik G1, will be ordered in the second quarter and is expected to be launched in the second half of 2012.

Andy Nativi Andy
GENOA, Italy — The Italian ministry of defense is increasing the pressure on both the U.S. government and F-35 Joint Strike Fighter prime contractor Lockheed Martin to win better terms for technology transfer and local industry involvement.

Michael Bruno
TANKER EXTENSION: The Pentagon is willing to extend the deadline for bids for the U.S. Air Force KC-X to July 9, giving industry another 60 days to prepare proposals. The move comes as EADS has leaked its interest in bidding for the beleaguered aerial refueling tanker program against Boeing. Although EADS had indicated it wanted 90 more days to bid, “We consider 60 days to be reasonable in this case,” Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said late March 31. The Air Force will compress its bid evaluation period, so it can still award the contract this fall as planned.

Amy Butler
The U.S. Air Force is proposing to take over management of the Missile Defense Agency’s (MDA) Battle Management Command and Control (BMC2) and integrate it into a global network of air operations centers (AOCs), Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz says. Schwartz says other services are interested in managing the system once it is transferred from MDA for operational use, and this decision will likely be made among senior uniformed officials on the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon.

Amy Butler
It would be in the interest of taxpayers to allow EADS North America an extension of the U.S. Air Force’s due date for KC-135 replacement bids if the company is serious about entering the competition, Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz says.

Robert Wall
The Pentagon is still discussing what tactical unmanned aircraft to provide the Pakistani military, and the outcome of the talks could lead to a change in the original plan to deliver 12 Textron AAI Shadow UAVs.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA’s abandonment of the Constellation program represents a “change in approach and philosophy,” but not a change to the ultimate goal of sending human explorers into the Solar System, according to the agency’s number two exploration official. The Obama administration plans to terminate the Constellation program, including the Ares launch vehicles and Orion spacecraft being developed for a lunar return, in favor of a multipronged effort aimed at enabling technologies for future deep-space exploration.

Andy Nativi Andy
GENOA, Italy — The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) plans to start operating its second Alenia Aeronautica ATR-42 MP maritime patrol aircraft, which will be based at Benin City AB, 400 kilometers (250 miles) north of Lagos. The second ATR-42 was delivered March 29. The order for two of the aircraft, worth $73 million, was announced in 2006 but signed in March 2007 and called for the delivery of both aircraft by the end of 2009. The first one was delivered in December.

Douglas Barrie
LONDON — Procurement problems at the core of the decision-making process on one of the U.K.’s largest private finance initiative (PFI) projects — the Defense Ministry’s Future Strategic Tanker Aircraft (FSTA) — are laid bare in a report by the government’s finance watchdog, the National Audit Office (NAO).

Frank Morring, Jr.
BENGALURU, India — India’s human spaceflight program is funded for a four-year development-and-trial effort that will build and fly an unmanned capsule to test its crew environmental control and life-support system (ECLSS) and launch-escape system, says K. Radhakrisnan, the new chairman of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO).