Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
Sikorsky Aircraft on April 18 announced a nationwide campaign to recruit more than 300 engineers to help meet demand for the company's military and civil helicopters. Sikorsky plans job fairs in several states over the next few months to fill engineering jobs at company and subsidiary facilities in Connecticut, Florida, Maryland, Alabama and New York.

Staff
LLOYD RETIRES: Iridium Satellite LLC announced April 18 that CEO Carmen Lloyd is retiring from the company. Dan A. Colussy has been named interim CEO until Lloyd's successor is appointed. Colussy is a founding investor and former CEO of Iridium Satellite LLC, as well as Chairman of Iridium Holdings LLC.

Staff
C-26D SUPPORT: URS Corp. announced April 17 that it was awarded a $17.7 million contract by the U.S. Navy to continue providing logistics support for seven C-26D aircraft, a military version of the Fairchild Metroliner commuter aircraft, at naval facilities in Barking Sands, Hawaii, and Sigonella and Naples, Italy. The contract includes an eight-month base period and four one-year option periods. The company won the initial five-year logistics contract in 1999.

John M. Doyle
The demise of the Joint Unmanned Combat Air System (J-UCAS) program is another example of why the Pentagon needs to reconsider what it wants from joint development programs, the head of the Navy's strike weapons and unmanned aviation program said April 18. "We start joint, but we never carry it across the goal line for some reason," Rear Adm. Timothy Heely said. "There are very few joint success stories," he told The DAILY after addressing the Precision Strike Association's conference on asymmetric warfare.

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Blaming defense budget cuts, program delays and contract completions, the Boeing Co. is restructuring its Wichita, Kan., operation and laying off roughly 900 more employees, the company announced April 17. Boeing Wichita, which is part of the company's Integrated Defense Systems unit, will change its business to focus primarily on military 747 and wide-body aircraft modifications and upgrades, as well as engineering for the B-52 Stratofortress and other defense and civil aviation-related businesses.

Staff
The U.S. Air Force has awarded contracts to a Boeing/Lockheed Martin team and Raytheon to compete in the risk reduction phase of the Small Diameter Bomb Increment II program. The Raytheon team is receiving roughly $144 million and the Boeing/Lockheed team about $146 million for the 42-month risk reduction phase. The Air Force announced the awards April 17.

Michael Bruno
With the Joint Common Missile abandoned for now, the U.S. Navy is looking to adapt Dual-Mode Laser-Guided Bombs (DMLGBs) and Laser Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs) as its weapons of choice to hit moving targets, such as Iraqi insurgents in pick-up trucks, according to a panel of Navy officers leading sea strike systems.

Staff
Intelsat, Ltd. on April 18 reported revenue of $1.171 billion and a net loss of $325.3 million for 2005, and said that finalizing the acquisition of PanAmSat is its "top priority" for 2006. Two more U.S. regulatory approvals are needed for the $3.2 billion merger to go through, from the Federal Communications Commission and the Department of Justice. DOJ has sent a second request for information to the companies. Intelsat believes all non-U.S. regulatory hurdles have been cleared.

John M. Doyle
If the U.S. government is serious about creating an overall terrorism information-sharing road map, a congressional report says, the Director of National Intelligence needs to birddog progress for meeting key milestones, identify barriers to achieving them and recommend changes to Congress.

Staff

Staff
The 3,300-pound unmanned re-entry module for the Chinese Shenzhou 6 manned mission launched in October 2005 has been commanded into a destructive re-entry after completing six months of autonomous flight and about 3,000 orbits. The two-man Shenzhou 6 astronaut crew returned to Earth after five days aloft. But as in the earlier Shenzhou 5 manned flight and four unmanned test flights, the 9-foot by 8-foot pressurized orbital module with solar arrays spanning 34 feet stayed in orbit as an unmanned satellite.

Michael Bruno
The Advanced SEAL Delivery System (ASDS) submarine is headed for a critical juncture next summer when the U.S. Navy, Special Operations Command and the industry team led by Northrop Grumman Corp. figure out if the one boat already produced is reliable, and whether to proceed with a new class of mini-subs or stop altogether, according to the Navy's program executive officer for subs.

Staff
LUNAR IMPACTS: NASA will send dual impactor spacecraft to the moon with the launch of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, scheduled for October 2008, to search for water ice that could be used during future exploration. In Figure 1 the two spacecraft - a 2,000-kilogram (4,409-pound) spent upper stage and a "Shepherding spacecraft" - approach the moon. Figure 2 shows impact in Shackleton Crater near the lunar south pole. Satellites and telescopes will scan the impact plume for evidence of water (DAILY, April 11). Images courtesy of NASA.

Staff
Defense Information Systems Agency

Staff
The Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) program has received final Pentagon approval for its new program plan, which aims to curb the delays and overages that nearly cost Boeing its JTRS Cluster 1 prime contract last year. On March 31, Pentagon acquisition chief Ken Krieg signed an Acquisition Decision Memorandum (ADM) officially approving the way ahead for JTRS, the Department of Defense announced April 17. Krieg was first briefed on the program's new requirements and budget in November 2005 (NetDefense, Feb. 23)

Michael Bruno
Seven capital-expenditure (capex) projects have been approved or are in development to help General Dynamics Corp.'s Electric Boat and Northrop Grumman Corp.'s Newport News slice costs off the Virginia-class submarine program, Navy Rear Adm. William Hilarides said April 17.

Staff
Orbital Sciences Corporation successfully launched six small scientific satellites into low-Earth orbit for Taiwan using its Minotaur I rocket April 14, the company announced. Launch took place at 6:40 p.m. Pacific Time from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. The mission is known in the U.S. as the Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere and Climate (COSMIC), and is owned and operated by Taiwan's National Space Program Office (NSPO).