Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy needs to do a better job managing its process for rapidly fielding materiel solutions to meet urgent needs in support of the operations in Southwest Asia and to ensure the safety of naval forces, the Pentagon Inspector General (IG) says. While the Navy had adequate procedures for identifying and validating urgent capability needs and was following these procedures, it still lacked internal controls in key areas, the IG says in its recent report.

Douglas Barrie
AESA ACCORD: Selex Galileo and Brazil’s Atmos Sistemas have signed a memorandum of understanding covering potential collaboration on active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar technology. Selex Galileo’s Raven ES-05 AESA is on offer as part of the Saab Gripen NG package proposed for the Brazilian air force fighter competition. Besides potential collaboration on the Raven, Selex Galileo and Atmos Sistemas also are examining working together on other areas of AESA application.

www.fedbizopps.gov
DOD Presolicitations DOD Presolicitations Date of Posting Response Date Opportunity Segment Procurement Office Solicitation Code Contact E-Mail 31-Dec-09 07-Jan-10 US flag OSV to support navy testing Transportation, travel, & relocation services

Douglas Barrie
CASE CLOSED: Claims that “new evidence” has come to light justifying the reopening of an inquiry into the 1994 fatal crash of a British Chinook heavy lift helicopter are being dismissed by the British Defense Ministry. The ministry says that internal documents seen by the BBC were available to the inquiry team and as such are “not new evidence.” The documents, according to the BBC, identified a number of concerns related to software reliability in the full authority digital engine control system.

By Guy Norris
LOS ANGELES — Boeing says the Jan. 6 confirmation of the United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) long-anticipated order for six C-17s, rather than four as previously disclosed, boosts hopes it will sustain the threatened airlifter program through 2012.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The U.S. Army hopes to complete the first phase of an analysis of alternatives (AOA) for its aerial scouting needs by April, according to Maj. Gen. James Barclay, chief of Army aviation. The service’s plans to move forward with a replacement for its aging Kiowa Warrior helicopter fleet have been on hold since the cancellation of Bell Helicopter Textron’s Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter (ARH) program in October 2008. The Army launched an AOA to determine its next platform and in the meantime began extensive modifications and upgrades on all of its Kiowas.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS — The European Defense Agency (EDA) has issued EADS Astrium Services a contract to determine how European defense ministries can aggregate and coordinate their commercial telecommunications satellite defense needs. The EDA was charged last year with coordinating this requirement.

Paul McLeary
The U.S. Marine Corps recently released a study on the turn of the Sunni tribes in Anbar, Iraq, against al Qaeda beginning in 2007, and the paper is gaining attention for both its approach and its message, purposeful or not. In a departure from usual U.S. reviews, the Marine study — “Al-Anbar Awakening: Iraqi Perspectives From Insurgency to Counterinsurgency in Iraq, 2004-2009” — is from the local perspective and it makes some blunt assessments of the insurgency, including who caused it and what fixed it.

Christina Mackenzie
PARIS — France’s defense budget for 2010 is €32.1 billion ($46.7 billion), 2.6 percent less than in 2009. Despite lower spending, new equipment is a priority, as laid out in the defense white paper of June 2008. The 2010 budget will, moreover, meet spending requirements of the six-year (2009-14) military program law, which stresses equipment, reorganization and better conditions for personnel.

Amy Butler
The Pentagon’s frenzy to field more unmanned aerial systems (UAS) to support ground troops in Iraq and Afghanistan has sparked an unintended challenge for the Air Force: paying for and producing the manpower to operate the systems.

Michael A. Taverna
The Vietnamese government says Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has given the green light for construction of a second telecom satellite, Vinasat 2, to be launched in 2012.

Amy Butler
WHITE TAIL: While the U.S. Air Force plans for space launch technology improvements, Lt. Gen. Larry James, 14th Air Force commander, says he also is exploring how to improve management of the flow of launches, including the possible introduction of a “white tail” concept. “In the past, you have handcrafted a booster for every satellite, especially some of the more complex birds that we have launched. The desire would be not to do that, but to have a standard booster that a satellite can go on late in the flow,” James says.

