_Aerospace Daily

Staff
RESHAPING DECISION: A proposed reshaping of NATO's military structure should be decided during ministerial meetings in Madrid on June 3 and 4. NATO defense ministers are slated to implement a plan dividing the military force into operational and transformational commands. The renamed Allied Command Operations, formerly Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, largely will continue as before. Last week, NATO's Defense Planning Committee agreed to appoint U.S. Adm. Edmund P. Giambastiani as the new supreme allied commander, transformation.

Staff
OFFSETS COMMISSION: The Presidential Commission on Offsets in International Trade shows no sign of life, and has not issued a congressionally mandated final report that was due in October 2001, according to the General Accounting Office. The Bush Administration never announced replacements for the five commission seats by Clinton Administration officials (DAILY, Jan. 17, 2002). "The last commission meeting was held on December 4, 2000, and no further activity is apparent," the GAO says. Offsets are technology transfers and other benefits that U.S.

Marc Selinger
The Canadian government hopes that becoming a participant in U.S.-led ballistic missile defense programs will improve its chances of derailing American proposals to develop space-based weapons, according to a key Canadian official.

Staff
NEW DESTINATION: The European Space Agency's Rosetta comet-chasing spacecraft has a new target, ESA says: Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Rosetta was to have launched in January to rendezvous with Comet Wirtanen, but that was delayed after the failed launch of Arianespace's new heavier-lift Ariane 5 forced scientists to select a new target. Rosetta now is scheduled to be launched in February 2004, and rendezvous with Churyumov-Gerasimenko in November 2014.

Staff
DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION: When Congress reconvenes the week of June 2-6 following its week-long Memorial Day recess, House and Senate negotiators will begin trying to craft a final version of the fiscal 2004 defense authorization bill. It is difficult to predict when the legislation will be completed, as lawmakers need to work out differences over several highly controversial issues, including base closings and personnel policies.

Staff
FOAM TEST: A recent test in which a piece of insulating foam was fired at a mockup of the leading edge of the space shuttle's wing created a long, narrow gap between a leading edge panel and its adjoining T-seal, an effect the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) calls "significant." During a test conducted at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas, a 1.67-pound piece of foam was fired at mockup at 779 feet per second, striking it at an angle of 20 degrees and causing the T-seal between leading edge panels six and seven to shift, the CAIB says.

Staff
DELAY: A formal solicitation for bids to build the battle management system for the U.S. Air Force's E-10A Multi-sensor Command and Control Aircraft (MC2A) may be delayed up to 10 days, sources said May 30. The delay may risk aggravating an already tightly scheduled review period. A request for proposals (RFP) for the E-10A's Battle Management Command and Control (BMC2) system was due May 30, but a source now says the solicitation may not be ready until June 9.

Nick Jonson
Plans are on track to begin converting the USS Florida from a ballistic missile submarine to a cruise missile submarine, according to a senior U.S. Navy program official. The USS Florida, the second of four ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) to be converted to cruise missile submarines (SSGNs), will enter Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth, Va. on August 1 to begin refueling and preparations for conversion work, Capt. Brian Wegner told The DAILY May 30.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE - The Czech Republic's defense minister has resigned for the second time in less than 36 hours over planned military budget cuts, after withdrawing his earlier resignation following a meeting with the prime minister. Jaroslav Tvrdik's departure, and proposed long-term military budget cuts amounting to some $1.4 billion, have cast doubt on plans for the protection of Czech airspace.

Stephen Trimble
The U.S. Air Force estimates that reactivating 23 B-1B Lancer bombers that were slated for retirement would create a $1 billion hole in its operations and maintenance accounts through fiscal 2009. The Senate and House armed services committees have approved separate proposals to force the Pentagon to reactivate 23 out of 32 B-1Bs that were to be retired.

Staff
STATION HELP: Russia could help China if it builds a space station, Alexander Medvedev, head of Khrunichev Space Center, told visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao during his tour of the center last week. Among other equipment at the center, Hu was shown a backup module to the International Space Station's Zarya control module. China has said it could launch a manned space mission as early as this year, and its plans include building a space station (DAILY, Jan. 21).

Staff
HELIOS: NASA's high-altitude, solar-powered Helios unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) is gearing up for a long-endurance flight of nearly two days and nights later this summer to test its newly developed fuel cell-based electrical energy system, according to NASA. The 256-foot-wide flying wing will be powered by solar arrays by day, which also will charge the electrical system for use at night. The two-day flight could occur as early as mid-July from the Navy's Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, NASA says.

Staff
Telephonics Corp. will provide three ground surveillance radars to the U.S. Air Force under a contract from L-3 Communications, the company said May 29. Terms of the contract were not disclosed. The radars will be deployed by the USAF's Force Protection Unit as part of a program to establish an integrated base defense system. Deployable in less than five minutes, the radars are suited for fixed or mobile surveillance operations in sensitive and high-value potential target areas, company officials said in a May 28 statement.

Stephen Trimble
U.S. Air Force officials are going forward with a nearly $1.8 billion plan to upgrade all but 16 aircraft in the aging C-5 fleet despite a pending military review that could call for retiring a majority of the heavy airlifters.

Stephen Trimble
The U.S. Air Combat Command (ACC) is rewriting mission needs to codify and expand the close air support (CAS) role for bombers and other strike aircraft that emerged during wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. "We are building a concept of operations that will ensure that every one of our Air Force weapons-delivering aircraft will possess the capability to conduct close air support, and will be able to do so in the most demanding threat environments," said Maj. Gen. David A Deptula, ACC's director of Plans and Programs.

Staff
CARRIER TRIALS: The newest and most advanced nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, Ronald Reagan (CVN 76), has completed acceptance sea trials and is awaiting its July 12 commissioning, Northrop Grumman Corp. said May 29. The ship is the seventh Nimitz-class carrier built by the company's Newport News sector.

Marc Selinger
The House and Senate are advancing separate measures designed to make it easier for U.S. firms to export commercial communications satellites. The House International Relations Committee has approved a proposal by Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.) that would give the president the option to transfer export licensing from the State Department to the Commerce Department when the satellites are destined for NATO countries or major non-NATO allies.

Aerospace Industries Association

By Jefferson Morris
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., has chosen Northrop Grumman as its industry partner for the proposed Eclipse planet-finder mission, the company announced May 29. Proposed as one of NASA's low-cost Discovery missions, Eclipse would perform the first sensitive imaging of nearby Jupiter-like planetary systems using a high-contrast optical telescope and coronagraphic camera, according to Northrop Grumman.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE - Plans for the future protection of Czech airspace were thrown into uncertainty May 29 when the Czech defense minister resigned over planned cuts in next year's military budget.

Nick Jonson
The U.S. Navy has awarded Lockheed Martin Naval Electronics & Surveillance Systems-Undersea Systems a $13 million contract for seven AN/AQS-232 Airborne Mine Neutralization Systems (AMNS). The contract includes support equipment, shipboard containers, expendable neutralizer vehicles and training. Each of the seven AMNS systems to be delivered includes 10 unmanned, wire-guided, neutralizer vehicles called SeaFoxes. The SeaFox is lowered into the water by an operator aboard a heavy-lift MH-53E Sea Dragon helicopter.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - India wants to acquire U.S. Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) interceptors as part of a push to procure anti-missile systems, a defense ministry official said. Indian officials discussed the buy during the visit of Stephen G. Rademaker, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for arms control, here last week. An official with the Indian Ministry of External Affairs said the move comes as part of improving defense relations between the U.S. and India.