Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
SUPPLEMENTAL SIDESTEP: The Senate is expected to take up the contentious supplemental bill to fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan this week – possibly as soon as May 19. The $193.9 billion measure cleared the Senate Appropriations Committee last week loaded with non-defense spending amendments. President Bush has threatened to veto any version that tries to set policy for the Iraq war or goes over his spending ceiling of $183.8 billion for the rest of fiscal 2008 and part of FY ‘09.

Bettina H. Chavanne
GROWLER SUPPORT: The first EA-18G Growler squadron will receive its first aircraft on June 3 at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Wash., where Boeing has established a new support center. The Growler Support Center (GSC) will provide technical and logistics support for the aircraft in coordination with the base’s existing supply chain management facility.

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicated new calendar listing.) May 19 - 20 — Next-Generation Radio Communications, “For Defense, Homland Security & Public Safety,” Harrah’s Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nev. For more information go to www.technologytraining.com.

By Graham Warwick
Canada has reduced the number of new fighters it plans to purchase to 65 from 80, and stresses that it has not formally selected the Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) despite having participated in its development. The reduced requirement for new combat aircraft was revealed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper when he unveiled the Conservative government’s new ‘Canada First’ defense strategy in Halifax last week.

Staff
ON ITS WAY: Crew members on the International Space Station (ISS) should have another 2.5 tons of supplies to unload this week, following another Russian launch of an unpiloted Progress cargo carrier toward the orbiting facility May 14. Progress M-64/29P was scheduled to dock with the FGB nadir port on the ISS May 16. Its cargo includes oxygen, water and food for the three-man Expedition 17 crew.

Michael A. Taverna
BIG DEAL: Eutelsat has concluded a package insurance deal for launch plus one year of operation that it calls one of the biggest ever signed by a fixed satellite service operator. The company said the deal, covering seven spacecraft currently under construction, offers “highly favorable terms” permitting launch using “the full range of available launch vehicles on the market.” The transaction could lessen the threat of a sharp insurance rate hike following a recent spate of launcher and satellite failures.

Staff
OSPREY EXPORT: International interest in the Bell-Boeing V-22 Osprey has picked up since the U.S. Marine Corps deployed the tiltrotor transport to Iraq, and the Osprey is to be demonstrated to Norway, which has a requirement for 10-12 new search and rescue (SAR) aircraft, according to V-22 program manager Col. Matt Mulhern. Japan and Israel also have expressed interest in the tiltrotor.

Bettina H. Chavanne
ROTOR STUDY: The Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff will deliver a study on DOD rotorcraft survivability by August 1, 2009, reporting their findings to congressional defense committees. In an amendment to the fiscal 2009 Defense Authorization Bill, Congressman Joe Sestak (R-Penn.) proposed a closer examination of military rotorcraft accidents and solutions to improve survivability.

Robert Wall, Douglas Barrie
AgustaWestland has signed a long-term partnership agreement with Moscow-based Oboronprom that could lead to the European helicopter maker setting up a production line in Russia. Details of the Russian production facility are still under study. The two parties are now working on finding a production site and figuring out how best to implement such a large effort. Helicopters produced off that line would be sold globally, not just in Russia and neighboring countries.

By Jefferson Morris
Intelsat has reported a net loss of $412.7 million for the first quarter of 2008, chiefly due to $313.1 million in restructuring and transaction costs associated with the February acquisition of Intelsat by Serafina Holdings, a holding company controlled by BC Partners and other private equity investors. The acquisition caused operating expenses for the quarter to double as compared to the same period last year, reaching $692.4 million.

By Graham Warwick
U.S. Air Force Lockheed Martin F-22 stealth fighters have sent sensor data to ground stations and other aircraft for the first time, both directly and via an airborne network gateway. The datalink demonstrations were conducted during the Joint Expeditionary Force Experiment (JEFX 08) at Nellis Air Force Base, Nev., in late April, details of which are now becoming available.

By Jefferson Morris
SpaceX says it’s not tracking any major technical issues in the final weeks before the third launch attempt for its Falcon 1 rocket, which is expected in the last week of June from Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. The Falcon 1 has had two test flights but has yet to reach orbit. The first flight attempt ended just seconds after liftoff due to a fuel leak, while the second attempt in March 2007 made it to space but didn’t go fast enough to achieve orbit because of fuel sloshing (Aerospace DAILY, March 22, 2007).

Amy Butler
GPS III AWARDED: Lockheed Martin has won the U.S. Air Force’s $1.5 billion next-generation Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite contract award over Boeing. The contract includes two development satellites plus options for 10 additional spacecraft. GPS III will incorporate new anti-jam features, including a high-powered spot beam system.

