Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

House

By Jefferson Morris
The U.S. Air Force wrapped up its first space program managers conference in Los Angeles on Feb. 23, which brought together more than 160 space acquisition personnel to discuss their programs and share best practices. The event was spearheaded by Air Force Undersecretary Ronald Sega, who is leading the military space acquisition community in a "back to basics" reform approach aimed at curtailing the budget overruns and schedule slips that have plagued so many major space programs.

Staff
General Dynamics said Feb. 23 that it has agreed to buy Quebec-based ammunition maker SNC Technologies Inc. for $275 million ($315 million Canadian dollars). SNC Technologies is a subsidiary of Montreal-based SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. SNC supplies small-, medium- and large-caliber ammo and related products to law enforcement agencies and armed forces globally.

Staff
RESCHEDULED: Arianespace has rescheduled the dual-launch of the Hot Bird 7A and Spainsat satellites for Feb. 24 from the company's spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, following the evaluation and replacement of a component in the Ariane 5 ECA rocket's ground support equipment that forced a scrub on Feb. 21. The new launch is scheduled for a window from 5:11 p.m. to 6:21 p.m. Eastern time.

John M. Doyle
The U.S. Navy is committed to maintaining 10 aircraft carrier wings, according to Adm. Robert Willard, vice chief of naval operations. The recently completed 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review calls for reducing the number of carriers from 12 to 11, which Willard says is "adequate." But "we intend to hold to 10 air wings," he adds, noting 10 carrier air wings "is a key factor" in meeting Navy goals of maintaining a continuous carrier forward presence while having the ability to dispatch a "surge" of six carriers in emergencies.

Staff
The Mars rover Spirit will be forced to at least temporarily abandon its detailed examination of the heavily layered Home Plate feature to head for a nearby north facing slope to prepare for the coming Martian winter. Once winter is over, the rover science team plans to drive Spirit back to Home Plate to continue investigations. Spirit needs by late February to begin the several-hundred-meter trip to McCool Hill, where it can point its solar arrays more directly at the sun to generate electrical power for rover heaters.

Michael Bruno
An upcoming high-level Defense Department review of the U.S. Air Force's combat search and rescue (CSAR-X) helicopter effort will entail several policy officials and represents a new form of program review under the Pentagon's newest chief acquisition official, according to an industry representative.

Staff
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency and a Boeing-led industry team has successfully completed a test that tracked a target missile with an upgraded early warning radar that is being incorporated into the Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system. A long-range Strategic Targets System rocket was launched at 7:09 a.m. Alaska time (11:09 a.m. Eastern time) on Feb. 23 from Kodiak Island, Alaska. The rocket was tracked by the radar, which is located at Beale Air Force Base, Calif.

Staff
TEST BURN: Europe's Venus Express probe has successfully tested its main engine, which will be used to brake the spacecraft so that it can enter orbit around Earth's cloud-shrouded neighbor. The three-second test burn, performed on the night of Feb. 16-17, came as a prelude to a 51-minute firing sequence set for April 11. Built by EADS Astrium on the basis of the Mars Express orbiter currently circling the Red Planet, Venus Express was launched in November 2005.

McAleese & Associates P.C.

Staff
U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf area plan to scale back to a much smaller footprint after Iraq operations are wound down, instead of creating large garrisons as was done in post-World War II Germany, according to Army Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, deputy director for plans and policy at U.S. Central Command. Kimmitt, speaking Feb. 23 at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, pointed to the U.S. military's Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa as an example of how to fight the Pentagon's so-called "long war" against Islamic extremism.

By Jefferson Morris
Retired Vice Adm. Joseph Dyer, executive vice president and general manager of iRobot, envisions the number of missions undertaken by the company's PackBot multiplying as robots become more important in day-to-day military operations. "I really look at PackBot as the F-18 of ground robots," said Dyer, the former head of Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) and current chair of NASA's Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel. "That basic platform will take on many payloads, sensors, manipulators, what have you, over time."

McAleese & Associates P.C.

Staff
The Australian government is expanding communications systems for its surface ships, with a plan to spend $74 million on the effort near-term. The government has announced that ADI Ltd. will be the prime contractor for the third phase of the multipronged Sea 1442 project. It aims at developing the initial Maritime Tactical Wide Area Network (MTWAN), and associated capability, as well as the hardware and software to equip 15 ships. The contract is valued at $33 million (45 million Australian dollars).

Staff
Boeing Co. has successfully completed weapons separation wind tunnel tests on P-8A Multi-mission Maritime Aircraft (MMA), the company said Feb. 23. The tests showed that the weapons, which include U.S. Navy mines, missiles and torpedoes, will separate from the aircraft safely when launched during flight. The 220 hours of testing were conducted over three weeks at Arnold Air Force Base Engineering Development Center in Tullahoma, Tenn.

Michael Bruno
The U.S. Naval Sea Systems Command is awarding General Dynamics Corp.'s Bath Iron Works shipbuilding unit $35.1 million to exercise an option for DDG-51-class destroyer program lead yard services, the Defense Department said Feb. 22. Lead yard services include liaison for ship construction, general class services, class logistic services, class design agent services and class change design services for ships and DDG modernization support. The work will be performed in Bath, Maine, and is expected to be completed by November 2010, the DOD said.

House Science Committee Democratic Staff

Staff
The U.S. intelligence community's enterprise architecture will be broadened beyond the traditional focus on its infrastructure to include missions and function areas, the chief information officer for the director of national intelligence said Feb. 22.

Staff
Bruce Albrecht has been named vice chairman. Harvey Castner has been appointed vice president. Henry Cialone has been named president and CEO. Dennis Crockett has been appointed chairman. Robert Myers has been named chief financial officer and secretary/treasurer. Phil Weisenbach has been appointed vice president and chief operating officer.

John M. Doyle
A deal to turn over operational control at six major U.S. ports is generating hearings, letters, legislation and rhetoric on Capitol Hill. The Senate Armed Services Committee plans to hold an open briefing Feb. 23 on the national security implications of the acquisition of Peninsular and Oriental Steamship Navigation Co. by Dubai Ports World -- a government-owned and controlled firm of the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Staff
CVN-21 PUMPS: Curtiss-Wright Corp. said Feb. 21 that it has been awarded $14.6 million in contracts by Northrop Grumman Newport News to build and design engineered pumps for the U.S. Navy's CVN-21 Class aircraft carriers. The pumps will be built by Curtiss-Wright's Flow Control unit in Phillipsburg, N.J. They are set to be delivered in 2008 and 2009.

Staff
Close coordination between the European Space Agency and the German team that operates the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on its Mars Express orbiter allowed them to capture images of the shadow of the moon Phobos racing across the planet's surface on Nov. 10, 2005.