Michael Bruno
CYBER READY: The 24th U.S. Air Force, the service’s newest numbered force for cyber operations, has been declared “ready” after a major command readiness assessment by an Air Force Space Command inspector general team. A service statement Jan. 4 said the goal was to evaluate the force’s ability to conduct Air Force network operations, as well as command and control of the service’s network. “While this is great news for the entire 24th Air Force team, they know this is just another key step on the path to operational readiness,” said Maj. Gen.

Amy Butler
ITT Corp. on Jan. 5 announced a restructuring of its defense business that is designed to provide end-to-end products — including services and hardware — to Pentagon and intelligence customers rather than merely selling specific hardware. The new division, which represents areas with about $6.5 billion in annual sales, will include three components:

Francis Tusa
LONDON — No one believes there is any likelihood that the U.K. Defense Ministry will survive the next budget round without cuts, and few can find easy cuts to make. Some treasured projects, programs and capabilities are going to get the ax. At the root of the problem is that in Fiscal 2009-10, the government planned to borrow £175 billion ($285 billion), 12 percent of GDP, the most since World War II. As of November, this was raised to £200 billion, and forecasts suggest that the final total could exceed £220-230 billion.

Staff
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. has moved a step closer to the first flight of its Falcon 9 medium-lift launch vehicle with a 329-second test of its single-engine upper stage, mimicking the burn that will be required to put the company’s planned Dragon cargo vehicle in orbit. That clears the way for the stage to be shipped from the SpaceX test site in Texas to Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., by the end of January for integration with the nine-engine Falcon 9 first stage on the path to a launch.

By Joe Anselmo
As 2009 drew to a close last week, the news media were full of articles lamenting the stock market’s “lost decade.” The tumultuous ’00s were far from a lost cause for aerospace and defense stocks, however. Shares in many aerospace and defense (A&D) companies doubled, tripled or even quadrupled in value.

Paul McLeary
The U.S. Marine Corps has rolled out a new weapon in combat: the 62-ton Assault Breacher Vehicle (ABV), a tracked, armored vehicle that can clear a lane through mine fields, expose and detonate improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and plow a path though obstacles.

Michael Bruno
SHARE ALIKE: It was not a failure to collect intelligence that almost led to a disaster in the Christmas Day airline bomb plot, according to President Barack Obama, but rather a failure to share the information properly and act on it. Addressing reporters Jan. 5, Obama acknowledged that the U.S.

Bettina H. Chavanne
NOW AVAILABLE: The team at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility has completed repairs aboard the destroyer USS Chung-Hoon five days earlier than scheduled. The push to finish early was driven by an upcoming Board of Inspection and Survey visit planned for February, according to the U.S. Navy. Work aboard the Chung-Hoon included deck resurfacing and repairs, updating the Vertical Launch System, corrosion inspections and stack preservation and antennae repairs.

Robert Wall
PARIS — There is growing concern at Airbus that talks between A400M buyers to renegotiate the firm-fixed price development and production contract may not come to a successful conclusion.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The U.S. Army is hustling to make up a 50-aircraft deficit of Chinook CH-47Fs that looks to stretch until fiscal 2013, according to outgoing Army program manager Col. Newman Shufflebarger. “These are very scarce assets, especially in theater,” Shufflebarger told reporters at a Boeing luncheon near Washington Jan. 5. “We’re ramping up to meet those needs.” Chinook F-model production is at about 2.5 aircraft per month, Shufflebarger said, and the goal is to increase to 3.5 aircraft per month next year.

Robert Wall
Bidders for Sweden’s armored wheeled vehicle program for at least 113 vehicles have until midnight on March 9 to provide their submissions to FMV, the country’s defense procurement agency. In releasing its request for quotations, the Swedish government says plans call for a contract to be signed in the second quarter. An initial operational capability for a reduced battalion-sized unit with 91 vehicles should be in hand by early 2014, FMV stipulates, or 54 months after contract award.

CRS
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