Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Amy Svitak
PARIS — U.S.-based Space Systems/Loral has been chosen to supply two high-powered, Ka-band satellites and ground equipment for Australia’s National Broadband Network (NBN), a $2 billion initiative over 15 years that aims to bridge the digital divide between urban and regional communities.
Space

Michael Fabey
ABOARD THE EL DIABLO — On just about any other watercraft, the sight of land approaching with such speed and proximity would be cause for concern, to say the least. But here on this Landing Craft, Air Cushion (LCAC) vessel, the mission is to hit the beach as quickly and efficiently as needed.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — The U.K. will acquire an eighth C-17, Prime Minister David Cameron tells parliament. The Royal Air Force (RAF) has long sought more of the Boeing airlifters. The U.K. has been increasing its C-17 fleet incrementally, initially leasing four aircraft more than a decade ago. The aircraft is due for delivery to the RAF in July. As with previous C-17s delivered to non-U.S. operators, the U.S. Air Force has given up a production slot to satisfy an ally’s needs. The eighth RAF airlifter comes off the line in March.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — NATO’s effort to convince members to maximize their limited defense spending by doing more together may not yield many concrete results, a senior European aerospace and defense industry official warns. The so-called “Smart Defense” initiative is not much different from ideas floated 20 years ago, and “very little has happened since then,” warns Airbus CEO and EADS CEO-designate Tom Enders.
Defense

Michael Bruno
TEL AVIV — Iran is developing an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) with a range of 10,000 km (6,200 mi.), according to Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Moshe Ya’alon. “The blast that occurred in a missile base outside Tehran in November damaged that program,” says Ya’alon, a former chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). “This missile is not aimed against Israel, the ‘small Satan,’ but against the ‘great Satan’ – the U.S.”
Defense

Robert Wall
FRANCO-GERMAN: Germany and France are looking to further extend their defense cooperation — and thus strengthen EU capabilities — in areas including combat search and rescue and space situational awareness systems. The two have already cooperated on remote sensing, and are already partnering in the helicopter domain, with ideas for France to provide combat search-and-rescue capacity to German troops, and Germany allocating heavy-lift capacity through its CH-53s to France. Another area of joint interest appears to be counter-rocket, artillery and mortar systems.
Defense

By Joe Anselmo
Mergers and acquisitions activity in the aerospace and defense industry reached a record $43.7 billion in 2011, edging out the previous high from 2007 as consolidation in the commercial supply chain gained steam and underperforming defense units were spun off. A PwC study scheduled for release Feb. 7 tallied 341 acquisitions, mergers or spin-offs worth $50 million or more announced during the year.

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Andy Savoie
AIR FORCE
Defense

PwC
Click here to view the pdf Top TenAerospace & Defense Acquisitions, Mergers and SpinoffsIn 2011 Top Ten Aerospace & Defense Acquisitions, Mergers and Spinoffs In 2011 Target Acquirer Category
Defense

Andy Savoie
NAVY
Defense

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING — China is firming up figures on the performance of two members of its forthcoming modular rocket family, with suggestions that at least one of the launchers might be a little better than expected. The figures remain patchy, however. The Long March 6, a light rocket designed for prompt launches, will be able to deliver “not less than 1 metric ton” to a Sun-synchronous orbit of 700 km (435 mi.) altitude, says Yu Menglun, a member of the general-design section at CALT, China’s main rocket builder.
Space

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — Applications for a small number of openings in NASA’s astronaut corps soared to 6,372 during the last solicitation period, the second highest total ever. This is despite the fact that the U.S. is an estimated five years away from having a commercial follow-on to the retired space shuttle and nearly a decade from piloted test flights of the agency’s deep space-capable Space Launch System/Multi-Purpose Crew Launch Vehicle.
Space

Staff
Analysts at Forecast International (FI) say the six Gulf Cooperation Council members will combine to spend $385 billion toward defense and security through 2016, while Iraq is expected to invest $65 billion in its security forces.
Defense

Staff
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Defense

By Jen DiMascio
The leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee are taking Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to task for undercutting their work on the Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter — not once, but twice. On Jan. 20, Panetta lifted probation on the F-35B, the Marine Corps short-takeoff-vertical-landing variant of the jet, just about one year after the time-out, originally anticipated to be in place for two years, was imposed.
Defense

Amy Butler
Acting Pentagon procurement chief Frank Kendall says it was “acquisition malpractice” to approve production of the Lockheed Martin F-35 years before the first flight of the single-engine stealthy fighter occurred. “It should not have been done,” Kendall told an audience Feb. 6 hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “But we did it.”
Defense

Amy Butler
David Van Buren, who has served as a top procurement official in the U.S. Air Force for four years, is planning to seek employment in private industry and will leave his post March 31, according to service officials. Service officials say it is “premature to speculate who and when a replacement will be named.” Van Buren held various procurement titles but has performed the role of the Air Force’s top acquisition executive since the departure of Sue Payton, the service’s last Senate-approved procurement chief, in April 2009.
Defense

Andy Savoie
AIR FORCE The Boeing Co., Long Beach, Calif., is being awarded a $1,781,413,723 firm-fixed-price contract for a modification as a Foreign Military Sales requirement for the Indian air force. Ten C-17 aircraft will be procured for the IAF. The location of the performance is Long Beach, Calif. Work is expected to be completed by July 28, 2014. ASC/WLMK, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, is the contracting activity (FA8614-06-D-2006, DO 0009).
Defense

Andy Savoie
NAVY
Defense

Amy Svitak
PARIS — Pushing the limits of a six-day launch window, the European Space Agency (ESA) has shifted the debut of its new Vega rocket to Feb. 13 from Feb. 9, allowing ample time to prepare the flight-qualification campaign. ESA says Vega’s flight-readiness review board met Feb. 2 to evaluate mission-preparation status and plans for the final days of the campaign. The Vega will lift off from Europe’s Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana.
Space

Andy Savoie
NAVY
Defense

Staff
Click here to view the pdf

Michael Fabey
With this month’s Bold Alligator event—the East Coast’s largest joint and multinational amphibious assault exercise in the past 10 years—the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps brass hopes to tax their commanders to the limit and develop long-lasting tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs) for using equipment and units.
Defense