Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
WING REPLACEMENT: New York-based L-3 Communications said April 7 that it was awarded a $16 million follow-on contract from the U.S. Navy to conduct Enhanced Special Structural Inspections and Center Wing Replacement on four P-3 maritime patrol aircraft. With the award, L-3 has been contracted to perform ESSI work on a total of 28 U.S. Navy P-3s. Over the next several years, all 150 P-3 aircraft in the Navy's fleet will require similar modifications to remain operational, L-3 said.

Staff
NO OPPOSITION: Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, says he foresees no opposition to the nomination of Navy Secretary Gordon England to replace Paul Wolfowitz as deputy defense secretary. Levin says England is "extraordinarily well qualified" and a "very decent and open type of person."

Staff
CHIP WARNING: A Defense Science Board task force is recommending "urgent action" to address an "alarming" migration of critical microelectronics manufacturing from the United States to foreign countries.

Rich Tuttle
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - The draft request for proposals for the Air Force's next buy of Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles assumes some 23 missions split about evenly between Boeing and Lockheed Martin to allow both to remain viable launch contractors through 2010, according to Lt. Gen. Brian A. Arnold, commander of Air Force Space Command's Space and Missile Systems Center.

Staff
TRANSMITTERS: BAE Systems said April 7 that it was recently awarded a $17.1 million contract modification for the production of six low-band transmitters (LBT) for the U.S. Navy's Electronic Attack-6B Prowler aircraft. The follow-on award brings the total contract value to $21.1 million. The LBT - Antenna Group is a radar and communications jammer used to provide protection for strike aircraft, ships and ground troops by disrupting enemy radar and communications signals.

Staff
NEW APPROACH: The U.S. military is finding that small numbers of large, expensive systems are not appropriate for increasingly common yet irregular types of warfare, retired Navy Vice Adm. Arthur K. Cebrowski says. Cebrowski, who until recently served as director of Force Transformation, says Pentagon leaders need to re-evaluate their approach to defense spending because the character of warfare is changing. "We are moving into the age of the small, fast and the many. To do that, we need an entirely different approach to what things cost," he said.

Lisa Troshinsky
Following an Army request, Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control has accelerated system development and fielding of its Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS) unitary rocket, a Lockheed Martin official said. The system is currently in test and evaluation, Rick Vallario, director of Lockheed Martin tactical missile business development, told The DAILY April 6. "Testing is under way and a Spiral 1 capability will be available this year. Then system development and demonstration (SDD) will continue," he said.

Staff
ATLAS V HEAVY: Lt. Gen. Brian A. Arnold, commander of Air Force Space Command's Space and Missile Systems Center, speculates that in light of NASA's space exploration plans Lockheed Martin may choose to develop a heavy version of its Atlas V Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV). When the EELV program began some years ago, Lockheed Martin and Boeing were required to develop heavy boosters, but only Boeing did so.

Staff
TARGET LAUNCHED: The U.S. Missile Defense Agency said it fired a new air-launched, medium-range target missile for the first time April 8. Initial indications are that the test was successful. The target was dropped from the back of a C-17 at about 7:30 a.m. Hawaii time (1:30 p.m. Eastern time) about 800 miles west-northwest of the Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai, Hawaii. Although the actual distance traveled is classified, medium-range targets have ranges of 621 to 1,864 miles.

Marc Selinger
The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program office appears to be sticking with its $40.5 billion cost estimate for the current development effort, despite a Pentagon group's analysis suggesting that the price tag could be $2 billion to $5 billion higher. It remains to be seen which figure the Defense Department will embrace. A Defense Acquisition Board (DAB) is scheduled to meet May 5 to review the program, including the latest cost projections.

By Jefferson Morris
The Air Force and Boeing have formally closed the investigation into the premature engine cutoff that marred the first launch of the company's Delta IV Heavy Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) on Dec. 21, and have begun implementing hardware and software fixes that they say should not affect current launch schedules.

Staff
MODULAR GOALS: The Army's modularity program, which includes the National Guard and Reserve, will be completed by 2011, Army officials say. The modularizing of the regular force will be done by about 2009, while the Guard and Reserve, headquarters, and support units of action will be complete by 2011, Secretary of the Army Francis Harvey said April 6. The Army will begin funding modularity in its core budget starting in 2007, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Schoomaker says.

Rich Tuttle
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - The future of the North American Aerospace Defense Command isn't necessarily a question of grow or die, as some have said, according to Adm. Timothy Keating, the NORAD commander. Rather, he said it might be a question of getting "a little bit better at the current threat spectrum." He also said NORAD "may look slightly different, maybe a lot different, five years from now."

Staff
Jean-Yves Le Gall will remain chief executive officer. Jean-Marie Luton will remain chairman of the board of directors. Pascal Claudel, Claire Coulbeaux, Marc Grosheitsch, Francois Maroquene, Victor Nikolaev, and Eve Portier now make up the management committee.

Staff
General Dynamics Electric Boat will perform submarine modernization and other work under an $8 million contract modification awarded by the U.S. Navy, the company said April 7. Under the contract, Electric Boat will continue to do non-nuclear sub modernization and repair work at the Naval Submarine Support Facility at the submarine base in Groton, Conn. The work includes intermediate and depot-level overhaul, repair and modernization of subs and the Shippingport floating dry-dock, the company said.

By Jefferson Morris
The shuttle Discovery's crew has lingering doubts about the on-orbit thermal protection system (TPS) repair techniques that NASA is developing in the wake of the Columbia accident, and would not be comfortable relying on them during re-entry on STS-114.

Staff
Don Antonucci is retiring as company president. Judy F. Marks will replace Antonucci in October 2005. Marks also has been chosen vice president of the Transportation and Security Solutions business unit, effective May 1.

Michael Bruno
The Senate Appropriations Committee (SAC) on April 6 approved an $80.58 billion supplemental spending bill for U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as antiterrorism, homeland security and tsunami relief efforts.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Air Force is evaluating whether to fix an F/A-22 Raptor test jet involved in a September mishap at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., according to a service official. Col. Arnold Bunch, director of the Air Force Research Laboratory's Munitions Directorate at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., who led the board that investigated the Sept. 28 mishap, said that no external damage is visible on Raptor 4003 but that some components would probably have to be replaced.

Marc Selinger
The head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency said April 7 that MDA plans to take several steps to avoid repeating the kinds of flight-test failures that have recently plagued the Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system.

Staff
COMBS CONTRACT: L-3 Communications' Vertex Aerospace subsidiary has been awarded a one-year, $6.6 million contract to provide Contractor Operated and Managed Base Supply (COMBS) for the U.S. Army National Guard's worldwide C-23 Sherpa aircraft fleet, the company said. L-3 Vertex will provide total contractor supply chain management services for the C-23 fleet, including worldwide procurement, spares repair, quality assurance and inventory tracking.

Michael Bruno
If Congress grants funding this year to restart a study of the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator (RNEP), defense officials would study one warhead and are confident they would soon find out whether the concept is realistic, the administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration has told lawmakers. Administrator Linton F. Brooks told the Senate Armed Services Committee's strategic forces subcommittee that officials selected the B83 warhead to study because that was where the RNEP study was when funding was pulled from the program last year.

Staff
Gen. John A. Gordon (USAF-Ret.) has been named to the board of directors. Gordon is a former homeland security adviser to President Bush and served as deputy director of central intelligence at the CIA. Gen. Richard Hawley (USAF-Ret.), Paul G. Kaminski, William Schneider Jr., and Fred Whitridge are returning for a second three-year term on the board of directors.

Staff