Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
TEXAS CYBERSPACE: Lackland Air Force Base outside San Antonio, Texas, is expected to be the new home of Air Force cyber operations. The decision won’t be final until an environmental impact study is completed. Lackland beat out five other bases in a competition to be the permanent headquarters of the new 24th Air Force, which will focus on cyber warfare and security. The National Security Agency’s Texas Cryptologic Center is already located in San Antonio.

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) May 1-31 — Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum. Two for one admission throughout the month. For vouchers and more information go to www.nycgo.com/culturespot May 18 - 21 — UAS 2009 - 5th Annual 2009 Unmanned Aircraft System, Washington, D.C. For more information go to www.idga.org/us/uas

Bettina H. Chavanne
A persistent capability gap in U.S. naval surface fire support (NSFS) could well be filled by the new Littoral Combat Ship (LCS), according to Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Conway. Conway said his Navy counterpart, Adm. Gary Roughead, has agreed to expand the concept of using the LCS as a firing platform for what Conway called a “box of rockets.” The services are still examining storage and elevator capacity aboard LCS, and Conway said “we don’t have [the] box we need.”

Amy Butler
Early indications from the Pentagon’s Mobility Capabilities Requirements Study suggest no need for additional strategic airlift beyond the funded procurements of re-engined C-5s and 205 C-17s already planned, says U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS — Eutelsat has selected Astrium to build a new satellite intended to boost capacity in its 7 deg. West. Long. neighborhood, which it operates in partnership with Egyptian operator Nilesat. The spacecraft, known as Atlantic Bird 7 and set to be launched in late 2011, will replace W4A at the position and be rebranded Nilebird. Atlantic Bird 7 will carry 60 Ku-band transponders providing direct-to-home broadcasting across the Middle East and North Africa and consumer broadcasting and Internet access to northwestern Africa.

Staff
PRICE HIKE: Russian Space Agency Roscosmos plans to charge NASA $51 million a seat for rides to the International Space Station after the current contract expires in the spring of 2012. That would be an increase over the $47 million negotiated last year in the first contract extension. Anatoly Permanov, the head of Roscosmos, told Russian reporters in Moscow the increase would be driven by inflation. A NASA official said negotiations are still ongoing for the contract, which will allow U.S.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS — The European Commission (EC) has selected Inmarsat Ventures Ltd. and Solaris Mobile Ltd. to provide hybrid mobile satellite services (MSS) across the European Union (EU) The selection completes a process begun in August 2008 that culminated in the short-listing of four candidates in December. However, operating licenses for specific radio frequencies for the 18-year period of the approval still must be granted by individual EU nation states. The EC has given the two suppliers 24 months to begin commercial service.

Frank Morring, Jr.
JOHNSON SPACE CENTER, Houston — Astronauts Mike Good and Mike Massimino accomplished the top-priority task of the STS-125 mission to the Hubble Space Telescope May 15, but only after a virtuoso display of persistence and planning.

Staff
HARVEST HAWK: By the end of this year, the U.S. Marine Corps hopes to fly its own C-130J gunship-equivalents. The Harvest Hawk program will provide the service with what Commandant Gen. James Conway calls “long-loiter capability.” A roll-on/off package will give the aircraft intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capability, while firepower will come from a 30-mm cannon and Hellfire missiles.

Staff
EADS EARNINGS: In reporting first-quarter results, EADS once again has had to take a charge on the A400M military transport and warns more are likely. Last quarter’s earnings after the €120 million ($163 million) A400M charge and exchange rate adjustments came in at €232 million, with net income of €170 million (a 40 percent decline from last year’s first-quarter results). EADS notes it remains cash-rich, with €8.7 billion on hand, although that is €500 million less than at year’s end.

Staff
EURO ASTRONAUTS: The European Space Agency will name four new additions to its astronaut corps on May 20 in Paris. The astronauts, intended to help meet crew requirements for the International Space Station after it transitions to a full six-person crew this summer, will complete their training in 2011.

By Guy Norris
HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. — The X-51A scramjet demonstrator is being readied for ground vibration tests at Boeing’s Huntington Beach, Calif., facility, having successfully passed a major U.S. Air Force program review last week.

