Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

U.S. Congressional Budget Office
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Graham Warwick
Lockheed Martin has fired CEO-elect Christopher E. Kubasik for having “a close personal relationship with a subordinate employee.” Marillyn A. Hewson, who was to succeed Kubasik as president and COO on Jan. 1, 2013, has been named to be the new CEO. Lockheed asked for Kubasik’s resignation “effective immediately” after completing an ethics investigation sparked when an employee came forward at the end of October “with an expression of concern,” says Chairman and current CEO Robert Stevens.
Defense

Leithen Francis
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesia’s defense minister says the purchase of a long-range ground-based radar for the country’s air force remains a high priority, but he will not say when a winning contractor will be selected. “I have told my staff if they are ready to select a supplier for the ground-based radar, I am ready,” Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro told Aviation Week Nov. 6 on the eve of the IndoDefense exhibition in Jakarta.
Defense

Frank Morring, Jr.
$90 million system will monitor air pollutants over North America
Space

Mark Carreau
Loral Space & Communications Inc. is cooperating with its principal Canadian ownership partner in Ottawa-based Telesat for a potential initial public offering, Loral CEO and President Michael Targoff told a Nov. 9 shareholders teleconference.
Space

Staff
March 5-6 2013 Hilton Arlington Arlington, VA Join senior defense officials and discover where priorities and opportunities exist beyond the FY 2014 budget and hear First-hand how programs are implementing affordable and effective designs! Register now at www.aviationweek.com/events/dtar Click here to view the pdf

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — The Indian air force (IAF) is likely to start taking delivery of 512 CBU-105 sensor fuzed weapons (SFW) made by Textron Defense Systems in the first half of 2013, a defense ministry official says. Under the U.S. Foreign Military Sales deal, Textron will deliver the SFWs to the U.S. Air Force, which in turn will give them to the IAF, the official says. The SFW will be mounted on the IAF’s Jaguar fighters, and Textron will work closely with state-run Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. to integrate the weapons, the official says.
Defense

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) NOV. 13 — Aviation Week MRO Engine Forum, Singapore. For more information go to www.aviationweek.com/events NOV. 13 - 14 — 2012 Homeland Security Symposium, "The Homeland Security Enterprise: Missions and Priorities During the Next Four Years," Crystal Gateway Marriott, Arlington, Va. For more information go to www.ndia.org/meetings/3490/Pages/default.aspx

Amy Svitak
Aiming for first-flight campaign in Istres, France next year
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — The Indian government plans to sell a 10% stake in state-owned defense aerospace firm Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL), according to a senior minister. “The government is aiming to sell HAL’s shares through an initial public offering,” Finance Minister P. Chidambaram said Nov. 8. The sale is expected to take place in the next fiscal year, which begins April 1. The government hopes to earn 25 billion rupees ($460 million) from the sale.
Defense

AWIN
Click here to view the pdf U.S. Congressional Committees, After The Election U.S.
Defense

National Research Council
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Defense

Leithen Francis
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Airbus Military and partner Indonesian Aerospace (IAe) have launched a new version of the C212, which is to be called the NC212. The NC212 will have a new avionics and autopilot system, says Ignacio Alonso, Airbus Military’s senior VP for commercial, strategy and industrial relations (Asia). The airframe and engines will remain unchanged from the current model, the C212-400. But thanks to a more efficient use of space — with a new interior cabin and seats — the passenger seat capacity will increase to 28 from 25, he says.
Defense

Michael Fabey
Even as the U.S. Marine Corps whittles away at personnel, acquisition and modernization efforts, the service still needs to beef up its cyber ability and retain its reacquired expertise in counterinsurgency (COIN) operations, says Gen. James Amos, Marine commandant. Amos cites cyber as the Marines’ one major capability gap, saying, “There is a lot we don’t know.”
Defense

Leithen Francis
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesia’s defense minister is adamant that the country will be getting anti-submarine warfare (ASW) helicopters. Purnomo Yusgiantoro says the country’s defense budget, passed by parliament, includes money allocated for the purchase of ASW naval helicopters. The aircraft are to be stationed on the navy’s Sigma-class corvettes. The navy has four corvettes, and a fifth was recently ordered.
Defense

Amy Svitak
PARIS — Members of the French parliament say Europe’s Arianespace launch consortium is ill-prepared to lose any commercial Ariane 5 business to competitors in Russia, China, India or the U.S., where startup Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) is making a splash with its low-cost Falcon 9 rocket.
Space

Amy Svitak
Results were due largely to the December 2011 acquisition of mobile satellite services provider Vizada.
Space

By Jen DiMascio
CALL TO ARMS: The leaders of top military service associations are appealing to congressional leadership to prevent sequestration. In a letter being sent Nov. 9 to House and Senate leaders, the retired military officials say the across-the-board cuts would harm the nation’s security and its economy. “The defense-industrial base is a strategic national asset; assuring its survival requires careful planning and foresight – not shortsighted draconian cuts,” write retired Gen. Gordon Sullivan, president of the Association of the U.S. Army; retired Lt. Gen.
Defense

Leithen Francis
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesia is building a squadron of locally developed UAVs for air surveillance in border areas. Each UAV will reportedly be four meters long, with a wingspan of around six meters. An aircraft was unveiled in October at Halim air base in Jakarta. Indonesia’s Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology and the ministry of defense’s research and development division developed the UAV.
Defense

Mark Carreau
The coming decade should bring strong growth to the global satellite production and launch industry, according to the Paris-based consulting company Euroconsult, which forecasts $198 billion in revenues for the 2012-2021 period, a 36% increase over the previous 10 years. Demand from established government space programs, as well as a commercial sector faced with replacing aging telecommunications spacecraft, will drive the anticipated demand despite global economic concerns.

By Jen DiMascio
Despite lingering disagreement over how to address the nation’s deficit, lawmakers from both parties in Congress are talking openly about a plan to avert sequestration. “I believe that there is a very decent chance that we can come up with a plan to replace the sequester for six months, while we negotiate a longer-term solution,” Rep. Chris Van Hollen (Md.), the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, told reporters after speaking to the World Affairs Council of America on Nov. 8, stressing that replacement is different from postponement.
Defense

Amy Butler
Boeing Defense, Space and Security is restructuring its business units once again, undoing some of the changes it enacted only two years ago in an effort to reap savings that it can pass on to more frugal defense customers worldwide.

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy needs to make more improvements in its Aegis-equipped fleet, according to a recent report obtained by the Aviation Week Intelligence Network (AWIN) that was prepared by a Navy Operational Advisory Group (OAG). Destroyers and cruisers equipped with Aegis radars and defense shields are becoming more vital components for the ballistic missile defense (BMD) missions envisioned by the Navy to protect the nation and its allies.
Defense