Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Bruno
U.S. Army Gen. Ray Odierno, commander of Multi-National Force-Iraq, remains confident about coalition plans to build up Iraqi land forces and dramatically downsize U.S. forces in Iraq before 2012. However, he told Pentagon reporters June 30 that training and equipping Iraqi navy and air forces will take even longer.

Staff
A Proton Breeze M launch vehicle sent the Sirius FM-5 broadcast satellite to its geostationary transfer orbit early July 1, releasing the 5.8-metric-ton spacecraft after a mission that lasted nine hours, 14 minutes. Liftoff from Pad 39 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan came at 1:10 a.m. local time (3:10 p.m. June 30 EDT). Launch of the Proton vehicle, built by Khrunichev, was organized by International Launch Services.

Paul McLeary
The U.S. Marine Corps expects Oshkosh Corp. to deliver all 5,244 MRAP All Terrain Vehicles (M-ATV) by the end of March 2010. The U.S. military and the company announced late June 30 that Oshkosh received an initial delivery order from the Army Tank-automotive and Armaments Command’s Life Cycle Management Command for 2,244 M-ATVs, following months of government testing on multiple production-ready vehicles.

Michael Bruno
U.S. Navy Adm. Timothy Keating, the head of Pacific Command (PACOM), wants more ships — ideally more capable ships — and other platforms and systems — such as for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) — in his area of responsibility (AOR).

Douglas Barrie
LONDON — The U.K. should re-examine its commitment to the Lockheed Martin F-35, a left-leaning think tank suggests, as part of a broader review of defense procurements. The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) says that as part of a “Strategic Security Review” the U.K. government should “re-examine ... its defense equipment requirements. This re-examination should explore all viable options for capability downgrading and quantity reductions, as well as for complete cancellation of some equipment programs.”

Graham Warwick
THUNDER ROLLS: Pakistan has begun final assembly of the JF-17 Thunder lightweight fighter, co-developed with China, with the first locally assembled aircraft scheduled to fly by year’s end. The air force is already taking delivery of JF-17s manufactured by Chengdu in China, where the fighter is designated the FC-1, and in March signed a contract for an initial 42 JF-17s financed by China.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The U.S. Marine Corps’ upgraded AH-1Z Cobra aircraft will benefit from a next-generation targeting system, as Lockheed Martin begins to deliver its Target Sight System (TSS) to the service. The first of 16 TSS under contract was delivered June 30, two months ahead of schedule, said Tom Simmons, Lockheed Martin vice president for Fire Control programs. The new TSS represents a leap forward technologically from the targeting system on the AH-1W aircraft.

GAO
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Staff
The U.S. and Japan on June 29 jointly released the most extensive digital topographic map of the Earth ever created, based on measurements from NASA’s Terra spacecraft. According to NASA, the new map covers more of the Earth than ever before — 99 percent of the Earth’s landmass — and was created from almost 1.3 million individual stereo-pair images collected by Japan’s Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) instrument carried aboard Terra.

Bettina H. Chavanne
EMPIRE CHALLENGE: U.S. Joint Forces Command will conduct the sixth annual live joint and coalition intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) interoperability demonstration between July 6 and July 31 at the Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake, Calif. Distributed locations like the Joint Intelligence Lab in Suffolk, Va., the Combined Air Operations Center-Experimental at Langley Air Force Base, Hampton, Va., and coalition sites in the U.K., Canada, Australia and other countries will be linked in to the exercise, called Empire Challenge.

Douglas Barrie
LONDON — France’s route to a future air combat capability will begin to be drawn up late this year or early in 2010, with the launch of a key study into how it plans to proceed in the development of an operational unmanned combat air vehicle. The work will pave the way for what happens beyond the present Neuron program, a multinational effort being led by Dassault, in determining the shape of the air force’s Future Combat Air System (FCAS). Sweden, Italy, Spain, Greece and Switzerland are all supporting the Neuron program.

Robert Wall
Lockheed Martin’s F-16 industrial partner in Turkey, Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI), will upgrade 42 F-16s for the Pakistani air force. The company says it secured a $75 million program to undertake the upgrade. The culmination of formal talks that began in 2006, the deal will run 46 months, with work to start in October 2010.

