ALEXANDRIA, Va. — The U.S. Army is spinning up its ability to perform aerial electronic attack (EA) and general electronic warfare (EW) missions, even in the face of budget turmoil, says Army Col. Jim Ekvall, the chief of the service’s EW division. “We need the ability to do aerial EW and electronic attack,” Ekvall said March 19 during the Electronic Warfare Summit hosted by the Institute for Defense and Government Advancement.
In its hunt for a squadron of long-endurance, carrier-capable unmanned aircraft, the U.S. Navy is preparing to issue four sole-source contracts this fall for nine months of preliminary design work, and will ultimately choose a single winner for a technology demonstration phase in early 2015. Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and General Atomics are each expected to submit designs for the Unmanned Carrier-Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike (Uclass) contract.
Efforts to stop funding the development of a tri-national missile defense system that the U.S. has no plans to deploy are part of the down-to-the-wire debate on a spending bill crafted to keep the government running after the current stopgap measure expires March 27.
NEW DELHI — India plans to loft its first navigation and timing satellite in June, the country’s top scientist says. The first satellite of the seven-spacecraft Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS) will be launched on a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C22) from the spaceport at Sriharikota off the coast of the south Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, according to the chairman of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), K. Radhakrishnan. Once launched, IRNSS-1 will be tested in orbit for nearly four months.
What has been reported by the mainstream press to have been a satellite collision in late January, which allegedly damaged a Russian satellite, never took place, according to a U.S. defense official. Major news outlets reported last week that the Russian BLITS satellite collided with a piece of orbital debris left after China conducted an anti-satellite test using its own defunct Feng Yun 1C satellite as a target in 2007. They quoted experts at the Center for Space Standards & Innovation.
SAN JOSE DOS CAMPOS, Brazil — Two years after formally establishing its defense and security unit, Embraer has brought in $1.056 billion in revenue, posting 24% growth over last year. And in the next eight years, the company is setting continually high expectations of double-digit growth, says Luiz Carlos Aguiar, the division’s chief executive officer. The company is continuing its effort to capture Brazilian defense contracts and to establish itself as a systems integrator for countries that do not already have an entrenched industrial base.
Boeing conducted the first flight of the new F-15SA version of the Strike Eagle in February, it has been revealed. The first flight of the fly-by-wire fighter bomber took place on Feb. 20 from Boeing’s facility in St. Louis, U.S. Air Force officials said March 13. The aircraft’s development is being led by the U.S. Air Force on behalf of the Royal Saudi Air Force (RSAF), which is ordering 84 new-build F-15SAs, while the country’s existing fleet of F-15S Strike Eagles will be upgraded as part of a $3.453 billion program.
LOCKHEED LEADERSHIP: Larry Lawson is retiring from his position as executive vice president for Lockheed Martin Aeronautics — which oversees the F-35, F-22 and C-130J programs — after only a year in the slot since his predecessor, Ralph Heath, left the company last April. Orlando Carvalho, who has led the F-35 program for the past year, will ascend to overseeing Lockheed’s aircraft manufacturing unit effective April 5. Carvalho’s deputy, Lorraine Martin, will take over as vice president overseeing the $400 billion, tri-service, multinational F-35 effort.
India has maintained its position as the world’s leading arms importer for the third year in a row, ahead of China, which moved up a spot as one of the world’s five largest weapons exporters, a Swedish-based research institute says. India replaced China as the world’s leading importer of weapons in 2011 and has retained the spot ever since, accounting for 12% of global arms imports, almost twice as much as China, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri) says.
The second U.S. Joint High Speed Vessel (JHSV-2), USNS Choctaw County, is progressing at a better pace than the lead ship of its class, the USNS Spearhead (JHSV-1), program officials say. “At this stage, JHSV-2 is more complete than the lead ship, and we are benefitting from JHSV-1’s lessons learned,” says Strategic and Theater Sealift Program Manager Capt. Henry Stevens.
There are growing concerns about how continuing resolutions (CRs) and sequestration will affect the proposed Pacific Pivot plans for the U.S. Navy. Program cuts and delays could disrupt Navy shipbuilding plans to a point that the service will be unable to support its strategy, according to officials in and out of the service. The result, some analysts say, could be a weaker Pacific stance that could embolden the Chinese in the region.
Federal law enforcement authorities arrested a former NASA contract employee as he attempted to leave the U.S. for his native China on March 16, charging him with lying about electronic media he was attempting to take with him. Bo Jiang, a computer imagery-enhancement expert who has been the target of whistleblower charges that he has taken “volumes” of sensitive NASA data back to China, was arrested at Dulles International Airport outside Washington.
TEL AVIV — Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) is looking to Poland as a potential next customer for its new 767 Multi Mission Tanker Transport (MMTT), after making its first sale of the version to Brazil.
ARMY BAE Systems Inc., Nashua, N.H., was awarded a $66,000,015 firm-fixed-price contract. The award will provide for the procurement of AN/AAR-57 common missile warning systems. The contract is in support of Foreign Military Sales for the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. The work will be performed in Nashua, with an estimated completion date of March 6, 2015. The bid was solicited through the Internet, with one bid received. The U.S. Army Contracting Command, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., is the contracting activity (W15P7T-13-C-C108).