Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
ARMY McDonnell Douglas Helicopter Co., Mesa, Ariz., was awarded on March 7, 2005, a $24,818,361 firm-fixed-price contract for Contractor Logistics Support Depot Repair. Work will be performed in Mesa, Ariz., and is expected to be completed by Sept. 30, 2006. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This was a sole source contract initiated on March 7, 2005. The U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command, Redstone Arsenal, Ala., is the contracting activity (DAAH23-00-C-0001). AIR FORCE

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI - Global Positioning System components provider NovAtel Inc. of Calgary, Canada, has received an order from Waltham, Mass.-based Raytheon Co. for Space Based Augmentation System equipment in support of the Indian Geostationary Earth Orbit Augmented Navigation (GAGAN) program, NovAtel said. Financial terms were not disclosed. The equipment is set to be delivered in the first half of this year.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency has awarded a contract to the Boeing Co. to tweak the ability of the Airborne Laser (ABL) to target ballistic missiles, a Defense Department official said March 14. The award continues work begun under an earlier technology insertion contract, the DOD official told The DAILY. The official declined to reveal how the ABL's targeting capability would be improved, saying such details are classified.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Navy's EA-18G program has successfully demonstrated a key technology that will allow the electronic attack aircraft to conduct voice communications with friendly forces while simultaneously jamming enemy communications, industry officials said March 14.

Staff
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc. (GA-ASI) of San Diego has completed its Extended Range Multi-Purpose (ER/MP) systems capability demonstration (SCD) as part of the first phase of a future Army unmanned aerial vehicle program competition, the company said. GA-ASI, leading teammates AAI Corp. of Hunt Valley, Md., and Sparta Inc. of Lake Forest, Calif., demonstrated its Warrior aircraft at Fort Huachuca, Ariz. The Warrior is a derivative of the Predator UAV.

By Jefferson Morris
The White House on March 11 announced the nomination of Johns Hopkins University physicist and former In-Q-Tel President Mike Griffin to be the next administrator of NASA. The nomination ends months of speculation over who would be chosen to fill the post vacated by former Administrator Sean O'Keefe, who announced his intention to leave NASA in mid-December and began serving as chancellor of Louisiana State University last month (DAILY, Dec. 14).

Michael Bruno
Progress on determining which of the U.S. military services are going to be in charge of which aspects of unmanned aerial vehicles, including development, has "started to take off" in joint service discussions in the past few weeks, Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Jan C. Huly told reporters March 10.

Staff
C-130 AMP: By late April, the U.S. Air Force plans to finish studying whether it would be feasible to recompete the C-130 Avionics Modernization Program (AMP), a service spokesman says. The Government Accountability Office recently called for the study, saying the AMP competition, which Boeing won in 2001, was tainted by Darleen Druyun, who began talking with Boeing about a job while still serving as an Air Force acquisition official (DAILY, Feb. 25).

Staff
LET THEM KNOW: Industry teams vying to build NASA's Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) have until March 15 to notify NASA centers in writing if they would like to partner with them on CEV work. The agency has decided that NASA centers can work with CEV contractors, but only on a nonexclusive basis. NASA released the final request for proposals for the CEV on March 1, and the deadline for submissions is May 2. The agency plans to award two three-year CEV contracts by September and downselect to a single prime contractor in late 2008.

Staff
OUTSIDE OPTIONS: Two aerospace and defense analysts say there is a good chance that Boeing Co. will go outside the company to find a new president and CEO to replace ousted head Harry Stonecipher. "Boeing would need to go outside to effect cultural changes," Herb Finster, senior partner and defense analyst at McKenna, Long and Aldridge, tells The DAILY.

Staff
Armor Holdings Inc. of Jacksonville, Fla., has received a $35 million order to provide the U.S. Army with a new armoring system for M1151 and M1152 Humvees, the company said March 11. The order was issued under a teaming agreement by military parts supplier AM General of South Bend, Ind. The Humvees will be armored to specified levels during production and fitted so that additional add-on armor can be quickly installed in the field with limited tools and manpower, the company said.

Staff
COMPETING LASERS: Military officials expect "in the next few months" to see three competing systems under the Joint High Power Solid State Laser program demonstrate close to 25 kilowatts of power "with the potential of good beam quality over relevant shot times," according to James B. Engle, Air Force deputy assistant secretary for science, technology and engineering. The Air Force, the High Energy Laser Joint Technology Office and the Army jointly fund the laser program.

Staff
March 17 - 18 -- Grid Networks, "Net-Centric Operations in the Emerging Global Information Grid," Sheraton National Hotel, Washington, D.C. For more information go to www.technologytraining.com. March 21 - 22 -- 13th Annual Conference on Quality in the Space and Defense Industries, "Strategies for Mission Success," Radisson At The Port Hotel & Conference Center, Cape Canaveral, Fla. For more information call (254) 776-3550, email [email protected] or go to http://www.asdnet.org/cqsdi.

