Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Lisa Troshinsky
The Army's fiscal 2006 budget request will change little from the service's FY '05 budget, but will be increased considerably by the 2005 supplemental and in the Future Years Defense Plan (FYDP), Army senior officials said Feb. 4. The Army's FY '06 budget request totals $98.6 billion, $1.4 billion more than what was requested in FY '05, but slightly less than the $98.9 Congress approved for '05. The FY '07 budget request is $110 billion, an $11.4 billion increase from FY '06, the service said.

Staff
AAR Corp. of Wood Dale, Ill. will furnish logistical support for the U.S. Navy's fleet of C-40A aircraft under a one-year contract, AAR said Feb. 3. Financial terms were not disclosed. Link Simulation Training, a systems integration firm based in Arlington, Texas, awarded the contract. Link is the prime contractor for the C-40A (B737-700) logistics support program. The contract contains four one-year options.

John Terino
SAN DIEGO - To counter militant Islam, the United States needs to rethink how it fights, said Major Gen. Robert Scales (USA Ret.). Despite the United States' experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan, its military is still preparing to fight large-scale battles against a technologically rich enemy, he said. The U.S. should concentrate on defeating the Islamists, Scales, coauthor of "The Iraq War: A Military History," told the AFCEA/U.S. Naval Institute West 2005 conference here last week.

By Jefferson Morris
The U.S. Air Force is requesting $102.9 billion for fiscal year 2006, up from $96.7 billion enacted in FY '05, which will include $11.9 billion for aircraft procurement. The budget includes $4.4 billion for the F/A-22 Raptor in FY '06, down from $4.7 billion enacted in FY '05. The money will buy 25 new aircraft and fund long-lead items for 29 more, according to an Air Force budget official.

Staff
Bell/Agusta Aerospace Co. is relocating its company headquarters from Fort Worth, Texas, to Reston, Va., to boost its "visibility," the company said Feb. 3. The company is a joint venture of Bell Helicopter, a Textron company, and Agusta, an AgustaWestland company. Initial plans call for 20 to 25 employees to occupy about 8,000 square feet beginning in mid-March.

By Jefferson Morris
A new study from the National Academies endorses exploration as NASA's primary goal, calling it "a form of science" if conducted properly. The Space Studies Board of the National Research Council performed the study, which explored the role science should play in NASA's plans to return astronauts to the moon by 2020 and prepare for landings on Mars and beyond.

Michael Bruno
The U.S. Defense Department's fiscal 2006 budget request is expected to be $418.1 billion - $4.6 billion less than the department predicted it would need just a year ago - and it may undermine troop support and shipbuilding, among other U.S. military needs, Rep. Ike Skelton (D-Mo.) said Feb. 3.

Marc Selinger
A key U.S. lawmaker said Feb. 3 that he remains unconvinced that the American military needs the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator (RNEP), despite a recent push by RNEP proponents to revive work on the bunker-buster weapon.

Staff
EADS Defence Electronics of Ulm, Germany, has successfully conducted its first ground tests with the missile launch detection sensor MILDS-F on a Denmark air force F-16, the company said Feb. 2. The tests sought to show that the MILDS-F can be integrated into the F-16 Electronic Warfare System, and to collect data for the MILDS-F software that will be adapted to the environmental conditions on F-16 aircraft, the company said.

John Terino
SAN DIEGO - The U.S. Navy "is not appropriately shaped for the world that we will face in the future," Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark said at a conference here, repeating concerns he voiced earlier at a conference near Washington (DAILY, Jan. 12).

Lisa Troshinsky
In preparation for the upcoming Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), in a few months the Department of Defense's Joint Staff will roll out a series of strategy documents on U.S. national security, defense, military, and military strategy to win the war on terrorism, said Lt. Gen. Walter Sharp (USA), the Joint Staff's director of strategic plans and policy. Sharp spoke Feb. 3 at the Associa-tion of the U.S. Army's Land Warfare breakfast in Arlington, Va.

Staff
U.S. Coast Guard stations have been unable to meet current Coast Guard standards and goals in the areas of staffing and boats, an indication that stations are "still significantly short" of desired readiness levels in these areas, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) said Feb. 1. Furthermore, because Coast Guard funding practices for personal protective equipment (PPE) have not changed, stations may have insufficient funding for such equipment in the future, GAO said.

