JSF TESTING: A senior Air Force official says that two F-35 aircraft pulled out of the flight-test program will likely be purchased later and used for follow-on test and evaluation, and possibly operations thereafter. Senior Pentagon leadership gave the nod to reducing the 19-aircraft test program recently. This reduction gives "balance" to the program, says the senior Air Force official.
CRUISE MISSILE DEFENSE: The Missile Defense Advisory Committee, an advisory group to the Missile Defense Agency (MDA), will meet Dec. 19-20 at the Pentagon to hear from the Defense Department, the armed services and industry on the "appropriate" role for MDA in cruise missile defense (CMD). The panel has been meeting this year to mull over MDA and CMD, which increasingly are gaining attention inside Washington (DAILY, Sept. 4).
A New National Intelligence Estimate from the U.S. intelligence community reports that Iran halted its nuclear weapons program in the fall of 2003 and likely would not be successful until at least six years from now.
U.S. Army plans to modernize or replace its aging helicopter fleet from now through 2030 could run into a money crunch as the service simultaneously invests heavily in the Future Combat Systems (FCS) program, according to a new congressional study.
PARIS - The French government has given the go-ahead to its first purchase of NH90 helicopters for its army. The deal for up to 68 of the Tactical Transport Helicopter version brings the total order book to 507 rotorcraft for NHIndustries (the joint venture of Eurocopter, AgustaWestland, and Stork Fokker).
FLYING AGAIN: Lockheed Martin's AA1 F-35 risk-reduction aircraft is expected to return to flight Dec. 4. The aircraft has been on the ground since an in-flight anomaly in May that forced engineers to redesign the aircraft's electricity distribution system. Also expected this week is a return to flight for the Combined Avionics Testbed, a 737-based test platform for the F-35's sophisticated avionics suite. The first short-takeoff and vertical landing (STOVL) aircraft, designated BF-1, also is expected to roll off the production line Dec. 18.
Airspace issues, whether access to domestic skies or control over a combat arena, is the next big focus for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and needs to be worked out imminently, according to a panel of one-star U.S. military leaders.
The White House may be trying to downplay the flap over China's last-minute rejection of a U.S. Navy visit to Hong Kong, but the top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee says it's time to prepare for a more aggressive China. 'Buy America' advocate and Republican presidential hopeful Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) wants President Bush to meet with the leaders of several key House committees to discuss "an adjustment of U.S. policy towards China."
AUGCOG: As part of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) Augmented Cognition (AugCog) program, a Honeywell-led team is measuring the workload, stress and cognitive capability of infantry soldiers during training exercises. The company and its partners, including several universities, have mounted sensors in helmets, including EEGs (electroencephalograms) to measure cognitive brain activity and an electrocardiogram to measure heart rate.
PERIMETER SECURITY: The U.S. Navy and the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) are partnering to test an airport perimeter security system at Florida's Panama City-Bay County International Airport. The Navy has been working on its virtual perimeter monitoring system for three years, says Michael Adams, program manager at the Naval Surface Warfare Center. Following successful Navy testing this summer, "TSA heard about our work and became interested in using it to leverage on things that the Dept. of Defense had already done," Adams says.
PARIS - Prospects for an alliance between aerospace and defense contractors Thales and Safran have been cut short by opposition from private shareholders, top management and the French government, which fears such a deal could add to the difficulties of stumbling EADS.
SIGNED UP: On Dec. 6 at the Space Investment Summit in San Jose, Calif., the first team to complete registration for the $30 million Google Lunar X Prize will unveil details of its plans to rove the surface of the moon. Representatives of the "Odyssey Moon" team will discuss their small robotic lander designed to deliver scientific, exploratory and commercial payloads to the lunar surface.
ETHICS CODIFIED: A new federal acquisition rule requiring that contractors promulgate a code of ethics and establish internal controls to combat procurement fraud will take effect Dec. 24. Small businesses will be exempt from formal training programs and internal controls after industry voiced concerns about burdensome costs, according to the notice in the Federal Register.
ORION LEADERSHIP: Caris A. (Skip) Hatfield, project manager for NASA's Orion crew exploration vehicle, is being reassigned to the International Space Station (ISS) program office at Johnson Space Center as part of a "strategic realignment." He will be replaced as head of the effort to develop the six-person Orion capsule by Mark Geyer, who was deputy manager of the Constellation Program that is overseeing Orion and the rest of the vehicles needed to support U.S. human spaceflight after the space shuttle retires in 2010.
DOCUMENT TRANSLATION: The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is figuring out what to do with all the information one might gather during a spy mission inside someone else's computer system or while browsing an interesting waste basket. BBN Technologies of Cambridge, Mass., won a $4.3 million contract to continue researching an end-to-end system that automatically translates handwritten and printed foreign documents into English with very high accuracy. This capability would be a great adjunct to network exploitation capabilities that U.S.
In what the National Academies of Science (NAS) calls the most comprehensive assessment of the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program to date, researchers have concluded that the Defense Department's SBIR program "is contributing directly to enhanced capabilities for the Department of Defense and the needs of those charged with defending the country," and it is achieving "significant" levels of commercialization.
UAV DREAMS: U.S. military officials increasingly seek small-craft hover and perch capabilities from unmanned aircraft, according to Army aviation chief Brig. Gen. Stephen Mundt. Fixed-wing unmanned systems can provide "stare" capabilities but only for a limited time as the aircraft obviously must follow flight paths. But Mundt acknowledges difficulties in the pursuit as he says the Army still has not solidified what the long-term plans are for its Future Combat Systems class 1 platoon-level and class 4 vertical takeoff unmanned systems.
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected] (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) Dec 3 - 4 --University of Hertfordshire's First International Conference on Unmanned Aircraft Systems, Intercontinental Hotel, Berlin. For more information go to www.hertfordshireconnect.com Dec. 4 - 8 --Langkawi International Maritime and and Aerospace Exhibition. MIEC Hall. Langkawi, Malaysia. For more information go to www.lima2007.com
GO: Senior NASA managers set a Dec. 6 launch date for the space shuttle Atlantis on the STS-122/1E space station assembly mission. As expected, the "executive" flight readiness review Nov. 30 found the station was ready to receive the European Columbus laboratory module Atlantis will be carrying, and identified no technical issues with the shuttle to preclude launching at the beginning of a window that closes Dec. 13.
AIR FORCE IT: U.S. Air Force officials are drafting portfolio-level policies and procedures for information technology (IT) investments and they tell congressional auditors that the groundwork is expected to be completed and approved this month. Until they are implemented, the service runs the risk that its IT investments will not meet its mission needs in the most effective manner, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) says.
BRITISH BRAVO: Britain's Guild of Air Pilots and Air Navigators has given Boeing's X-45A unmanned combat air vehicle its Johnston Memorial Trophy, which is presented to an individual, aircraft crew or organization for outstanding performance of airmanship or operation of airborne systems. In particular, the program was lauded for a series of demonstration flights in August 2005 when two autonomously flying X-45s identified, attacked and destroyed ground-based radars and associated missile launchers before they could launch surface-to-air missiles.