Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael A. Taverna
UPGRADED MILANS: MBDA has delivered the first series production batch of its advanced Milan ADT firing post to South Africa, along with upgraded Milan 3 multirole antitank missiles and a training simulator. The post, which features improved optics, integrated thermal imager and digitized localizer, is currently in troop trials in South Africa. The new firing system and missiles were developed under a Franco-German cooperative program.

Joris Janssen Lok
Australia’s new Labor-led government is terminating the Royal Australian Navy’s (RAN) long-running, problematic SH-2G(A) Super Seasprite naval helicopter program, Defense Minister Joel Fitzgibbon announced March 5. Immediate focus will now be placed on upgrading and eventually replacing RAN’s Sikorsky S-70B Seahawks. A buy of naval NFH90s will likely be one of the key options to be considered, sources say.

By Bradley Perrett
The introduction of China’s new-generation Long March 5 rocket has slipped again, with an industry official saying it is now expected to go into use in 2014. As recently as October the oxygen-hydrogen launcher, which is in the class of the Delta IV and much larger than the current Long March series, was expected to go into service in 2013. Before that, the Long March 5 was seen as a candidate to launch the second Chinese lunar probe, Chang’e 2, which is now due to be launched “sometime around 2009.”

Amy Butler
Key Senate staffers on the defense oversight committees are considering adding a proposal in the fiscal 2008 war spending supplemental to lift restrictions on selling the stealthy Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor abroad. This would clear the way for Japan to become the first foreign military sales customer for the fighter. Tokyo is willing to offer about $1 billion for an initial purchase, according to a Senate aide. Flyaway price for the F-22 is now $153 million.

By Michael Bruno
The chairman of the House defense appropriations subcommittee suggests concerns about politics, jobs and international rivalries could derail the selection of the Northrop Grumman/EADS team in the U.S. Air Force tanker competition.

Robert Wall
The A400M European military airlifter has finally received its four TP400-D6 engines to power the first flight aircraft. Rolls-Royce, one of the leaders in the Europrop International (EPI) engine consortium, says that the fourth engine for the first flight aircraft has now arrived in Seville, Spain, for installation. The TP400 has reached 1,000 hours of engine ground testing.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The Defense Science Board (DSB) in a recent report proposes innovative solutions to energy challenges facing DOD, including a blended wing body for fixed-wing, heavy-lift aircraft. Also among the proposals are a variable speed tilt rotor for vertical lift aircraft and a “blast-bucket” design concept for light armor ground vehicles.

Michael Bruno
ATHENA BID: Rockwell Collins announced March 3 that it is moving to buy Athena Technologies, a privately held company that develops and provides flight control and navigation products primarily for unmanned aircraft. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed. The companies said the deal should close in about 30 days and is subject to regulatory approvals. The acquisition is expected to be neutral to Rockwell Collins’ fiscal 2008 earnings.

Michael Bruno
Raytheon said March 3 it received an initial contract to provide engineering services related to a U.S. foreign military sale of the Patriot air and missile defense system to South Korea. The U.S. contractor said it expects “significant” follow-on awards to complete the system integration and to provide command and control, communications and maintenance support equipment, as well as the training of Korean operators and maintainers and technical assistance to the deployed systems.

David A. Fulghum
China’s military has been known for generations as a force that relied on simplicity, mass and endurance, but the Pentagon’s newest report to Congress says there is a fast-paced transformation under way.

Andy Savoie
SUPPORT SERVICES: Lockheed Martin Maritime Systems and Sensors of Mitchel Field, N.Y., has been awarded a $21.3 million contract modification to provide U.S. Trident II (D5) navigation subsystem engineering support services requirements, the DOD said March 4. The effort will focus on U.S. Strategic Weapon System shipboard integration support and U.S. trainer shipboard integration support. The work will be performed in Mitchel Field and is expected to be completed by April 2010.

Michael Bruno
U.S. defense officials continue to back off any launch date for Transformational Satellites (TSAT) and have told lawmakers they are essentially re-evaluating the program to shore it up. During a hearing on Capitol Hill March 4, Gary Payton, deputy undersecretary for the Air Force for space programs, called any launch prediction right now “premature.” He said an ongoing analysis through spring is looking at “rephasing ... re-architecting” TSAT to make sure it provides the most important strategic communications capabilities to the most important users first.

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Air Force has told Alabama Aircraft Industries – formerly Pemco Aviation Group – that the service intends to go ahead with its KC-135 maintenance contract award to Boeing, despite the U.S. Government Accountability Office’s sustainment of a Pemco protest over the deal, according to sources intimately familiar with the decision.

