Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
Allan W. LeGrow has been promoted to associate principal director in the National Space Systems Engineering Directorate for Architectures, Programs and Integration in Rosslyn, Va.

Staff
Mamoru Iguchi has been appointed general manager of the Asia Pacific region.

Staff
Robert Pavlock and David Ridderikhoff have been appointed business development executives in the geospatial and engineering divisions.

Pat Toensmeier
Among contenders in the U.S. Air Force's CSAR-X (combat search and rescue) helicopter competition are models from Lockheed Martin and Sikorsky Aircraft. During the Air Force Association's Air Warfare Symposium in Orlando, Fla., last week, both companies made presentations detailing the features and benefits of their offerings.

Staff
Adventurer Steve Fossett is to pilot the Scaled Composites/Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer across Africa Feb. 9, following a harrowing takeoff and initial cockpit problems Feb. 8 at the start of the planned longest flight in history.

Staff
Lt. Gen. Harry D. Raduege (USAF) has been appointed chairman of the Deloitte Center for Network Innovation.

Staff
Hushang Ansary has been appointed chairman. John B. Simmons has been named vice chairman and will continue to serve as CEO. Gary W. Stratulate has been appointed president and chief operating officer.

Staff
VEHICLES DELIVERED: The Dutch military has received six FOX nuclear, biological, and chemical reconnaissance vehicles from Germany's Rheinmetall Landsysteme GmbH, the company said Feb. 7. The vehicles were ordered in late 2003. The vehicle's integrated sensor and analysis systems can detect a wide range of nuclear and chemical hazards, allowing quick protective countermeasures to be taken. Rheinmetall has produces more than 260 of the vehicles in all, half of them for the U.S. military.

Staff
Donald G. DeGryse has been appointed vice president of navigation systems for the space systems company. Mary Margaret VanDeWeghe has been named senior vice president of finance

Staff
GUN SHIELDS: BAE Systems said Feb. 8 that it has delivered to Iraq 1,000 Transparent Armored Gun Shields (TAGS) for U.S. Army Humvees. The $4.7 million contract was awarded in November by the U.S. Army's Tank-automotive and Armaments Command. The TAGS are effective during close-in urban combat and are also used on the Bradley Fighting Vehicle, M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank, and M113 vehicles, as well as for the Stryker Common Ballistic Shield.

US Government

By Jefferson Morris
Development of the Boeing X-45C and Northrop Grumman X-47B Joint Unmanned Combat Air System (J-UCAS) vehicles is continuing for now with available fiscal 2006 funding, despite uncertainty over what happens in FY '07, when J-UCAS is scheduled to end.

Michael Bruno
Congressional Democrats continue to raise the prospect of curbing requested funds for national missile defense in light of the Bush administration's fiscal 2007 request and long-term military planning for reduced Guard troop levels. Rep. Ike Skelton (Mo.), ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, told Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace on Feb. 8 that he questioned plans to go "skinny" on Guard levels while going "robust" on missile funding.

Frank Morring
NASA Administrator Michael Griffin has ordered agency public affairs officers not to spin public statements by scientists working with agency funds. "It is not the job of public affairs officers to alter, filter or adjust engineering or scientific material produced by NASA's technical staff," Griffin says in an e-mail sent to all NASA employees. He was responding to complaints from the agency's top climate expert that headquarters public affairs officials had tried to stifle his contention that more needs to be done to mitigate global warming.

Staff
James Robert Campbell has been appointed senior advisor to the company's bioterrorism preparedness advisory board.

By Jefferson Morris
The U.S. military is projecting that there will be 4,000 robotic systems in Iraq and Afghanistan before the end of fiscal 2006, as compared to 2,400 systems in theater today. There will be 22 different robots, ranging from iRobot's PackBot and the Rapid Equipping Force's MarcBot, to larger systems such as the Panther -- a modified Abrams tank equipped with a countermine flail. U.S. military forces are using robots for improvised explosive device (IED) disposal, force protection, countermine, and urban operations missions.

Michael Bruno
The U.S. Navy's new long-term shipbuilding and fleet structure plan, sent to Congress Feb. 7, notes that with early retirement of the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy and funding of the CVN-21 in fiscal 2008, the Navy could fall below its own 11-carrier requirement in FY '13 or FY '14. The plan cited "past delays in beginning the CVN-21 program." Meanwhile, Navy officials have said they will immediately ask Congress to pass new legislation for mothballing the JFK -- which Congress recently rejected (DAILY, Feb. 7).

Michael Bruno
The Defense Department's Small Business Innovation Research and technology transfer and the Marine Corps' Expeditionary Warfare efforts have been designated as "programs that are not performing" under the White House's new blacklist of federal programs. The list, available at ExpectMore.gov, is part of the Bush administration's attempt to cull federal programs, 28 percent of which the White House asserts are not performing.

By Joe Anselmo
NEW YORK -- Top defense industry executives are giving a thumbs up to President Bush's fiscal 2007 budget request, but caution that it will be a long road before a final appropriation clears Capitol Hill. The $439.3 billion budget that Bush submitted on Feb. 6 would boost top line military spending by 7 percent over the budget approved by Congress last year and is missing some of the draconian program cuts that investors and defense executives have worried about for more than a year.

Staff
NET LOSSES: SPACEHAB Inc. said Feb. 7 that it suffered net losses for both its second quarter of FY '06 and the six-month period ending Dec. 31. The company's second quarter net loss was $8.9 million on revenue of $11.8 million. In the second quarter of FY '05, the company had a net loss of $1.2 million on revenue of $13.1 million. SPACEHAB's six-month net loss was $10.8 million on revenue of $23.8 million, compared to a net income of $5.7 million on revenue of $26.2 million for the first six months of the previous fiscal year.