Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
The U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer Bainbridge (DDG 96) will be commissioned on Nov. 12, the Defense Department said. A ceremony for the Arleigh Burke-class vessel will be held at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Rep. E. Clay Shaw (R-Fla.) will give the principal address, and Susan Bainbridge Hay will be the sponsor of the ship, named for her great-great-great-grandfather.

Michael Bruno
The Defense Department is making headway in getting its financial house in order, officials said at a hearing Nov. 9, and so far is managing to avoid a congressional effort to install a chief management officer at the Pentagon to reign in wasteful spending.

Staff
General Dynamics' Bath Iron Works Corp. has received $12.1 million for lead yard services for the U.S. Navy's DDG-51 destroyer program. The work will be performed in Bath, Maine, and is expected to be completed by November 2010. The Naval Sea Systems Command contract was not competitively procured, a Nov. 8 Pentagon announcement said.

Staff
Gen. John P. Jumper has been appointed to the board of Rolls-Royce North America Holdings. Jumper is a former Air Force chief of staff.

By Jefferson Morris
In its fiscal 2006 appropriations legislation, Congress is ordering NASA to submit two reports early next year on the future of unmanned aerial vehicles. The first request appears to confirm NASA's rumored plans to withdraw from the Access Five UAV airspace initiative in FY '07 (DAILY, Sept. 29).

Staff
The U.S. Navy Air Systems Command is seeking industry reaction to its revised plan for acquiring a sea-skimming anti-ship cruise missile target that includes a supersonic "sprint vehicle," mimicking the Russian system known as Threat D.

Staff
The final 2005 Base Closure and Realignment recommendations for reshaping the Defense Department's infrastructure and force structure officially took effect Nov. 9 after Congress allowed them to pass into law at the mandated Nov. 8 deadline, the Pentagon said. The DOD now has until Sept. 15, 2007 - two years from the date President Bush sent Congress the BRAC commission's final report - to begin closing and realigning facilities as decided by the independent BRAC Commission.

Staff
Dianne VanBeber has been appointed vice president of investor relations and corporate communications.

Staff
Russell Johnson has been named vice president of sales and marketing.

Staff
Michael B. Baughn has been appointed president and chief operating officer, effective Dec. 31. Robert J. Khoury is retiring as president and CEO at the end of the year.

Marc Selinger
Major programs at the U.S. Missile Defense Agency appear to have largely dodged a bullet in the latest round of Pentagon budget cuts. No major programs were canceled, despite persistent speculation that such technologically challenging efforts as the Airborne Laser and the Kinetic Energy Interceptor might be killed. The majority of cuts would simply delay future programs that still are being defined.

Staff
John Jacobson has left the company as president and CEO. Kenneth Kirkpatrick will succeed Jacobson, effective immediately.

Staff
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), a critical voice on Capitol Hill overseeing defense procurement, will lead a Senate Armed Services airland subcommittee hearing Nov. 15 on defense acquisition issues related to tactical aviation and Army programs. McCain will call for opinions from John Hamre of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Gene Porter of the Institute for Defense Analyses, Frank Anderson Jr. of the Defense Acquisition University and auditor Katherine Schinasi of the Government Accountability Office.

Staff
A plan to help South Korea obtain military goods quickly in case of war is being discussed with the United States, South Korea's defense ministry said Nov. 8.

Staff
CONTRACT WINNER: Technest Holdings Inc. said Nov. 8 that it has won a U.S. Navy Small Business Innovation Research contract to develop a compact pan-tilt-zoom optical sensor for unmanned combat aerial vehicles. The newly designed optical sensor, called OmniBird, will be used by the Navy for close-range machine vision applications, specifically aircraft carrier flight deck operations and autonomous air-to-air refueling, the company said.

Staff
AMENDMENT: The Senate late Nov. 8 was expected to vote on a Democratic proposal to shift $50 million from missile defense funds into Cooperative Threat Reduction efforts. Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), chairman of the defense appropriations subcommittee, said subcontractors working on ground-base interceptors would be hurt by the manufacturing delay caused by the move and would have to be recertified later. Democrats said the money should be used to fight weapons proliferation, a more immediate threat.

Staff

Staff
Deliveries of F-16 night vision kits to South Korea and power conditioning units to the U.S. Navy's Tactical Tomahawk missiles program helped Astronics Corp.'s sales to more than double in the third quarter of 2005, the company said Nov. 8. The East Aurora, N.Y.-based company, which manufactures lighting, electronics and electrical power systems, said its third-quarter military sales were $8.3 million, a 94% increase over the same period the year before. The company also reported a $1.1 million jump in total net income.

By Jefferson Morris
The Defense Department's future TacSat small satellites still are awaiting a decision from the Air Force about how they will be launched, although an answer is expected shortly, according to Lloyd Feldman, assistant director of the Pentagon's Office of Force Transformation.

Staff
Lockheed Martin has delivered the second modernized Global Positioning System Block IIR satellite to Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., the company said Nov. 8. The GPS-IIR is scheduled for launch in January. Lockheed Martin is modernizing eight GPS satellites to improve military and civilian navigation worldwide. The first modernized GPS-IIR satellite was launched in September from Cape Canaveral (DAILY, Sept. 27) and is performing normally after a series of precision maneuvers and deployment of its spacecraft systems, the company said.

By Jefferson Morris
The strike by Boeing workers that has put Delta rocket launches at Vandenberg Air Force Base and Cape Canaveral on hold has entered its second week with no new negotiations between the parties currently planned. Roughly half of Boeing's Delta work force went on strike just after midnight on Nov. 2, following the recent expiration of a three-year contract between the company and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers District 725. Best offer