The newly established NASA Engineering and Safety Center (NESC) is reviewing the upcoming return to flight of the X-43A hypersonic demonstrator in response to a request from a member of the project team concerned that current aerodynamic models of the vehicle may not be accurate.
LARGER ROLE: European militaries may yet play a larger role in Iraq, but not before substantial progress is made in Afghanistan operations, Robertson says. "That is a big job we've got to get right," he says. "There's no point in dabbling in Afghanistan and then going in and dabbling in Iraq, and risking two half-done operations. NATO has to succeed in Afghanistan." Eighteen of 26 NATO countries have supplied a total of 5,700 troops in Afghanistan, Robertson says.
MOSCOW - Prime Minister Mikhail Kasianov has ordered the Russian finance ministry to provide 1.5 billion rubles (about $50 million) to Rosaviakosmos, the aviation and space agency, primarily for building additional Progress resupply vehicles to support the International Space Station. He requested the order be fulfilled within three days. "We have to do everything to keep space as a driving force of the Russian economy," Kasianov said.
NASA BUDGET: Sens. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas), Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) and Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) are asking fellow senators to sign a letter urging President Bush to boost NASA's funding after a decade of flat budgets. "NASA has attempted to do too much with too little for too long," the letter says. "It is time to fix that funding shortfall. We are prepared to support you in the pursuit of a realistic and achievable vision for space flight.
Nov. 16 - 21 -- 2003 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress, Marriott Wardman Park & Omni Shoreham Hotels, Washington, D.C. Contact John Varrasi at (212) 591-8158, email [email protected] or go to www.asme.org. Nov. 16 - 21 -- Defense Research and Engineering Conference and Exposition (DREX), Marriott Wardman Park & Omni Shoreham Hotels, Washington, D.C. Contact John Varrasi at (212) 591-8158, email [email protected] or go to www.asme.org.
PRE-EMPTION: The Bush Administration's policy of reserving the right to conduct pre-emptive strikes against potential threats, particularly threats involving terrorism or with chemical, nuclear and biological weapons, is not that different from previous policy, according to NATO Secretary General Lord George Robertson. "Pre-emption has always been part of deterrence policy. That may not have been spelled out, but deterrence had to imply that you might do something if an attack was imminent," Robertson says.
RETROFITS: The Boeing Co. will produce 86 Harpoon Missile Block II retrofit kits and 24 warhead section kits under a $10.9 million contract modification. Egypt will get 62 of the retrofit kits and United Arab Emirates will get 24 retrofit kits and the warhead section kits, the Pentagon said Nov. 14.
PRAGUE, Czech Republic - Aero Vodochody shareholders plan to meet again before the end of the month after failing to agree on the short-term business plan for the struggling aircraft maker. Company Vice President Viktor Kucera told The DAILY that shareholders discussed several plans at an extraordinary general meeting Nov. 12, but could not reach agreement. "It is necessary to continue examining the details of each business plan variant, and discussions are ongoing," he said.
The U.S. Air Force is considering upgrades to its future Wind Corrected Munitions Dispenser-Extended Range (WCMD-ER) to give it an in-flight retargeting capability and make it more resistant to jamming, according to sources. The Air Force also is weighing the possibility of increasing its planned purchase of the WCMD-ER by about a third, the sources told The DAILY.
Even if the U.S. Army equips all its helicopters in Iraq and Afghanistan with the most modern missile defense equipment, as demanded by the service's top civilian official, they still will be vulnerable to weapons like the rocket propelled grenade, industry officials say. A heat-seeking missile apparently downed a CH-47 Chinook in Iraq on Nov. 2, killing 16. A rocket propelled grenade, or RPG, is thought to have hit a UH-60 Black Hawk in Iraq on Nov. 7, killing six.
COMANCHE TO RETURN: The Army's RAH-66 Comanche helicopter will return to flight testing next April with a newly installed Electro-Optical Sensor System (EOSS), a new helmet and a new target identification and classification system. The EOSS includes a solid-state television, a two-color laser designator/rangefinder and two second-generation infrared sensors. "We're right now poising ourselves for installation of the EOSS," says Chief Contractor Test Pilot Rus Stiles.
