Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency has awarded Raytheon Co. a $266 million contract to build, test and deliver Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) rounds to the U.S. and Japan, the company and Pentagon announced Aug. 16. The Naval Sea Systems Command contract, expected to be complete by December 2009, calls for 29 SM-3 Block IA missiles for the United States and Japan and for flight-test support, engineering activity, system upgrades and continued research and development with Japan. Raytheon said it already tallied $168 million in initial funding.

Sharon Weinberger
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - Army leadership recently decided that it will not grant an official "program of record" status for a counter-rocket, artillery, mortar system currently being used in Iraq, according to an official involved in the effort.

Michael Bruno
Leading Senate Republicans overseeing defense budget and appropriations are trying to figure out how to get a better account of defense spending, as well as apply greater congressional oversight to supplemental funds that now make up a fifth of the Pentagon's annual allowance.

Staff
The 1.4-meter primary mirror for NASA's planned Kepler planet-finding mission has arrived at prime contractor Ball Aerospace in Boulder, Colo., for environmental testing and integration into the spacecraft.

Michael Fabey
The Defense Acquisition Board review for the estimated $13 billion Combat, Search and Rescue (CSAR-X) helicopter program has been delayed yet again, this time by another month to Oct. 31, industry sources familiar with the aircraft purchase proposals say. The contract award is now tentatively scheduled for Nov. 3, the sources said. Air Force officials confirmed the Oct. 31 DAB date, but refused to comment further because of acquisition policies.

Staff
PRODUCT SUPPORT: BAE Systems is opening a 6,000-square-foot facility near Robins Air Force Base, Ga., to support and upgrade U.S. Air Force equipment and software, the company announced Aug. 17. BAE is completing the installation of infrastructure and equipment at the BAE Systems Readiness and Sustainment Center, which is located five miles from the base and should be ready for operations in December.

Michael Fabey
The $477 million upgrade program to make the A-10 Warthog a digital combat aircraft shows the Air Force's commitment to the plane, but funding battles could still stretch out the improvement schedule, the service's A-10 program manager said. "The A-10 has been underappreciated from the very beginning," said U.S. Air Force Col. Jim Ratti, the aircraft system manager and commander of the 508th Aircraft Sustainment Squadron. "But this shows the Air Force wants to keep it around and viable."

Michael Bruno
Starting next year, more public information on annual defense spending requests and other Pentagon reports can be expected - although how much more and how quickly remain to be seen. Senators are including a provision in their fiscal 2007 defense spending bill that requires Defense Department reports to congressional appropriations panels be posted online. And already, the White House Office of Management and Budget agreed to publish budget justifications as of 2007, according to the movement's most vocal proponent.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA is looking at refining the launch approval process for the space shuttle to make it easier and simpler for stakeholders to go on record with caveats to supplement their final go/no-go decision. "We ...have asked ourselves the question of whether our polling and our documentation process is as crisp as we would like it to be," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said Aug. 16. "And in fact we're working on it."

Staff
AFRICAN FOCUS: As defense contractors have been predicting, American and NATO forces will be shifting more resources into Africa, U.S. Marine Corps. Gen. James Jones said Aug. 17. Western forces will be moving more into sub-Sahara and other African regions, said Jones, the Supreme Allied Commander for Europe and the commander of the United States European Command. "There's going to be more movement into Africa as the years go on," Jones said.

Michael Fabey
Commercial satellite imaging company GeoEye filed its intended proxy with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Aug. 15, said Matthew O'Connell, company chief executive officer, president and director. The company expects an SEC response within a month or two, O'Connell said during an Aug. 16 investor update conference call. O'Connell said there has been growing interest, particularly foreign and commercial, for the type of imaging being offered by GeoEye, especially with online access.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA on Aug. 16 completed the flight readiness review (FRR) for space shuttle Atlantis' next mission, STS-115, approving the orbiter for flight and setting the launch date for the afternoon of Aug. 27. "All members of the board were 'go' for launch," Associate Administrator for Space Operations Bill Gerstenmaier said at a news conference following the review.

Staff
Phillip A. Thompson has been named to the board of directors.

Staff
AIR INTERCEPT: Two Massachusetts Air National Guard F-15 fighter jets scrambled Aug. 16 to escort Washington-bound United Airlines flight 923 to Boston's Logan National Airport instead, the North American Aerospace Defense Command said. A "disruptive" passenger with hand cream and matches triggered an emergency landing, according to the Transportation Security Agency. Since Operation Noble Eagle began after Sept. 11, 2001, NORAD has flown more than 42,000 sorties - 70 percent by National Guard crews - and scrambled or diverted aircraft more than 2,100 times.

Staff
Glenn A. Delgado has been named assistant administrator for the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization.

Staff
ROBOTIC CONTROL: The Defense Department's Joint Robotics Office has awarded Lockheed Martin Corp. a $1.9-million, three-year contract to mentor AnthroTronix Inc., a small, privately held, woman-owned business in developing a Joint Architecture for Unmanned Systems-compliant robot control system, Lockheed said Aug. 16. The Multi-Purpose Autonomous Teaming Control of Heterogeneous Robots will control heterogeneous teams of robots performing diverse sets of force-protection tasks for the Air Force Research Laboratory.

Staff
Mauricio Botelho is stepping down as president and CEO. Frederico Fleury Curado will succeed Botelho.

Staff
Steve Larned has been named chief marketing officer. Marc Tremblay has been appointed general manager of the commercial business unit.

Staff
Kenneth A. Paladino has been elected president, chief executive officer and director. Timothy J. Roach was replaced by Paladino. Roach retired Aug. 14.

Michael Fabey
The first EA-18G Growler, known as aircraft EA-1, successfully completed its maiden flight Aug. 15 from Lambert International Airport in St. Louis, about one month ahead of schedule, prime contractor Boeing said. The EA-1 is the first of two test aircraft built under a system development and demonstration contract that Boeing signed with the Navy on Dec. 29, 2003.

Staff
Jack Harrington has been appointed vice president, command and control systems, for the network centric systems unit. Brian McKeon was replaced by Harrington. McKeon has joined Raytheon Systems Limited in the United Kingdom as president and managing director. Richard B. Johnston has been appointed vice president for corporate operations.

Staff
Martin C. Faga has been named to the board of directors.

Staff
Bob Kramer has been named senior vice president of marketing and strategic development. Dennis J. Reed has been named vice president for operations of the space and airborne systems business.