Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
SPAWAR SUPPORT: The Space and Naval Warfare (SPAWAR) Systems Center-San Diego has tapped Qinetiq North America’s Systems Engineering Group to provide life-cycle support services to its Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance programs. Work on the eight-year, $206 million multiple-award, indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contract will be done in Philadelphia.

Staff
MISSILE GRUMBLE: Israel’s outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was in Moscow last week meeting with his Russian counterpart Dmitri Medvedev to discuss security issues. Likely high on the agenda was the sale ­or not of long range air-defense missile systems ­ such as the S-300 (SA-10 Grumble/SA-20 Gargoyle) to Iran. Interfax quoted a Russian foreign ministry spokesman saying that the S-300 would not be supplied by Russia to Iran.

Graham Warwick
The Blackswift reusable hypersonic testbed has been canceled by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) after Congress slashed the program’s fiscal 2009 budget to $10 million, from $120 million. Blackswift was to demonstrate an unmanned hypersonic vehicle able to take off, accelerate to a Mach 6 cruise and return to a runway landing.

Staff
ORBITAL BOOST: Orbital Sciences Corp has unveiled plans for a major expansion of its launch vehicle research & development, engineering, production and test facilities in Chandler, Ariz. The first phase of the plan, intended to meet strong demand, especially from the Defense Department, for launch vehicles and satellites, will comprise an 82,000 square-foot building housing 330 employees. Ultimately, the expansion will add 232,000 square feet of floor area in three buildings, doubling the size of the facility.

By Jefferson Morris
HAWK SUPPORT: NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center has awarded a multi-year contract to L-3 Communications for support of the center’s pending operation of two Global Hawk aircraft. The contract is worth up to $15 million and covers through Sept. 4, 2013. Dryden inherited the unmanned aircraft from the U.S. Air Force, and will use them for science missions that need high-altitude, long-endurance airborne capability. The first mission is tentatively scheduled for the spring of 2009.

David A. Fulghum
Elbit Systems forecasters say that within three-to-four years, at least one-fourth to one-third of all combat missions will be flown by unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), and a few years after that, unmanned ground vehicles will also begin to flood the market and the battlefield. Indeed, growing unmanned-ground business will bring with it an expected double-digit growth for the next decade, according to Steven Roser, Elbit’s vice president of marketing for the United States.

Staff
GRIPEN PYLONS: Aero Vodochody has concluded an agreement with Saab to build pylons for the Gripen fighter. Production of the pylons, set to begin this autumn, follows a recent accord by the two companies to identify potential work packages that can be transferred to the Czech manufacturer and to cooperate in marketing its L-159 light strike fighter/training aircraft.

Staff
FAILING GRADE: Two years out of office and former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is still a figure of controversy. Revered for his vision for national security space management, Rumsfeld is now losing some of his disciples. A. Thomas Young, the chairman of the Allard Commission, a panel of space experts, says management in national security space is and has been woefully lacking. “It boggles my mind,” Young says on the subject of Rumsfeld’s leadership in this area. “You could not give a grade other than F.

Staff
HOT OPPORTUNITY: The U.S. Air Force’s nuclear mission recapitalization means security and logistics opportunities for federal information technology vendors, according to Washington-area consultancy Input. Analyst Kate Naunheim acknowledges that not all of the recently publicized recommendations require support that is scientific in nature, and in fact, many of the objectives focus more on the reorganization and logistical integrity of the nuclear mission as it stands.

Staff
COMING AROUND: Gen. David Petraeus, the incoming commander of Central Command, says Pakistani leaders are beginning to see the “existential threat to their country” posed by al Qaeda terrorists in the remote and largely ungoverned areas near the Afghan border. Petraeus, formerly head of U.S. operations in Iraq, says “there’s no question” senior al Qaeda leadership is sheltering in Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and the North West Frontier Province.

Frank Morring, Jr.
NASA’s spaceflight schedule for the next six months or so will remain fuzzy until a key piece of hardware for the Hubble Space Telescope can finish its long-deferred acceptance testing, and it has already had some problems.

Frank Morring, Jr.
Top NASA managers believe they can overcome technical hurdles to meet the launch window for the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) in September/October 2009, but at an additional cost still to be calculated.

Staff
FLINTLOCK 09: More than a dozen countries from Europe and northern Africa will participate in this month’s Flintlock 09 exercise. Gen. William “Skip” Ward, commander of Africa Command (AFRICOM) says U.S. CV-22 Osprey tilt rotor aircraft (Aerospace DAILY, Sept. 17) will participate in the joint Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps combined training exercise in the vast spaces of North Africa.

