Boeing earlier this week made an unsolicited offer of 30 C-17s to the U.S. Air Force to help the service meet its growing air mobility needs and keep the production line open for the aircraft, according to industry and service sources familiar with the program. Boeing's offer was sent to the Air Force April 16, but the company has not provided official comment on the proposal yet. Boeing is "sweetening" the offer by agreeing to limit the cost for the Air Force to a guaranteed $196 million flyaway price for the aircraft only, according to a program source.
The foundation of U.S. military strength, its U.S. Army and Marine Corps ground forces, is crumbling because of a draining war, questionable procurement, ill-suited training and loosening recruitment standards, defense analysts said April 17 during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing.
The Defense Department spends too much money and time worrying about technology and high-performance fighter jets and needs to focus more on foot soldiers, retired U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Robert Scales told Senate Armed Services Committee members during an April 17 hearing.
Teams led by Boeing and Argon ST are embarking on an effort sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to develop technology capable of determining one's position on the Earth based on available terrestrial signals when the Global Positioning System (GPS) is being jammed or blocked. The Robust Surface Navigation (RSN) program seeks to exploit "signals of opportunity" -- such as electronic waves emanating from satellites, cell phone towers or TV transmitters -- to provide precise location and navigation information to ground troops.
Raytheon Missile Systems has been awarded a $32.4 million contract for Excalibur Block IA-1 projectiles, the Defense Department said April 17. The work will be performed in Tucson, Ariz., Farmington, N.M., Niceville, Fla., Heraldsburg, Calif., Cincinnati, Ohio, Minneapolis, Minn., Anaheim, Calif., Thousand Oaks, Calif., Williamsport, Pa., Joplin, Mo., Fort Lowel, Mass., Minneapolis, Minn., and Karlskoga, Sweden. It is expected to be completed by June 31, 2009. The contract was awarded by the U.S.
The U.S. Coast Guard commandant promised key senators April 18 that the service's move to take over lead systems integrator (LSI) duties for its massive and troubled Deepwater recapitalization program is significant and represents more than a minor contractual reorganization.
SPACE SUMMIT: Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) is calling on President Bush to convene a bipartisan, bicameral space summit with the White House to address the future of America's space program. "There is no more visible sign of American global leadership than our space program," wrote Mikulski, chair of the Senate Commerce Subcommittee that oversees NASA, in an April 18 letter. "To lose that position to other countries would be a tragedy... We need a national commitment to our space program to put it on a path for success." Other signatories on the letter included Sen.
Pentagon officials and congressional auditors continue to disagree over elemental budgeting aspects of the ballistic missile defense system (BMDS), adding to a debate that could affect how spending plays out under the Democratic-controlled Congress.
The U.S. Army is seeking about $1 billion via off-budget appropriations through September 2008 to pay for an information technology (IT) effort to account for about $60 billion worth of the Army's goods worldwide, generals told lawmakers April 18. The effort, which is trying to consolidate as many as 800 legacy inventory IT systems to a goal of three or so, comes as key Democratic House defense appropriators expressed concern over what military equipment will be given away or left in Iraq only to some day possibly be used against U.S. forces or allies.
The Defense Department's Missile Defense Agency (MDA) continues to make progress on its systems, but costs have grown and less work is being completed than planned, congressional auditors report. In turn, Congress may want to reconsider MDA's unique budget flexibility since it plans to spends about $10 billion a year for the foreseeable future and will not meet its original Block 2006 cost, fielding or performance goals, U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) auditors have suggested.
ATLANTA - The total maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) market for the 38,970 Western-built aircraft in the world's military fleet is worth about $59.9 billion this year and will grow less than 1 percent a year over the next 10 years to $63.7 billion in 2017, according to a forecast prepared by AeroStrategy and presented April 17 at Aviation Week's MRO Military Conference here.
The U.S. Coast Guard has stripped a Lockheed Martin/Northrop Grumman joint venture of its lead systems integrator (LSI) role in the service's potentially 25-year, $24 billion Deepwater recapitalization program, although the contractors remain the leading first-tier providers.
TANKER MRO: Boeing has selected Delta's TechOps division to provide parts inventory management and repair services for the company's KC-767 offering, which could mean a lot of extra third-party maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) work for Delta if Boeing wins the U.S. Air Force tanker replacement competition against rival Northrop Grumman. The Air Force is expected to award a contract for 179 tankers in October. Delta TechOps already performs work for Boeing and the U.S. Air Force on the C-40 program under a contract awarded in 2001.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) says it will cost about $108 billion from now until 2013 to fund the Bush administration's proposal to increase the size of the active-duty U.S. Army by 65,000 personnel, increase the U.S. Marine Corps by 27,000, and beef up the reserves and National Guard. The increases would have a direct bearing on procurement costs, CBO reported April 16 in its "Estimated Cost of the Administration's Proposal to Increase the Army's and the Marine Corps's Personnel Levels."
FRENCH HAWKEYE: The U.S. Navy will sell to France one E-2C aircraft with the Hawkeye 2000 Airborne Early Warning (AEW) suite, as well as three T56-A-427 engines, spare parts, training and service support and related materials, according to an April 17 notice in the Federal Register. The $260 million deal, the fourth aircraft for France, will boost the country's NATO communications and interoperability.
Although defense analysts testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee April 17 agreed that the U.S. Army's Future Combat Systems (FCS) program demands serious attention from lawmakers, they differed widely in their opinions of whether the mammoth modernization program is worth the cost or trouble to develop and deploy.
NASA's latest set of target space shuttle launch dates for the remainder of the year suggest Europe's long-awaited Columbus laboratory module could make it to the International Space Station (ISS) before the end of 2007, but a few key issues remain unresolved.