Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Fabey
Half of the Pentagon’s weapons programs under review by the Defense Department’s Director of Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E) fail to make the grade, highlighting a worrisome trend, evaluators say. “Of the eight beyond low-rate initial production (BLRIP) reports published last year, most systems (88 percent) were operationally effective; but half were not suitable,” DOT&E chief Charles McQueary wrote in the agency’s annual report. “Program performance has not shown improvement.”

David A. Fulghum
Northrop Grumman officials are promoting their unmanned strike aircraft being designed for the U.S. Navy as a “first-generation” unmanned combat aerial system (UCAS) with capabilities that include early missile defense intercepts.

Bettina H. Chavanne
Royal Saudi Air Force (RSAF) Weapon System Officers (WSOs) soon will benefit from a new undergraduate training program at the King Faisal Air Academy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, courtesy of Lockheed Martin. The company has been awarded a three-year contract for design, development and delivery of courseware, electronic classrooms, training devices, and a training management system as well as instruction and maintenance support services.

Bettina H. Chavanne
Deputy Secretary of Defense Gordon England likened the current global war on terror (GWOT) to the Cold War on March 19, and warned that the Iraq war will not end if the U.S. walks away from the battlefield.

Bettina H. Chavanne
GROWLER IOC: The U.S. Navy says Boeing’s EA-18G Growler program is going so well that it anticipates the aircraft’s Initial Operating Capability (IOC) may occur earlier than the originally scheduled date of 2009. The electronic attack aircraft will replace the aging EA-6B Prowler and be fielded first at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island in Washington state. Five aircraft have been delivered and are in flight-test, and eight low-rate production aircraft are on contract for delivery in fiscal 2008. The first squadron will transition officially in January 2009.

Frank Morring, Jr.
JOHNSON SPACE CENTER – The combined crews of the space shuttle Endeavour and the International Space Station (ISS) took a half day off March 19 after a busy week assembling Canada’s Dextre robot and getting the first pressurized Japanese module installed and outfitted. Still to come are some repairs and inspections, and tests of a thermal-tile repair technique that could be needed on the servicing mission to the Hubble Space Telescope coming up at the end of the summer.

Michael Fabey
A recent Rand Corp. report says that while terrorist groups could opt to use unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and cruise missiles, there are more likely threats to worry about. Nonetheless, the UAV and missile threat cannot be ignored, Rand says. “We conclude that they do not appear to have major advantages over other ways of carrying out operations against similar targets, although they cannot be dismissed outright as a potential threat,” Rand says in its recent report.

Michael Bruno
The U.S. Navy is facing shortfalls in the coming years in warships and aircraft and is increasingly encountering skepticism on Capitol Hill over whether the service’s planning is sufficient to meet its stated and expected requirements.

Michael Bruno
RESEARCH AWARDS: A mission-configurable stealth underwater batoid, heterogeneous unmanned networked teams and rotorcraft brownout mitigation are three of several multidisciplinary basic research concepts that DOD looks to fund with as much as $200 million over the next five years, DOD announced March 18.

Joris Janssen Lok
Germany’s Rheinmetall Group says it has taken over Netherlands-based armored vehicle company Stork PWV from its parent company Stork NV. Financial terms were not disclosed, and the deal still requires approval from relevant competition authorities. With the acquisition, Rheinmetall becomes the 64 percent majority shareholder in the Artec consortium that is building the new Boxer family of modular 8x8 armored wheeled vehicles, one of the largest armored vehicle projects in Europe.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS – Arianespace is planning to accelerate the ramp up of its new Soyuz launch pad in Kourou to meet telescoping demand. The new pad, due to open in mid-2009, is currently slated to start business with three missions the first year and four the second. But European institutional customers say this rate will not be sufficient to handle the number of public and commercial launches expected.

Bettina H. Chavanne
A draft request for proposals (RFP) could be released as soon as April for a new sea-based missile that would provide U.S. Navy combatant commanders with short- and medium-range tactical ballistic missile defense capabilities. Lockheed Martin recently completed a year-long feasibility study commissioned by the Navy demonstrating the ability of its Patriot Advance Capability-3 (PAC-3) Missile Segment Enhancement (MSE) missile to be integrated onto an Aegis ship.

By Jefferson Morris
A LEGEND PASSES: Space visionary and author Arthur C. Clarke died March 19 at his home in Sri Lanka, after reportedly suffering respiratory problems. He was 90 years old. Clarke is credited with first proposing the concept of geostationary satellite communications in a 1945 article in Wireless World magazine. The first geostationary telecommunications satellite, Syncom 3, was launched in 1964. In later years Clarke also championed the concept of space elevators as a low-cost means of transferring cargo to orbit.

Michael Bruno
Two skeptics of the Pentagon and White House’s assertions behind the U.S. shootdown of a dying intelligence satellite last month are calling on Washington officials to publish their risk assessments or face the prospect that the unprecedented strike could do more long-term harm than good to U.S. interests.

Bill Sweetman
The U.S. Navy is considering whether to seek a new engine for the Bell/Boeing V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor transport, program manager Col. Matt Mulhern said March 18. The existing Rolls-Royce AE 1107C Liberty engines are demonstrating an unacceptably short life, which has prevented the Navy and Rolls-Royce from reaching a deal on paying for engine support, overhaul and replacement.

By Jefferson Morris
NOAA AWARDS: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has chosen Integrity Applications Inc., of Chantilly, Va., for an award worth up to $9.9 million to provide systems engineering and technical support for the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-R (GOES-R) system.

Amy Butler
Citing a proliferation of “confusing and misleading statements” about its $35 billion win of a competition to build refueling tankers for the U.S. Air Force, Northrop Grumman officials say the contested decision was fairly conducted.

Amy Butler
Firewalling procedures to fence off data in a modeling tool used in selecting a Northrop Grumman/EADS refueling tanker design for the U.S. Air Force prevented any unfair advantage for the winner, even though the tool used to assess the bidders was designed by eventual winner Northrop Grumman, according to the Air Force.

David A. Fulghum
The U.S. Navy’s most recent estimated shortage of 69 F/A-18 Hornets and Super Hornets is getting ready to leap by about 300 percent.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS - Mission controllers have passed another important milestone in preparing Europe’s Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) for its inaugural docking with the International Space Station (ISS), successfully demonstrating a critical collision avoidance maneuver (CAM).

Craig Covault
HOUSTON - The imaging radar on the Cassini Saturn orbiter continues to return data on Saturn’s moon Titan showing lake, river, stream and mountain features similar to those found on Earth, especially in southwestern Africa, researchers say.