Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Bettina H. Chavanne
AUSSIE NET: Boeing says it has demonstrated the ability to deliver streaming video over a mobile, ad hoc tactical network from a UAV to a Chinook helicopter and ground troops. The demonstration took place March 16-18 at Boeing’s Systems Analysis Laboratory in Brisbane, Australia, where personnel from Australia’s army, navy and air force viewed the network’s capabilities on actual flight hardware.

Michael Bruno
CLAWS OUT: Textron is promoting its Clean Lightweight Area Weapon cluster bomb’s potential to Wall Street. CLAW is set for international sales in 2018, but there is a bill moving through Congress that would allow international sales as early as next year, according to Macquarie Research Equities. Textron claims the 64-pound, 31-inch-long CLAW has the same combat effect as a 1,000-pound bomb against human targets — but still leaves a “clean” battlefield free of unexploded ordnance.

Graham Warwick
Boeing has demonstrated the deployment of a containerized solid-state laser weapon system to reduce risk for the U.S. Army’s truck-mounted High Energy Laser Technology Demonstrator (HEL TD). The Redeployable High-Energy Laser System (RHELS) is a company-funded initiative to demonstrate the maturity and utility of directed-energy weapons. The solid-state laser, thermal management, beam control and operator station are packaged in a 40-foot cargo container than can be transported on a semi-trailer.

Douglas Barrie
LONDON The British Defense Ministry is beginning the acquisition process for a 1,300-vehicle element of its Future Rapid Effect System (FRES) program, the FRES Specialist Vehicles (SV), with an invitation to tender expected in September. The first FRES SV is expected to have an initial operational capability in 2014, with the introduction of the Block 1 vehicle. This covers a scout vehicle with a medium-caliber cannon, as well as various reconnaissance support configurations. A tracked vehicle is preferred for the FRES SV, versus a wheeled vehicle.

Bettina H. Chavanne
Bollinger Shipyard is still on the hook for shoddy conversions of U.S. Coast Guard 111-foot patrol boats to 123-foot boats. Rep. Gene Taylor (D-Miss.) wanted answers from the Coast Guard’s acquisitions chief, Rear Adm. Gary Blore, during a hearing March 24. The ships — since abandoned by the armed service — left Bollinger and were then sent to other shipyards for modifications after issues were discovered, despite the fact that the 123’s were under warranty at Bollinger.

Staff
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Bettina H. Chavanne
Lawmakers have drafted legislation that codifies the reforms the U.S. Coast Guard has been making ever since the establishment of the armed service’s acquisition directorate in 2007.

By Jefferson Morris
The U.S. Air Force’s latest Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite was delivered to orbit early March 24 by a United Launch Alliance Delta II from Cape Canaveral, Fla. Liftoff took place at 4:34 a.m. EDT from Launch Complex 17A. One hour and eight minutes later, the rocket deployed GPS IIR-20, the seventh of eight modernized spacecraft in the GPS Block IIR-M series built by Lockheed Martin.

Michael Bruno
MISSILE LOCK: Raytheon said the U.S. Navy has awarded it a $106 million contract for production of the Joint Standoff Weapon C-1. “With this contract award, the first network-enabled weapons in the world will be produced to meet warfighter requirements,” said Cmdr. Andrew Kessler, JSOW deputy program manager in the Navy’s Precision Strike Weapons program office. The contract includes funding for fixed-price production of more than 350 weapons, container cables and test units. The award also includes $17.2 million to reorient the factory from producing earlier JSOW-Cs.

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING Chinese officials are dropping more hints that they are about to announce an aircraft carrier program. Defense Minister Liang Guanglie tells his Japanese counterpart, Yasukazu Hamada, that “China cannot be without an aircraft carrier forever. China’s navy is now rather weak.” Earlier this month, Adm. Hu Yanlin told the China Daily that “China has the capability to build aircraft carriers and should do so.” They are “very necessary,” he said.

Michael Bruno
Two key leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) pressed the top combatant commander in charge of NATO and U.S. military forces in Europe March 24 on whether a compromise with Russia over a missile defense deterrent against Iran could work.