Michael Bruno
Rep. Harold Rogers (R-Ky.), chairman of the House Appropriations Committee's homeland security subcommittee, on March 10 said that while the Bush Administration's $966 million fiscal 2006 budget request for the Coast Guard's Deepwater recapitalization program represents "significant growth, it is also accompanied by numerous questions and concerns."

Staff
RADIOS CONTRACT: Harris Corp. of Rochester, N.Y., has been awarded a contract worth up to $75 million to supply the U.S. Marine Corps with Harris Falcon(R) II HF radios, spares and training, the company said. The AN/PRC-150(C) is the only HF radio with embedded communications security that has been certified for transmission of U.S. classified information, the company said.

Rich Tuttle
A U.S. Air Force industry day slated this month on the broad mission of airborne electronic attack reflects recent Defense Department emphasis on the importance of electronic warfare, according to one analyst. At the March 22 event in Arlington, Va., Air Force officials will outline an effort to identify technology gaps in current airborne electronic attack plans and speed solutions to fill them.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE - A new privately owned French aerospace, defense and telecommunications group has emerged after electronic equipment maker Sagem successfully bid to merge with state-run aerospace propulsion and equipment company Snecma. The two companies said March 9 that the merger would create a large international high technology group once formalities are completed. Sagem's successful offer for Snecma shares represented more than 83% of the state-owned company's capital and 94.4% of the shares which could be tendered, the companies announced.

Lisa Troshinsky
An analysis of alternatives (AOA) review for implementing the next-generation Defense Department command and control system, Joint Command and Control (JC2), should be completed next month, an Army official told The DAILY. The JC2, the follow-on to the current Global Command and Control System (GCCS), still is in its infancy, said Col. Stuart Whitehead, director of the Training and Doctrine Command's Program Integration Office Battle Command.

Staff
BEHIND THE WALL: In fiscal 2006, the U.S. Air Force will continue working on a low-collateral-damage warhead, seeking a so-called "behind-the-wall" weapon with a "highly localized lethal footprint," says James B. Engle, the Air Force deputy assistant secretary for science, technology and engineering. The warhead case is a low-density, wrapped carbon fiber/epoxy structure in a steel nose and base. It can survive penetration into a one-foot hardened concrete wall, Engle says.

Staff
MMA REVIEW: The U.S. Navy's Multi-mission Maritime Aircraft (MMA) is scheduled to undergo a system functional review in April to ensure the program is on track for its preliminary design review in September. The Navy says the program successfully completed February's integrated baseline review, which was designed to ensure funding is assigned to the right tasks. MMA, which the Navy is developing to replace the aging P-3, will use a modified 737-800ERX jet and perform anti-submarine warfare, anti-surface ship warfare and reconnaissance. Boeing is the prime contractor.

Staff
TOMAHAWK: A U.S. Navy Tomahawk cruise missile was launched March 9 from the USS Minneapolis-Saint Paul (SSN 708) - a Los Angeles-class submarine now stationed in the Atlantic Ocean off Jacksonville, Fla. - and recovered 825 nautical miles away on the Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., test range, the Navy said. The Navy has awarded Raytheon Missile Systems a $1.6 billion contract for up to 2,200 Tomahawk block IV missiles for the Navy's surface and submarine strike warfare fleets.

Staff
The Abrams tank is getting a tank urban survival kit (TUSK), a series of improvements that will increase the survivability of the vehicle in urban areas off the traditional battlefield. The Abrams, designed for the Cold War, "is still the most survivable weapon in the arsenal from the front," Lt. Col. Michael Flanagan, Army product manager for TUSK, said in an Army statement. "But today it's a 360-degree fight, and these systems are designed to improve survivability in that urban environment."

Neelam Mathews
NEW DEHLI - Seven of the Indian navy's diesel-electric patrol submarines have been retrofitted to carry Russian 3M-54E1 Klub-S submarine-launched cruise missiles, a navy defense official said. The work was done at Russia's Zvezdochka shipyard at Severodyinsk. Three more subs will be equipped within two years under the $78 million deal. The retrofits also involve building platforms to launch the undersea variant of the Indo-Russian supersonic BrahMos cruise missile.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Defense Department's chief weapons tester has given the U.S. Air Force's F/A-22 Raptor a mixed review, finding that the stealthy fighter performs well but has problems being sustained in the field, sources said March 11. The rating of operationally "effective" but "not suitable" is contained in a report that DOD's Director of Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E) recently submitted to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Congress, sources told The DAILY.

Staff
MORE HELLFIRES: The Defense Department has invested additional funds in the AGM-114N Hellfire missile and will deliver more than 100 units to the Marine Corps and Special Operations Command by June 2005, according to Ronald M. Sega, director of defense research and engineering. Money came from fiscal 2002 Quick Reaction Munitions Funds, though Sega did not provide further details during a hearing last week of the Senate Armed Services Committee's emerging threats subcommittee.