Michael Bruno
“Jumpstart,” a multipronged effort set to fly a so-called operationally responsive space (ORS) payload on the SpaceX Falcon 1 Flight 003 mission, is slated for a June launch from Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands, the U.S. Air Force said March 3. “Jumpstart will demonstrate agility and flexibility in the rapid integration of three separate payloads on parallel manifest paths, with the downselect to the final payload prior to the flight readiness review no later than two weeks before launch,” the service said.

Michael Bruno
CHINOOK AWARD: Boeing said March 3 it was awarded a $280.5 million U.S. Army contract for 11 new CH-47F Chinook helicopters, increasing the number of new Chinooks on contract to 59. Aircraft deliveries under this award will begin in 2011. The CH-47F helicopter features a newly designed, modernized airframe, a Rockwell Collins Common Avionics Architecture System cockpit and a BAE Digital Advanced Flight Control System. The entire suite of improved cockpit capabilities will apply to other H-47 models, the company says.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The dire need for a better energy strategy should not preclude careful study and analysis of all the options being proposed, Sen. Jeff Bingaman (R-N.M.) told a packed house March 3 at the U.S. Air Force’s Energy Forum in Arlington, Va. “There is a growing consensus across the ideological spectrum that we need to move faster and go further to secure energy,” he said. Bingaman cited the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 as examples of steps taken by Congress, across parties, to address the need for clean energy.

John M. Doyle
Congressional reaction to the U.S. Air Force decision to pick the Northrop Grumman/EADS KC-330 for its tanker replacement fleet continues to snowball, with House Appropriations Defense Subcommittee Chairman John Murtha (D-Pa.) adding a March 5 hearing on the issue to the panel’s schedule.

David A. Fulghum
U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. T. Michael Moseley won’t confirm the news that Iran is the first big customer for the Russian-made, advanced SA-20 air defense missile, but he did detail what such a sale would mean operationally while speaking to reporters in Washington last week. He highlighted in particular the 100-mile range of the SA-10 and the 200-mile-plus range of the SA-20 surface-to-air missiles. “The SA-20 is a big deal,” he said. “Put it next to the Washington monument, and you can [target] airplanes all the way from Philadelphia to Richmond.”

Amy Butler
U.S. Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne has formally notified Congress that cost overruns on the Lockheed Martin/Northrop Grumman Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) satellite program have topped 15 percent of the program’s baseline, largely due to a Pentagon decision to restart the production line and add a fourth spacecraft (SV-4) to the planned total buy.

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Michael Fabey
The U.S. Air Force decision to award its initial $40 billion tanker replacement contract to the team of Northrop Grumman and EADS should stand up well to the legislative scrutiny being demanded by lawmakers, analysts say. With up to $200 billion at stake over the long haul, according to some estimates, the contract is one of the biggest Pentagon prizes of the decade.

Bettina H. Chavanne
MARITIME PATROL: The U.S. Coast Guard accepted delivery of the first mission-ready HC-130J long-range surveillance maritime patrol aircraft Feb. 29. The aircraft’s new mission equipment and sensor packages are designed for enhanced search, detection and tracking capabilities to perform maritime search and rescue, maritime law enforcement and homeland security missions. Lockheed Martin is under contract with the USCG to deliver three mission-ready HC-130Js through the Deepwater program, and is on schedule to complete work by the end of March.

Joris Janssen Lok
Israel’s defense ministry has mandated Controp’s Stamp family of stabilized miniature electro-optical sensor payloads for its upcoming buy of several hundred small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), senior company executives say. According to Controp, after contracts for the Israel Defense Force (IDF) program have been signed, production quantities will allow the company to reduce the market price for Stamp payloads, currently around $20,000 per unit, to “well below that.”

Michael Bruno
U.S. military and other defense officials have publicly discussed long-sought conventional prompt global strike (PGS) capabilities as a hedge against competing countries and other adversaries pursuing anti-satellite (ASAT) measures threatening U.S. space capabilities.

Frank Morring, Jr.
The STS-123/1J/A International Space Station (ISS) assembly mission will feature five spacewalks – a heavy load for the crews – but it should reduce the need for extravehicular activity (EVA) at the station in the future. Tucked in the payload bay of the space shuttle Endeavour when it lifts off as early as March 11 (DAILY, March 3) will be Canada’s special purpose dexterous manipulator, a big two-armed robot dubbed “Dextre” that can approach human capabilities with its “delicate” sense of touch.