Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Coast Guard’s proposed fleet plan could still cost far more than the service anticipates, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) says. The Coast Guard completed a two-phased Fleet Mix Analysis that intended to eliminate uncertainty surrounding the future mission performance of the service’s fleet and produce a baseline for the acquisition of a majority of its assets, the GAO notes in a May 31 report.
Defense

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — A multinational crew of four is scheduled to evaluate a range of asteroid exploration strategies following a June 11 descent to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Aquarius Reef Base undersea habitat off Key Largo, Fla., for a 12-day stay.
Space

By Jen DiMascio
China, France and Russia provide no upper limit on their coverage.
Space

Staff
LOSING LUSTER: The global airborne anti-submarine warfare (ASW) sensor market is due for a dip, according to consultancy Forecast International. The market has a projected worth of $429.42 million in 2012, but then drops in value to $238.85 million in 2016 — a roughly 44.37% ($190.57 million) drop, according to a new study that examines 50 of the leading airborne ASW sensor programs around the world.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
With news reports saying that defense companies will begin issuing layoffs related to potential military budget cuts before the November presidential election, Republican senators interested in defense are building a legislative case for preventing them. If Congress fails to reach a deal to reduce the deficit by $1.2 trillion, then in January 2013 cuts of the same amount will be applied to the entire federal budget — with about half targeted at the Pentagon.
Defense

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — The success of the SpaceX/Dragon resupply mission to the International Space Station has not been lost on Ad Astra Rocket Co., a seven-year-old venture focused on the development of advanced electric plasma propulsion systems for commercial in-space transportation. “That is the proof in the pudding,” says Jared Squire, Ad Astra’s senior vice president for research, of the nine-day SpaceX pathfinder mission nurtured by NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program. “That type of relationship works.”
Space

Aircraft Composite Repair Management Forum October 9, 2012 Amsterdam, The Netherlands Repair in New Generation Aircraft: Challenges and Opportunities Lightweight composites will soon rival metals as the primary material for airframes. Are you prepared? Aviation Week’s Aircraft Composite Repair Management Forum will highlight the latest developments, challenges, and best practices in aircraft composite repair and maintenance technology.

Leithen Francis
SINGAPORE — New Zealand’s air force plans to lease five used Beechcraft KingAir 200 aircraft from Australian company Hawker Pacific to replace five KingAir 200s it currently leases from another company. “We are currently in negotiations with Hawker Pacific to conclude a contract to lease five secondhand KingAir 200s to replace the fleet currently leased from Aeromotive,” New Zealand’s air force chief, Air Vice Marshal Peter Stockwell, says in an emailed response to a query from Aviation Week.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
ARAB SUMMER: With the Egyptian presidential election close at hand, U.S. experts on the region see an opportunity to redefine the diplomatic relationship but are divided about what that means for the relationship with the Egyptian military — long a source of stability in the Middle Eastern center of influence. Since the 1980s, the U.S. has extended billions in military aid to Egypt. Frank Wisner, a former U.S. ambassador to Egypt, told the Center for American Progress on June 5 that the Egyptian military will remain critical to U.S. relations there.
Defense

By Guy Norris
The protracted pace of the U.S. Forest Service’s plan to replace aging firefighting air tankers is expected to come under renewed scrutiny following two accidents on June 3. Both events, one of which was fatal, involved Lockheed P2V Neptunes engaged in fighting wildfires in the Western U.S. The FAA and National Transportation Safety Board are investigating the loss of a 1962-built Neptune Aviation Services P2V while tackling a blaze in the Hamblin Valley area of western Idaho close to the Nevada border.

Graham Warwick
Beacons enabling autonomous aircraft to deliver cargo with greater accuracy, particularly at night and in poor weather, are to be deployed to Afghanistan, where two Lockheed Martin/Kaman K-Max unmanned helicopters are resupplying U.S. Marine Corps remote forward bases. The K-Max conducted precision autonomous cargo drops using the electro-optical navigation beacon to guide the aircraft in April under a U.S. Army technology demonstration.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
The State Department is wrestling with how to refresh a treaty that has governed peace in Europe since 1992. The Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty (CFE) that limits the number of conventional weapons that can be deployed on the continent was signed in 1990, following the collapse of the Soviet Union. But participation in the treaty has gradually eroded. Russia suspended its implementation in 2007. By late 2011, the U.S. and 21 NATO allies ceased carrying out their CFE obligations with respect to Russia.
Defense

Frank Morring, Jr.
NASA will get a little slack from Congress on how it may procure commercial crew transportation for astronauts headed to the International Space Station (ISS), but apparently no more money.
Space

AWIN, HAC
Click here to view the pdf 2013 House Appropriations Markup: U.S. Navy Winners and Losers ($ in thousands) 2013 House Appropriations Markup: U.S.
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — Pakistan on June 5 successfully test-fired a multi-tube, indigenously developed, nuclear-capable cruise missile, the Hatf-VII (or Babur), which has a range of 700 km (435 mi.). “[The] Babur cruise missile is a low-flying, terrain-hugging missile with high maneuverability, pinpoint accuracy and radar-avoidance features,” a Pakistan defense ministry official says. “The missile can carry both nuclear and conventional warheads and has stealth capabilities.” This was the fifth missile test by Pakistan since late April.
Defense

Michael Fabey
ARLINGTON, Va. — The U.S. Navy is investing in research that could make its submarines even stealthier, using cloaking technology that seems to come straight out of a Tom Clancy thriller or Star Trek script. Developed by New York-based Weidlinger Associates with U.S. Navy Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) funding, the technology involves the carving up and altering of aluminum to give it “elastic properties” — a form of what the company calls “metal water,” according to Jeffrey Cipolla, a Weidlinger senior associate.
Defense

Richard Mullins
A new report attempting to cut through the persistent vagueness and wide variation in U.S. nuclear weapons spending estimates has arrived at a figure of at least $30 billion spent annually. The study, “Resolving Ambiguity: Costing Nuclear Weapons,” was released June 5 by the Stimson Center’s Budgeting for Foreign Affairs and Defense project. Russell Rumbaugh says he and co-author Nathan Cohn hope the report’s methodology and data granularity can set a starting point for budget and policy discussions about U.S. nuclear weapons spending.
Defense

Leithen Francis
SINGAPORE — As Japan seeks to become an exporter of military aircraft, the government is careful to stress that its equipment should be used only for peaceful missions.
Defense

By Guy Norris
LOS ANGELES — Boeing plans to open up the performance envelope of the Phantom Eye UAV following a successful first flight of the hydrogen-powered demonstrator at Edwards AFB, Calif., on June 1. The 150-ft.-span vehicle completed a 28-min. flight after lifting off at 6.22 a.m. PDT from the desert base using a specially designed launch cart. The aircraft climbed to 4,080 ft. and a speed of 62 kt. Boeing says that after returning to land, the vehicle “sustained some damage when the landing gear dug into the lakebed and broke.”
Defense

Leithen Francis
Defense Minister Jonathan Coleman says New Zealand received an unsolicited offer from Kaman.
Defense

Click here to view the pdf

Michael Fabey
When pilots and crewmembers can no longer see the landing area during a brownout, they have no options other than aborting.
Defense

Leithen Francis
SINGAPORE — U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is downplaying the prospect of so-called “sequestration” cuts to the Pentagon’s budget. “Sequester is not a real crisis, but an artificial crisis,” Panetta says, adding that Congress deliberately “put a gun to its head” with the Budget Control Act, which forces across-the-board spending cuts if lawmakers fail to make sufficient progress in reducing the U.S. federal budget deficit.
Defense