Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Anthony Osborne
LONDON — The U.K. Cabinet Office says several major defense programs are in danger of being unachievable or may need to be rescoped in order to stay on track.
Defense

Michael Fabey
Despite continued operational hiccups and maintenance issues associated with the ship’s coolant system since arriving in Singapore, the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS-1) USS Freedom is still expected to participate in the regional Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training 2013 (Carat ’13), says U.S. Navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Clayton Doss.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
PENTAGON HACKED: A Defense Science Board report is warning that designs for 29 major Pentagon weapons systems have been breached by Chinese hackers, according to the Washington Post. But the Defense Department disputes the notion that the intrusions on everything from the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter to the V-22 Osprey and Patriot Advanced Capability-3 missile have hampered their effectiveness. “We maintain full confidence in our weapons platforms,” said Pentagon Press Secretary George Little in a statement.
Defense

Michael Fabey, Bill Sweetman
U.S. Navy has identified initiatives needed to accommodate the F-35
Defense

Staff
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Staff
STEM CELLS: The Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (Casis) is seeking proposals for using International Space Station facilities to study how microgravity affects the growth, division and differentiation of non-embryonic mammalian stem cells. Casis says it will provide grants, coordinate flight opportunities and locate potential partners for winning proposals. The non-profit organization, set up by Congress to operate the public U.S.
Space

Staff
U.S. AIR FORCE
Defense

Staff
U.S. ARMY The Boeing Co., Mesa, Ariz., was awarded a $69,227,561 modification (P00008), to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price, foreign-military-sales (FMS) contract (W58RGZ-12-C-0089), for the procurement of Apache Block III aircraft and associated parts and services. This FMS contract is in support of Saudi Arabia. The total cumulative face value of this contract is $259,389,626. The Army Contracting Command, Redstone Arsenal, Ala., is the contracting activity.
Defense

By Joe Anselmo
Large aerospace and defense (A&D) companies are getting out in front of government budget cuts by cutting costs, shedding excess capacity and trimming their workforces, and the payoff has been higher profit margins, according to the new results from Aviation Week’s Top-Performing Companies study.

Graham Warwick
The U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory’s (AFRL) plans for a High-Speed Strike Weapon (HSSW) demonstration program to follow on from hypersonic flights of the Boeing X-51A WaveRider scramjet demonstrator are in flux. A notice issued on May 21 announced that a planned solicitation for the HSSW demo program had been canceled. AFRL held an industry day for potential bidders in June 2012, at which time the program was expected to begin this year.
Defense

Michael Fabey
Lockheed Martin has begun to equip and test the Aegis Ashore development facility in Moorestown, N.J., company officials say. The company has built a ship deckhouse near the so-called “Cruiser in the Cornfields” ship superstructure facility, to test vessel-installed Aegis equipment systems to run Aegis Ashore components through their paces before global operational installation. Use of Aegis Ashore is part of theU.S.’s strategy for ballistic missile defense (BMD).
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — Russia has made a veiled threat that it may stop bidding for Indian military contracts, complaining that some procurements seem to have been engineered for predetermined outcomes. Undermined by fierce competition from U.S. and European defense companies on several deals in the Indian arms market in the past few years, Russia feels, “Sometimes, terms of tenders are crafted specifically to get the required results.”
Defense

Michael Fabey
SINGAPORE — The defense community needs to better employ technology to meet the long-term ebb and flow of military shipbuilding, says Chan Yeng Kit, the permanent secretary for defense development for Singapore.
Defense

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — The European Space Agency’s (ESA) unpiloted Automated Transfer Vehicle-4 (ATV-4) the Albert Einstein, is expected to have no difficulty berthing with the International Space Station (ISS) in mid-June, but the station’s mission management team has approved a response strategy just in case Russia’s Progress 51 cargo capsule imparted damage as it docked with an undeployed navigation antenna early April 26.
Space

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) may 27 - 29 — 19th AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference (34th AIAA Aeroacoustics Conference), Ramada Hotel Berlin-Alexanderplatz, Berlin, Germany. For more information go to www.aiaa.org/Aeroacoustics2013/ may 27 - 29 — Homeland Security Summit Middle East, Le Royal Meridien, Abu Dhabi, UAE. For more information go to http://www.idga.org/events/

Staff
The MRO Fleet, Forecasts and Data you need to accurately plan and strategize for the future. See for yourself with a free demonstration: AviationWeek.com/FleetMRO Click here to view the pdf

Anthony Osborne
LONDON — Spain is preparing to make cuts to several aircraft procurement programs as it aims to post more savings in the face of the European economic downturn. Several Spanish news outlets are reporting that the country’s ministry of defense is planning substantial cuts to the Eurofighter, Airbus Military A400M transport aircraft, Tiger attack helicopter and NH90 utility helicopter procurements in a bid to save €4 billion ($5.2 billion) on major weapons programs.
Defense

Staff
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U.S. Department of Defense
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David Eshel
TEL AVIV — Syria’s efforts to modernize its air defenses are increasing the threat of a conflict suddenly erupting between Israel and its enemies, according to Israel’s air force chief, Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel.
Defense

Michael Fabey
Recent international maritime countermine exercises highlight the benefits of unmanned vehicles for those types of missions, military naval officials say, but the underlying tactics for such work remain the same. Unmanned systems and their accompanying technology are making it possible for naval countermine operations to continue for much longer, continuous periods of time. “The biggest benefit [is] they’re much more persistent,” says Vice Adm. John Miller, commander of U.S. Navy Central Command, U.S. 5th Fleet and Combined Maritime Forces.
Defense

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy successfully completed tests of the Block 2 Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) earlier this month at the service’s Pacific Missile Test Range. Missiles were launched May 10 from a Self Defense Test Ship operated by the Naval Surface Warfare Center Port Hueneme and intercepted turbojet-powered targets emulating enemy anti-ship cruise missiles. The Navy completed another test May 12, successfully firing two more missiles.
Defense

Staff
In observance of the U.S. Memorial Day holiday, Aerospace Daily & Defense Report will not publish an issue dated May 28, 2013. The next issue will be dated May 29. Aviation Week Intelligence Network subscribers may visit www.aviationweek.com/awin at any time for news updates.

Michael Bruno
CYBERSPACE PROGRESS: At the House Armed Services intelligence and emerging threats subcommittee markup of the 2014 defense policy bill last week, Chairman Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) praised the military’s progress in protecting the U.S.
Defense

Amy Butler
The Pentagon’s latest cost report on the stealthy F-35 shows no change in the high price of estimated flying hour usage or total lifetime sustainment, two areas of great interest to operators in the U.S. and abroad.
Defense