Joris Janssen Lok
The Royal Norwegian Navy (RNoN) is equipping its six Ula-class diesel-electric submarines with bow-mounted, forward-looking active mine-avoidance sonars and keel-mounted, downward-looking active multibeam echo sounders under a contract awarded to Kongsberg Maritime of Horten, Norway, on May 14. The upgrade is designed to enhance the boats’ capability to safely navigate in very shallow waters, for example during intelligence-gathering and special operations forces support missions close to potentially hostile coasts.

Michael A. Taverna
KOREASAT: Thales Alenia Space and Orbital Sciences Corp. will supply a new telecom satellite, Koreasat 6, for Korea Telecom. Thales Alenia will be responsible for integrating, testing and launching the spacecraft and ground segment, and will supply the payload. Orbital will supply a Star 2 satellite bus for the 30-transponder spacecraft. Thales Alenia also supplied Koreasat 5, a dual-use telecom intended for KT and the Korean defense ministry.

Michael Bruno
The U.S. House is on track to consider – and likely approve – legislation that could double annual production of the Virginia-class attack submarine to two boats starting in fiscal 2010, a year ahead of the U.S. Navy’s latest plans.

Craig Covault
China’s January 2007 anti-satellite weapon test is being used as a recruiting message by the U.S. Air Force to lure space-savvy young people to join up. The recruiting campaign, airing on major U.S. television networks, shows a satellite orbiting northward along what looks like the east coast of China. “What if your cell phone calls, your television, your GPS and even your bank transactions could be taken out with a single missile,” the announcer says, just as a rocket fired from the ground ascends rapidly and blows up the satellite.

John M. Doyle
COLLISION COURSE: Both the House and Senate defied a Bush administration veto threat May 15, setting up a battle over the supplemental war funding legislation. The House rejected one of three amendments that would have approved $163 billion to fund U.S. operations in Iraq and Afghanistan through the summer of 2009. Most Republicans voted “present,” to show their opposition without voting on record against a war funding bill. That left war funding up to the Senate, where a $169 billion supplemental war spending bill was being marked up by the Appropriations Committee.

By Jefferson Morris
Federal prosecutors are saying the damage done to two Boeing Chinook helicopters appears to be “deliberate” and U.S. Attorney Patrick Meehan has launched a criminal investigation into what exactly happened at the company assembly plant in Ridley Township, Pa., just outside Philadelphia. Flanked by Kenneth Maupin, the lead investigative agent for the Defense Criminal Investigative Service of the Department of Defense, Meehan announced the criminal probe at a press conference in front of the plant May 15.

Frank Morring, Jr.
The Constellation Program can stay on schedule even if its spending is held to fiscal 2006 levels for another six months, according to the NASA manager in charge of the program. Jeff Hanley told reporters May 15 that his accountants have evaluated the program’s ability to handle a six-month continuing resolution into fiscal 2009 that would keep NASA spending at fiscal 2008 levels. In effect that would mean spending at fiscal 2006 levels, since the agency has been under a continuing resolution for two fiscal years.

Frank Morring, Jr.
Careful analysis of surface imagery collected at Jupiter’s moon Europa by the Voyager, Galileo and New Horizons probes suggest that its rotational axis has wandered by as much as 80 degrees, offering researchers new evidence that a liquid-water ocean lies beneath the frozen surface.

Frank Morring, Jr.
A broad study of more than 29,000 data series from about 80 long-term climate change studies has found direct links between a wide range of changes in Earth’s natural environment and rising temperatures caused by human activity. Led by NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Science, the study linked human-caused warming to changes in glaciers, permafrost, vegetation cycles and wildlife migration patterns.

Bettina H. Chavanne
JOINT STARS: The U.S. Air Force awarded Northrop Grumman Corp. two undefinitized contracts, worth $300 million collectively, to complete nonrecurring engineering and flight-test/certification and begin production of new engines for the service’s E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System (Joint STARS) fleet. Work will begin immediately with the test bed aircraft, based in Melbourne, Fla., the first E-8 to convert to the Pratt & Whitney JT8D engine.

Michael Bruno
NO FRANCOPHILES: Two British conservative members of the European Parliament on May 13 railed against alleged French motivations in offering to rejoin NATO’s integrated military command. In a Heritage Foundation panel in Washington, the members also criticized expected French efforts later this year to underpin the European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP) in the European Union.

By Jefferson Morris
If NASA decides by this summer to proceed with the development of crew transfer capability under the agency’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program, SpaceX founder Elon Musk says his company could be ready to conduct crew flights to the space station by early 2011.