_Aerospace Daily

By Jefferson Morris
The General Accounting Office (GAO) criticizes the U.S. Defense Department's new space acquisition policy in a new report, saying the policy will increase program risk by having technology development and product development take place simultaneously. DOD's new space acquisition policy is similar to the one used by the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), according to the GAO, and differs from DOD's acquisition policy on most other weapons-related acquisitions in several ways:

Staff
General Dynamics Electric Boat has been awarded a $34 million contract modification by the Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) for work on converting four Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) to cruise missile submarines (SSGNs). The award modifies a five-year, $443 million contract announced in September 2002 for the detailed design and purchase of long-lead time materials related to the conversion work. If all options are exercised, the value of the contract could total $654 million.

Staff
CHAIRMAN SUGAR: As expected, Ronald D. Sugar has been named chairman of the board of Northrop Grumman, effective Oct. 1. Company president Sugar was named CEO in February (DAILY, Feb. 20), and officials said he was expected to be named chairman after former Chairman Kent Kresa retires Oct. 1.

Stephen Trimble
A Northrop Grumman B-2A has dropped 80 Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) bombs on a Utah test range, capping a six-month testing effort to introduce the 500-pound JDAM into the U.S. Air Force inventory. The Sept. 10 precision-strike demonstration, which targeted a simulated airstrip, also marks the first of several upgrades planned for the B-2 program over the next few years, including a 5,000-pound penetrator bomb, radar modernization, and stealth material upgrades, said Jeff Cliver, Northrop Grumman's director for B-2 programs.

Brett Davis
NASA will test several shuttle repair contingencies when it returns to flight next year, aerospace agency officials said Sept. 16. Astronauts will test a tile-repair substance, made by GE, in the shuttle's cargo bay when the shuttle returns to flight, said NASA Flight Director Paul Hill.

Staff
BOEING NASA SYSTEMS, Kennedy Space Center, Fla. John Elbon has been named vice president and program manager for the International Space Station for Boeing, replacing Joe Mills, who will lead the company's Jupiter Icy Moon Orbiter program. Jim Chilton, the Checkout, Assembly and Payload Processing Services (CAPPS) Contract director of mission management, will replace Elbon. DUCOMMUN, Los Angeles David H. Dittemore has joined the company as president and chief operating officer. EADS AEROFRAME SERVICES, Lake Charles, La.

Staff
The U.S. Defense Department says its Brain Machine Interface program, which seeks to develop ways to control machines with brain signals, is in jeopardy because of a proposed congressional funding cut.

By Jefferson Morris
Facing a flat worldwide launch market and limited space budgets among European governments, the Space Systems division of European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co. (EADS) is bracing itself for further consolidation while at the same time seeking new strategic partnerships with the U.S.

Nick Jonson
An aerial refueling boom being developed by the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co. (EADS) should be ready for testing next year, company officials said Sept. 16. EADS' Military Transport division in Madrid began developing the boom to compete against the Boeing Co. for the Air Force's aerial refueling tanker contract. A competition between the two companies last year ended in a victory for Boeing after the Air Force decided that EADS had not conclusively demonstrated its concept for an aerial refueling boom (April 5, 2002).

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Army has announced it plans to award a contract to Northrop Grumman to build a prototype of the Mobile Tactical High Energy Laser (MTHEL). The Army revealed in a Sept. 15 FedBizOpps notice that it does not intend to hold a competition for the joint U.S.-Israeli chemical laser program, partly because of Northrop Grumman's successful efforts in developing THEL, the fixed-site precursor to MTHEL. In addition, picking another company to build the MTHEL prototype would result in a "substantial duplication of costs," the notice says.

Stephen Trimble
Lockheed Martin lost a bid to capture the $2.5 billion Small Diameter Bomb (SDB) program, but company executives say they believe the program will not remain locked up by Boeing forever. The 250-pound smart bomb contract awarded to Boeing two weeks ago for system development and demonstration (SDD) covers the technologies needed for simple air-dropped weapons deliveries on fixed targets, Kevin Sheehan, Lockheed Martin's business development director for strike weapons, said Sept. 16 at the Air Force Association convention in Washington, D.C.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Air Force's Space Based Radar (SBR) will be delayed up to 18 months if Congress approves a House proposal to slash the program's fiscal 2004 budget and restrict how the remaining funds are used, according to the Defense Department. The House-passed version of the FY '04 defense appropriations bill cuts $100 million from the Bush Administration's $274 million request for SBR, which is being developed to track moving ground targets. The remaining funds could be used only for technology maturation and risk reduction.

Nick Jonson
Acquiring Titan Corp. will allow Lockheed Martin to extend its reach into the information and technical services areas supporting the federal government, according to several industry analysts. Information and technical services, which include such work as software development and data fusion, typically generate higher profit margins that standard defense work, analysts said.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE - Plans to install one of two specialized radar systems that will form part of NATO's integrated defense system in the Czech Republic are being delayed by a dispute with local residents over transmissions.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - Pakistan will get spares for its F-16s as part of a defense package from the United States, according to a senior diplomat with Pakistan's embassy here. The diplomat said the agreement will be reached during a meeting of the Pakistan-U.S. Defense Consultative group in Washington.

Rich Tuttle
Textron Systems' win of the U.S. Air Force's Argus unattended ground senor program contributes to a strategic thrust the company has had for the last several years, according to Bob Buckley, vice president for strategic development. The Wilmington, Mass., company, a unit of Textron Inc., won a competition in July to develop Argus and the U.S. Marine Corps' related Advanced Air Delivered System (AADS). The system development and demonstration work now underway will lead to delivery of first production units in 2006 (DAILY, July 23).

By Jefferson Morris
Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin have added Pratt & Whitney to their Joint Unmanned Combat Air System (J-UCAS) team, in anticipation of building the first two flight demonstrators scheduled to fly in February 2006. The Northrop Grumman team and competitor Boeing each will produce two full-scale unmanned combat air vehicle (UCAV) demonstrators for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) under phase IIB of the naval UCAV technology demonstration program that preceded the J-UCAS effort.

Staff
TECHNOLOGY TEAM: The Boeing Co. and Italy's Centro Italiano Ricerche Aerospaziali (CIRA) will cooperate on technology development projects, Boeing said Sept. 16. Initial projects will be related to Boeing's 7E7 Dreamliner aircraft and CIRA's test facilities, and later work could involve unmanned aerial vehicles systems.

By Jefferson Morris
Technology developed for the Affordable Moving Surface Target Engagement (AMSTE) program, which is scheduled to end in October, may live on in one of the U.S. Defense Department's Horizontal Fusion network-centric warfare (NCW) initiatives.

Rich Tuttle
The Department of Homeland Security is launching a two-year, $100 million effort to develop and demonstrate devices to protect airliners from shoulder-fired missiles. A production decision would follow.