Rich Tuttle
Three companies have received U.S. Air Force contracts worth $1 million each for work on the Orbital Deep Space Imager (ODSI) program, a projected constellation of geosynchronous orbit satellites that would significantly improve the ability of the United States to track and characterize objects in space.

Staff
EDITOR'S NOTE: Electronic versions of Aerospace Daily & Defense Report dated Feb. 7 will not be sent out or placed on the Web until shortly after 10:30 a.m. on that day, so we can include a special section detailing the U.S. Department of Defense's fiscal year 2006 budget request, which is embargoed until then. Print subscribers will receive the special section as part of the Feb. 8 issue.

Staff
The Boeing Co. announced Feb. 3 that its EA-18G electronic attack jet and laser-guided Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) have achieved key goals. The EA-18G, which Boeing is developing for the U.S. Navy, completed its wind-tunnel testing, which confirmed that the F/A-18F Super Hornet airframe is well-suited to the electronic attack mission, the company said. Boeing conducted 1,412 hours of tests in five wind tunnels from June 2004 until Jan. 27.

Michael Bruno
Several members of Connecticut's congressional delegation, including both U.S. senators, will host a closed-door session with U.S. Navy Secretary Gordon England late Feb. 9 to protest the recent upset award to provide the next fleet of presidential helicopters to a team led by Lockheed Martin Corp.

Staff
SPARE ENGINES: United Defense Industries Inc. of York, Pa., will provide the Army with 20 spare engines for M88A2 Hercules recovery vehicles under a $9.9 million contract modification, the company said Feb. 3. The contract was awarded by the U.S. Army Tank-automotive and Armaments Command. The work will be done in York. Deliveries are set for February 2006 through October 2006. United Defense designs and produces combat vehicles, artillery, naval guns, missile launchers and precision munitions.

Rich Tuttle
Lockheed Martin has been selected over Boeing to develop RATTLRS, a demonstration program intended to increase the capabilities and performance of expendable supersonic vehicles. "They won," said Jennifer Huergo, a spokeswoman for the Office of Naval Research, when asked Feb. 3 to confirm that Lockheed Martin had beaten Boeing.

Staff
ATLAS III RETIRES: Lockheed Martin's Atlas III rocket had its sixth and final flight in the early morning hours of Feb. 3 when it launched a classified National Reconnaissance Office satellite from Cape Canaveral, Fla. The flight marked the 75th consecutive successful flight for the Atlas series since 1993, including Atlas II, III, and V launches. Lockheed Martin has now phased out all the earlier Atlas rockets in favor of the Atlas V, which the company developed for the Air Force's Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle. The final Atlas II launch occurred Aug. 31, 2004.

By Jefferson Morris
The International Space Station's Expedition 11 crew has a "lengthy list" of experiments to conduct that will help enable long-duration missions by astronauts beyond Earth orbit, according to NASA Station Science Officer John Phillips. Phillips and Expedition 11 commander Sergei Krikalev will fly to the ISS onboard a Soyuz rocket on April 15. During their stay, "we will emphasize science that will lead us to go farther and longer into space," Phillips said during a press conference Feb. 3.

Lisa Troshinsky
Raytheon's net sales increased 12% for both the fourth quarter of 2004 and the full year, boosted largely by military sales, the company reported Feb. 3. Raytheon's fourth-quarter net sales reached $5.7 billion, compared with $5.1 billion in the fourth quarter of 2003. Fourth-quarter profits reached $245 million, compared with $205 million in 2003. "This is our fifth consecutive quarter of predictable financial performance," Raytheon Chairman and CEO William Swanson said in a statement.

Staff
USAF VISION: Gen. John Jumper, U.S. Air Force chief of staff, conveyed his vision for the service during a meeting of Air Force officials Feb. 1 in San Antonio, Texas, according to a spokeswoman for the general. Topics discussed at the summit included the integration of air and space operations.

Staff
The House Science Committee Republican caucus late Feb. 1 held its organizational meeting for the 109th Congress and chose chairs for its four subcommittees. The caucus re-elected Rep. Vernon J. Ehlers (R-Mich.) as chairman of the Environment, Technology and Standards Subcommittee, and Rep. Judy Biggert (R-Ill.) as chairman of the Energy Subcommittee. Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.) was elected chairman of the Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee, which oversees NASA, replacing Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), who was term-limited.