ARMY HEARING: The Senate Armed Services Committee has rescheduled a hearing on current Army issues for Nov. 19. Acting Army Secretary Les Brownlee and Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Schoomaker are to testify. The hearing had been slated for Nov. 13 but was postponed when the Senate launched a marathon debate on judicial nominations (DAILY, Nov. 10).
ISS FUNDING: The Bush Administration is formally objecting to a Senate-proposed cut in NASA's $1.7 billion fiscal 2004 budget request for the International Space Station (ISS). In a statement, the Administration says the $200 million reduction, contained in the FY '04 NASA appropriations bill (DAILY, Sept. 5), "would deplete reserves deemed critical by independent cost estimates and limit the program's ability to address risks in FY '04, including impacts" from the Columbia space shuttle accident.
NON-MARINE TECHNOLOGY: Technologies developed by industries outside the traditional marine industry are beginning to have an impact on naval shipbuilding, according to senior naval analyst Stuart Slade of Forecast International/DMS. A propulsion system being developed by automaker DaimlerChrysler could have a revolutionary impact on submarine design, he says. The system uses diesel fuel to produce hydrogen and oxygen, which is then used to power hydrogen fuel cells.
Elbit Systems of Haifa, Israel, will supply the Uzbekistan air force with two full mission/full motion simulators for its Mi-24 and Mi-8 helicopters, the company said Nov. 13. The work is being done under a $6.5 million, two-year contract from the U.S. State Department. The simulators will be used to train helicopter pilots and co-pilots as part of a project to enhance border security and provide support to Operation Enduring Freedom, the company said.
Lockheed Martin Corp. briefed South Korean officials on the U.S. Defense Department's F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, a step that could pave the way for the Asian country to buy the aircraft. Lockheed Martin Corp. conducted the information-sharing sessions in South Korea earlier this month for representatives of the South Korean air force and Ministry of National Defense, a company spokesman told The DAILY Nov. 13.
Lockheed Martin has won a $2.5 million end-to-end architecture study contract for the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES-R) program from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the company announced Nov. 13. The contract covers four areas: space and launch; command, control, communications (C3); product generation and distribution; and end-to-end integration. NOAA's goal is to increase GOES-R's weather and environmental forecasting capabilities and reduce mission cost, according to Lockheed Martin.
RAPTOR PROCUREMENT: Acting Pentagon acquisition chief Michael Wynne has released a memorandum authorizing the Air Force to buy 22 Lockheed Martin F/A-22 Raptors for Lot 4 in fiscal 2004. The memorandum also approves advance procurement for F/A-22s the Air Force wants to procure for Lot 5 in FY '05.
ISS CONTRACT: Applied Research and Engineering Sciences Corp. of Burlingame, Calif., will support International Space Station program, business and configuration management under a $178 million contract, NASA said Nov. 12. The contract's base period is four years, nine months, with two one-year extension options. The company also will support data integration, program information technology, international partner elements integration management, systems analysis and integration, engineering and technical services and safety and mission assurance, NASA said.
NATO countries have made "substantial progress" in improving their military readiness, according to NATO Secretary General Lord George Robertson. "People are waking up very quickly, not just from my exhortations, but to the realities facing them as well," he said Nov. 13 at a Defense Writers Group breakfast. Robertson pointed to efforts initiated by the Czech Republic, Norway, the Netherlands and Denmark to improve troop readiness and reduce inefficiencies.
After months of delays, Marine Corps Systems Command has chosen AeroVironment of Monrovia, Calif., to build the backpack-portable Dragon Eye unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) system, The DAILY has learned. Over the next five years, AeroVironment is expected to build approximately 300 Dragon Eye systems, each consisting of one ground station and three aircraft. A fixed-wing, battery-powered surveillance UAV with a 45-inch wingspan, the Dragon Eye is launched by hand or with a bungee cord and controlled through a laptop ground station.