John M. Doyle
Missile defense advocates in Congress will likely consider trimming military personnel spending as a way to restore funding for programs, like the Airborne Laser (ABL), cut by the Obama administration, a key member of the House Missile Defense Caucus says.

Staff
HERCULEAN LUCK: The U.S. Air Force is likely to augment its AC-130H/U fleet with a MC-130W-based gunship, a move that will diminish the likelihood of fielding a C-27J-based Stinger II gunship. U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz says the “optimum path” forward may require Air Force Special Operations Command to pull some of its C-130s out of the fleet and outfit them with armaments. The command operates 12 MC-130Ws, which have specialized navigation and defensive systems, and pods suitable for refueling the CV-22.

By Jefferson Morris
Due to a typographical error, the designation of the CH-47 Chinook helicopter appeared incorrectly in a May 14 DAILY story.

Staff
RIVETING DISCUSSIONS: British Politicians will have the chance to consider the future of the Nimrod MRA4 program during a Westminster Hall debate in Parliament May 20. The Defense Ministry has yet to formally decide on acquiring the RC-135 Rivet Joint or using the Nimrod MRA4 as the basis for a replacement for the Nimrod R1 electronic intelligence aircraft. While senior personnel within the Royal Air Force (RAF) continue to express a preference for the Rivet Joint, there is political and industrial pressure in favor of the MRA4.

DOD
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Staff
ARH OFFERING: Boeing continues to finalize a stretched AH-6 to offer for the U.S. Army’s gaping Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter requirement (Aerospace DAILY, Jan. 12). The helicopter will use a new six-bladed metallic main rotor and a more powerful engine to meet the 6,000-foot, 95-degree Fahrenheit out-of-ground-effect operational requirement. Boeing says discussions are underway with Rolls-Royce about up-rating with a version of the 250-C30 turboshaft, rather than looking at all-new engines such as the Honeywell HTS900.

Amy Butler
Pentagon officials have not yet decided whether an upcoming KC-X competition between Boeing and a Northrop Grumman/EADS North America team to build new aerial refueling tankers will be managed by the U.S. Air Force or the Defense Department’s acquisition chief, according to David Van Buren, acting assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition.

Staff
QUADRENNIAL REVIEW: The U.S. Marine Corps will be on the hook to prove the viability of its amphibious capability when the Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) rolls around, possibly as early as this summer. Commandant Gen. James Conway says the question is not how much is enough, as Defense Secretary Robert Gates has asked, but “how much is too little.” Conway is concerned there is too much focus on the so-called high-end of amphibious capability, or forcible entry, when there is equal demand for amphibious ships in “security cooperation and theater engagement.”

Staff
HELP WANTED: Lt. Gen. Mark Shackelford, military deputy to the U.S. Air Force acquisition czar, says the service is taking measures to improve its acquisition workforce. The service is spending money on an expedited strategy to hire acquisition experts to fill an unusually high 15 percent job vacancy rate. Also, 2,062 new positions have been funded — ranging from intern level to positions that demand the highest qualifications. These jobs will be filled over the next three years, Shackelford says.

Paul McLeary
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — The military needs to completely rethink and retool its training programs if it hopes to stay on top of emerging threats, several senior officers said at the Joint Warfighting Conference here last week. Marine Gen. James Mattis, commander of Joint Forces Command and Supreme Allied Commander - Transformation for NATO, called for the United States and its allies to form a new “grand strategy” for the post-Cold War world, adding that “any analysis shows that we have that need” to update outdated concepts that linger from the Cold War.

Michael Bruno, Neelam Mathews
INDIAN CRASH: India said May 15 that a Mig-27 Indian Air Force fighter crashed near Luni, about 40 kilometers (25 miles) south of Jodhpur, around 8:20 a.m. local time. The aircraft launched from the Jodhpur air base and was on a routine training sortie. The pilot, Squadron Leader P. Dhawan, ejected safely. An inquiry has been ordered to investigate the reasons of the accident, according to the official announcement.

DOD
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Douglas Barrie
LONDON — British Prime Minister Gordon Brown May 14 nearly — but not quite — confirmed that the U.K. will go ahead with a further purchase of the Eurofighter Typhoon if agreement can be reached on cost. London has been stalling on committing to at least an element of its notional Tranche 3 off-take of aircraft. The government’s finance department has been blocking the funding required to support a Tranche 3 purchase.