Staff
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Staff
SIRIUS BIRD: Space Systems/Loral will supply a new telecom spacecraft for SES’s Sirius unit. The satellite, Sirius 5, will be equipped with up to 36 active Ku-band and 24 C-band transponders, with a Ka-band uplink capability. To be launched in 2011 to 5 deg. E. Long., the unit is intended to provide broadcasting and broadband services to Sirius’s core Nordic and Baltic market, as well as countries in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicated new calendar listing.) Oct. 13 - 14 — Defense Equipment & Support 08 Conference & Exhibition, “Supporting Operations Now and In The Future,” Central Hall, London. For more information go to www.shephard.co.uk/events

Bettina H. Chavanne
With an $11 million reprogramming for the Joint Heavy Lift (JHL) program cleared through the House Appropriations Committee, the Bell-Boeing Quad TiltRotor (QTR) team is breathing a sigh of relief and moving ahead with its design. Alan Ewing, Bell Helicopter program manager for QTR, spoke with Aerospace DAILY at the Association of the U.S. Army annual show in Washington, D.C., Oct. 8. “Both committees have withdrawn their objections [to funding JHL],” he said. “All is good for fiscal 2008.”

Michael Bruno
NGA IT: Four companies have been selected to further compete to provide systems integration and information technology (IT) services to the U.S. Defense Department’s National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA). The indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity award under the agency’s Applied IT Solutions (AITS) contract covers a broad range of engineering support, integration services and related material needed to accelerate access to NGA’s geospatial intelligence (GEOINT) data and services and to transform use of GEOINT across NGA’s federal user base.

Neelam Mathews
With four new aircraft on order, Qatar joins the rapidly growing number of nations with C-130J fleets, including Australia, Canada, Denmark, India, Italy, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States. Qatar signed a $393.6 million contract with Lockheed Martin for the purchase of four “stretched” variants of C-130J Super Hercules plus training and spares, with deliveries to begin in 2011 (Aerospace DAILY, Oct. 8).

Michael Bruno
CENTER OF IT: The U.S. Defense Department accounts for 14 out of 20 known major federal information technology business opportunities in fiscal 2009, with a total value of $75 billion, down from FY ’08’s list when DOD accounted for 95 percent of the total value, according to consultancy Input. An October report to clients cites pending election turnover and trends toward consolidated federal contracting, such as government-wide acquisition and multiple-award contracts (GWACs/MACs), to warn vendors about a cooling atmosphere.

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Michael A. Taverna
OTOMAT FIRING: MBDA says its Otomat antiship missile has undergone a successful test firing from a Royal Malaysian Navy Laksamana class corvette using a TG2 over-the-horizon revectoring system installed on RMN Super Lynx helicopters. The system permits the missile to be revectored toward brown water and land targets beyond the vessel’s radar horizon using new navigation and attack data provided by shipborne helicopters. It is part of the Mk II Block IV upgrade, which is also earmarked for Italian Horizon and Fremm frigates.

Craig Covault
The Cassini spacecraft in orbit around Saturn, 920 million miles from Earth, dove to within 82,000 feet of the surface of Saturn’s moon Enceladus Oct. 9 to sample the composition of its water vapor geysers blasting material 300 miles into space. It is a “thrilling and daring” encounter, says Todd Barber, Cassini lead propulsion engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The closest approach was made at 4:30 p.m. EDT, with a data playback to Earth set for early Oct. 10.

David A. Fulghum, Douglas Barrie
Britain is looking at an aerial intelligence gathering force that is completely interchangeable with that of the United States. The Royal Air Force (RAF) is expected to have its Raytheon-built Astor ground-surveillance radar aircraft ready for operations in Afghanistan by year’s end. The RAF Waddington-based aircraft is smaller, but has the same mission and is operationally compatible with the U.S. E-8 Joint STARS.

David A. Fulghum
Raytheon is kicking off a U.S. Army program to mount Joint Silent Guardian nonlethal, directed energy weapons – with a range of more than 250 meters – on Ford 550 commercial trucks for crowd control. The high power microwave (HPM) device heats water in a person’s outer layers of skin to the point of pain. Tests have shown that the effects can reach through cracks in and around concrete walls and even through the glass of automobiles, company officials say.