Michael Bruno
MOUNTING UP: The U.S. Army is expected to renew a contract with Textron for the rest of its planned Armored Security Vehicles (ASVs) in the next few months. Textron executives recently told Macquarie Research Equities that the company also believes international potential for the vehicle is high. Still, while Macquarie analysts note the ASV is part of the Army’s force structure and should have a future beyond current military operations, they also say it is unclear whether the ASV becomes redundant against the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV).

John M. Doyle
Northrop Grumman thinks its Kinetic Energy Interceptor (KEI) may be the cheaper, more flexible missile defense system the Pentagon is searching for, while Boeing says its Airborne Laser (ABL) is DOD’s answer. Many attending the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics missile defense conference this week in Washington believe the U.S. Missile Defense Agency (MDA) will see cutbacks when President Barack Obama announces his revised fiscal 2010 defense budget next month.

Bettina H. Chavanne
SECOND WARNING: The U.S. Navy has awarded Northrop Grumman a $48 million follow-on contract for initial fielding and continued development of the Joint Warning and Reporting Network (JWARN). JWARN will provide the military services near real-time analysis and response to chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) attacks. According to Northrop Grumman, the system will enable commanders to understand the tactical and strategic implications of a CBRN attack or hazard and provide information and communications to minimize contamination.

Michael Bruno
GAME PLAN: Raytheon sees cyber security and warfare, unmanned aircraft, and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance gaining importance and funding in coming years under the Pentagon’s budget, according to Macquarie Research Equities. Financial analysts there see the company as well positioned for expected shifts in defense spending under the Obama administration, since Raytheon has less exposure to problem programs or the war-related supplemental, which is expected to shrink. “Many in the media are saying the defense industry is drinking Maalox these days.

Bettina H. Chavanne
ROBOT STRATEGY: The U.S. Army is proposing a new “Robotics Strategy” that will inform its input into the Defense Department’s next Unmanned Systems Roadmap. The robotics white paper, dated March 19 and released publicly March 24, is a collaboration between Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) and the Army Tank-Automotive Research, Development and Engineering Center.

Frank Morring, Jr.
JOHNSON SPACE CENTER, Houston The combined crews of the space shuttle Discovery and the International Space Station will say their farewells and close the hatches March 25 as the STS-119/15A ISS assembly draws to a close. After an off-duty day March 24 highlighted by a call from President Barack Obama, the crews were set to go to sleep early in preparation for what promises to be an unusually busy undocking day.

Bettina H. Chavanne
SHIP SHAPE: A group of Senators, led by Massachusetts Democrat Edward Kennedy, is pressuring the Pentagon to make a decision on whether or not to truncate the U.S. Navy’s DDG-1000 program for good. “Despite several months of Congressional and Department of Defense requests for further analysis, the Navy has yet to provide sufficient justification” to end DDG-1000 and restart DDG-51 production, Kennedy and his colleagues wrote in a letter March 20.

Bettina H. Chavanne
MIDCOURSE CORRECTIONS: Lockheed Martin announced March 23 it will compete for the U.S. Missile Defense Agency’s (MDA) contract for future operations and sustainment of the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system and associated support facilities. In preparation for its bid, Lockheed is sending missile defense executives to GMD sites in Alaska and California, as well as command facilities in Colorado through April.

By Bradley Perrett
NO THANKS: Indonesia has declined a Qatari offer of 10 secondhand Dassault Mirage 2000s because it could not afford to maintain the fighters. Qatar has previously offered its Mirage 2000s to India.

Frank Morring, Jr.
JOHNSON SPACE CENTER, Houston Astronauts Joe Acaba and Richard Arnold weren’t able to open a cargo attachment device to its full extension on the second try of the STS-119/15A International Space Station mission, leaving undone a pair of extravehicular activity (EVA) tasks that were intended to set the station up for the day when the space shuttle fleet stops flying.

Michael Fabey
While the U.S. military has improved its ability to keep track of the tens of thousands of night vision devices (NVDs) used by the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF), Multi-National Force-Iraq (MNF-I) and Multi-National Security Transition Command-Iraq (MNSTC-I), better oversight is still needed, the Pentagon Inspector General (IG) says.

Frank Morring, Jr.
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. Most of the pieces of NASA’s Ares I-X prototype crew launch vehicle have arrived here, awaiting only the final shuttle mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope before they are stacked for the first flight-test of the post-shuttle era.