Michael Bruno
RADAR EXTENSION: An Australian defense project to upgrade its army’s Weapon Locating Radar has achieved initial operational capability, according to a defense official. The AN/TPQ-36 provides the Australian Defense Force (ADF) with the ability to locate enemy mortars, guns and rockets, enabling early warning for ground forces, according to Greg Combet, minister for Defense Personnel, Materiel and Science. “I am pleased to see that this project is performing on schedule and on budget and is due to achieve its full operational capability by March 2010,” he says.

GAO
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Staff
Controllers switched off the Ulysses joint European Space Agency/NASA solar orbiter June 30, almost 19 years after its launch on the space shuttle Discovery in October 1990. The end-of-mission command from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) turned off the spacecraft’s radio into monitor-only status, and no further commands are planned. Mission engineers managed to eke out an extra year of operations by firing Ulysses’ thrusters every two hours to keep the fuel from freezing as the onboard radioisotope power system degraded.

Douglas Barrie
LONDON — The U.K. is already facing a £1billion ($1.66 billion) cost increase for its two next-generation aircraft carriers (CVF), with more than half of the rise believed to be due to a two-year delay in the program. The BBC on June 29 revealed it had obtained an industry memo suggesting that the CVF program for two 65,000 ton-class carriers is running on the order of £1 billion more than its £3.9 billion budget.

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Bettina H. Chavanne
TALK RADIO: The U.S. Army’s Communications and Electronics Command (CECOM) has awarded a Northrop Grumman-Cobham team a 10-year contract worth up to $2.4 billion for the VIS-X Vehicular Intercommunication System Expanded. Under the contract, the team, called Northrop Grumman Cobham Intercoms, is required to deliver up to 500 VIS-X systems per month during the first year following completion of First Article Testing, and up to 2,000 systems per month in subsequent years.

Bettina H. Chavanne
GUIDED ROUNDS: The U.S. Navy has awarded Lockheed Martin a $16.5 million order to deliver paveway II Enhanced Laser Guided Training Rounds (E-LGTRs), exercising the fourth option of a 2005 contract valued at more than $114 million. Under the award, Lockheed Martin will extend production deliveries of E-LGTRs to the Navy in 2001, bringing the total quantity of rounds awarded on the contract to more than 50,000.

Amy Butler
Disparate efforts at the Pentagon to field a multirole missile suitable for carriage in F-22 and F-35 weapons bays are showing signs of consolidation under U.S. Air Force leadership, according to industry sources. Air Force officials are planning to begin fielding the Joint Dual-Role Air Dominance Missile (JDRADM), which would handle the HARM’s anti-radiation strike mission and the AIM-120’s medium-range anti-aircraft role, around 2024, say officials at the Air Armament Center, the service’s development hub for weapons in Florida.

GAO
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Douglas Barrie
LONDON — Amidst increasing interservice rivalry and warnings of military budget cuts, Britain’s main defense and aerospace lobby group is calling for the Labour government to launch a full-blown review.

Andy Savoie
AIR FORCE The Air Force is awarding a cost-plus-incentive-fee contract to Northrop Grumman Mission Systems, Electromagnetic System Laboratory, of San Jose, Calif., for $71,047,776. This contract action will provide MQ-1 unmanned aerial system communications intelligence airborne signals intelligence Payload-1 C scaled sensors for the Predator UAS. At this time, $69,851,657 has been obligated. Reconnaissance Systems Wing (ASC), Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, is the contracting activity (FA8620-08-C-3004).

Douglas Barrie
TRY, TRY AGAIN: BAE Systems Australia has secured hull work on the navy’s Air Warfare Destroyer. BAE’s bid was revived following one of the companies initially selected for the work having to restructure its business, according to local press reports. BAE will now build bow and stern sections of the ships, along with the machinery compartments. The navy has three Air Warfare Destroyers on order — the Spanish F100 design. The ships are due to be delivered between 2014 and 2017.

Douglas Barrie
LONDON — Having missed two target dates, BAE Systems is now mum as to when it expects to fly the Mantis medium altitude long endurance unmanned aerial vehicle demonstrator. Mantis was originally due to be flown in the first quarter of 2009, then by the end of the second quarter. The air vehicle remains on the ground and the manufacturer is being circumspect as to a revised flight schedule.