Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Bruno
Maritime defense - including the creation of a maritime equivalent of the North American Aerospace Defense Command - presents the greatest single opportunity to beef up domestic security, according to the Defense Department's top official for homeland defense. "When we speak of a maritime NORAD, we're not talking about just a bilateral relationship with Canada modeled on the NORAD agreement we have in the air domain," said Paul McHale, assistant secretary of defense for homeland defense.

Artem Fetisov
LE BOURGET, France - In January, Eurocopter finally terminated an agreement to develop and produce the utility Mil Mi-38 helicopter jointly with Russia, as legal difficulties regarding industrial property rights could not be resolved. Although Russian developers have lost their French partner, their hopes are still high as they look for new partners, according to Aviation Week's ShowNews.

Staff
U.K. ISTAR: BAE Systems' Nashua, N.H., facility will perform $12.5 million worth of work under a larger contract between the U.K. Ministry of Defense (MOD) and BAE Systems to provide maritime intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and reconnaissance (ISTAR) sensors for the Royal Navy. BAE Systems' technology partner, QinetiQ Group, also will work on the sensor system proposal, called "Sextant." The seven-month advanced demonstration phase will result in a demonstration to British officials, BAE Systems announced June 13.

Rich Tuttle
A BAE Systems-Raytheon team is proceeding with development of an advanced mission planning capability for the U-2 reconnaissance aircraft, and efforts to develop similar capabilities for other types of platforms are shaping up, according to a BAE Systems official. The team won a $12.9 million contract for the U-2 work on May 9, said Bob Simek, business development director for BAE Systems' National Security Solutions unit in San Diego.

Marc Selinger
LE BOURGET, France - The V-22 Osprey is doing "swimmingly well" in its operational evaluation (OPEVAL) and is expected to finish that key test phase in about a week and a half, according to a program official. "We're on the brink of completing OPEVAL," said Marine Corps Col. Bill Taylor, the deputy program manager for the U.S. Navy-led V-22 program. "We're looking forward to the results when they officially come out."

Staff
FAST PATROL BOATS: United States Marine Inc. of New Orleans has been awarded an $18.8 million U.S. Navy contract to build three 27-meter Fast Patrol Boats, with technical data, training and spare parts, for the Royal Oman Police Coast Guard under the Foreign Military Sales Program. Oman will use the fiberglass-reinforced plastic boats for law enforcement and local-patrol operations. The boats will be built in New Orleans and should be ready by May 2007. The contract was awarded June 9 by the Naval Sea Systems Command.

Michael Bruno
The U.S. military must prepare for global anti-terror operations as well as a potential major engagement with China as it works on the new Quadrennial Defense Review, analysts said at the American Enterprise Institute on June 10. Speed in response to worldwide developments is critical, but budget realities will force hard constraints at a time when modernizing the military is important, they said.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA is preparing to release the latest Announcement of Opportunity for its Discovery program, which will ease restrictions on proposals that have contributed to cost and schedule overruns on previous missions, according to Andrew Dantzler, director of the Solar System Division at NASA headquarters.

Staff
MAKING APPEARANCE: The first KC-767A aerial refueling tanker built for the Italian air force flew across the Atlantic June 10 to be displayed at the Paris Air Show. The flight is part of a flight-test and aerial refueling certification program, aircraft builder Boeing said. The company is building four of the planes for Italy.

John Terino
MERIDIAN, Miss. - Rolls-Royce plans to use the success of its Power By the Hour (PBTH) F405 engine maintenance contract for the Navy's T-45 trainer to seek similar contracts for other military aircraft, Alan W. Wilson, director of U.S. Navy programs for the company, told The DAILY. Candidates for PBTH contracts include Northrop Grumman's E-2C Hawkeye airborne early warning aircraft, the C-2 Greyhound, a cargo-carrying Hawkeye derivative, and the Boeing AV-8B Harrier II.

Staff
Aviation Week Group will hold a press conference with J.D. Power and Associates at the Paris Air Show on June 13 at 10:30 a.m. in room 4 at the media center to announce their new relationship. The McGraw-Hill Companies, which owns Aviation Week Group, completed its acquisition of J.D. Power and Associates on April 1.

Staff
AMERICAN DATA: Boatloads of data from the recent sinking of the USS America aircraft carrier will help shipbuilders design stronger, better naval ships for decades, but first analysts have to interpret the information, according to U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Denny Dwyer. The two-star admiral, program executive officer for aircraft carriers, says the May 14 controlled sinking led to no surprises. The 78,000-ton aircraft carrier, built by Newport News Shipbuilding and named by President John F. Kennedy, first was honored with full naval rites before the exercise.

Staff
ROLLOUT: Shuttle Discovery is scheduled to begin rolling back out to Launch Pad 39B at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida in the early morning hours of June 14, equipped with an upgraded external tank featuring a new heater to prevent ice formation. Mounted atop the Crawler Transporter, the fully stacked shuttle and its mobile launcher platform will take six hours to make the four-mile trip to the pad. Launch of Discovery on mission STS-114 to the International Space Station is scheduled for a launch window lasting from July 13 to July 31.

Staff
MORE SPACE: The National Air and Space Museum plans to expand the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia to add three new components to the facility. The expansion, which will proceed as privately raised money pays for it, will add 216,000 square feet, for an eventual total of 760,000 square feet. The expansion plan would create space for a restoration hangar where visitors could watch the work being done, a "collections care" center including an archive for paper, photographs and film, and a collections storage unit.

Staff
NASA'S PREDATOR: NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center in Edwards, Calif., is scheduled to receive a new Predator B unmanned aerial vehicle in early 2006. The agency is purchasing the UAV, ground control system and related equipment from the Air Force for $5.9 million in fiscal 2005 funds. Dryden will receive the Predator in its Air Force configuration, then modify it to fly missions in support of its high-altitude/long-endurance UAV technology program.

Staff
PAYING LESS: South Korea's portion of the expense of hosting U.S. military forces has been cut for the first time under a new cost-sharing agreement, the Voice of America says. South Korea will pay about $676 million to finance the U.S. military presence in 2005 and 2006, almost 9% less than last year, VOA says. The deal was announced June 9. About 32,500 U.S. troops are stationed in South Korea, but the Pentagon's planned global redeployment of forces would reduce that number. The U.S.

Staff

Staff
TESTING GALILEO: Two experimental satellites being developed for Europe's planned Galileo satellite navigation system will be launched in about six months, the European Space Agency says. The satellites are being readied for the Galileo System Test Bed - Version 2, which will be the first phase of the in-orbit validation of the system. Their main purpose is to secure Galileo frequency filings, validate new technologies for operation, study the radiation environment where the operational satellites will be and experiment with live Galileo signals.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA is keeping close watch on asteroid 2004 MN4, which Apollo 9 Astronaut Rusty Schweickart thinks has a remote chance of hitting the Earth in 2036, but agency officials don't feel at this point that placing a transponder on the asteroid for better tracking would be worth the expense.