ACQUIRED: Information technology company SI International Inc. said Feb. 9 that it has completed the purchase of Shenandoah Electronic Intelligence Inc., which provides support services to the Department of Homeland Security. SI acquired SEI for $75 million in cash.
Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said Feb. 8 that he will question Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark closely "on the rationale for retiring the USS John F. Kennedy, and its impact on national security" at a Feb. 10 SASC hearing.
The Bush Administration plans to spend $26 million over the next two years to finish a study on the feasibility of modifying an existing nuclear warhead to destroy hardened and deeply buried targets, government officials said Feb. 8.
Alexis C. Livanos has been elected corporate vice president and president of the company's Space Technology sector. Wesley G. Bush, whom Livanos is succeeding, has been elected chief financial officer. Art Stephenson has been named vice president of the new Directed Energy Systems business area. Stephenson is a former director of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center.
Deborah Lee James has been named senior vice president and general manager of the Command, Control, Communications, Computer and Information Technology business unit.
The U.S. Air Force is getting closer to conducting "Space Flag" exercises to allow space warriors to hone their skills. The exercises would do for the military space community what "Red Flag" exercises do for combat aircrews, according to Brig. Gen. Daniel J. Darnell, commander of the Air Force's Space Warfare Center. "I've spoken with the 14th Air Force Commander, Maj. Gen. Mike Hamel, who is a big, big supporter of it, and he thinks it's a great idea," Darnell said in a Feb. 5 telephone interview.
Carlos C. Campbell has been named to the board of directors. Campbell operates a consulting business in Reston, Va., and serves on the board of directors for Resource America Inc., NetWolves Corp., and Pico Holdings Inc.
The U.S. Air Force is considering forming a "center of excellence" to find ways to improve coordination among different types of unmanned aerial vehicles, according to a top general. Gen. Michael Moseley, Air Force vice chief of staff, said Feb. 9 that "incredible synergies" might be achieved by getting UAVs that operate at different altitudes to work together. Details of the possible center are under evaluation.
James A. Schaefer has been named to the board of directors. Schaefer is a certified public accountant and retired in 2004 as an audit partner for the accounting firm Baird, Kurtz & Dobson LLP.
The Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory is working on several initiatives to upgrade the Dragon Eye unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), including improving its sensors, endurance and communications.
The elected 2005 leaders for the AIA councils are as follows: Gerald L. Mack, Civil Aviation Council. Mack is vice president, Government and Industry technical liaison, Boeing Commercial Airplanes, Boeing Co. Rosanne O'Brien, Communications Council. O'Brien is corporate vice president of Communications, Northrop Grumman Corp. Richard Kirkland, International Council. Kirkland is vice president of Corporate International Business Development, Lockheed Martin Corp.
The Defense Department's total spending on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in fiscal year 2006 is likely to stay at roughly the same level as FY '05, according to Dyke Weatherington, head of the Pentagon's UAV Task Force. President Bush's FY '06 budget request for DOD includes between $1.7 billion and $2 billion for UAVs, according to Weatherington. Precisely calculating the total UAV request takes time after the budget is released because the services tend to "bury" some of their UAV funding, Weatherington said.
NASA plans to develop an unmanned aircraft capable of staying airborne for 14 days as part of its High-Altitude Long-Endurance Remotely Operated Aircraft (HALE ROA) technology program, according to fiscal year 2006 budget documents.
Rep. Sherwood Boehlert (R-N.Y.), House Science Committee chairman, said science programs fared "relatively well" in President Bush's fiscal 2006 budget proposal and that he was "especially pleased to see the significant increase proposed for the laboratories at the National Institute of Standards and Technology."
The classified Schriever III space war game, set in the year 2020 and now under way at Nellis Air Force Base, Nev., involves a series of events that stress the space architecture, including weapons of mass destruction and access to oil, said Brig. Gen. Daniel J. Darnell, the executive game director. Darnell, commander of the Space Warfare Center at Schriever Air Force Base, Colo., also said lessons from the game, the third in a series that began in 2001, will feed into the Pentagon's Quadrennial Defense Review, due out later this year.
Lockheed Martin Corp. said Feb. 8 that its industry team began cutting steel for the first U.S. Navy Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) on Feb. 1, marking the start of fabrication at shipbuilder Marinette Marine in Marinette, Wis. The group was authorized to move to the construction phase after passing a defense Production Readiness Review on Jan. 14.
LONDON - Does the U.S. Defense Department's selection of a Lockheed Martin-led team to supply the next presidential helicopter fleet signal an opening for European defense companies eager to penetrate the U.S. market?
ARMOR KITS: United Defense Industries Inc. of Santa Clara, Calif., will provide a variety of armor kits for U.S. Army combat vehicles under a $30 million contract award, the company said Feb. 8. The contract was awarded by the U.S. Army Tank-automotive and Armaments Command. United Defense will furnish add-on armor, including side armor and mine armor, for M113 vehicles. The company also will provide transparent armor shields for M113s and Bradley Fighting Vehicles. The work is set to be complete by July 31.
U.S. security forces airmen at Tallil Air Base in Iraq are using Lockheed Martin's miniature unmanned aerial vehicle, Desert Hawk, to gather information and identify threats, the Air Force says. The seven-pound, remote-controlled aircraft, part of the service's force protection airborne surveillance system, has a four-foot wingspan and can fly for about an hour using its rechargeable batteries. It's built from mold-injected expanded polypropylene.
The Army's Tank-Automotive Research, Development and Engineering Center (TARDEC) is conducting experiments in support of the Army's Future Combat Systems (FCS) effort in which manned Stryker vehicles work together with unmanned ground and air vehicles in simulated missions.
Almost $5 billion, or 90%, of the increase from President Bush's fiscal 2006 federal information technology (IT) budget request goes to support homeland security, anti-terrorism military operations and expanding health IT, according to Karen Evans, administrator of e-government and IT at the White House's Office of Management and Budget.
A group of leading suborbital space entrepreneurs intends to form an industry federation to develop technical standards and processes to promote the safety and growth of the personal spaceflight industry, the group announced Feb. 8. Individuals involved in forming the Personal Spaceflight Federation include Burt Rutan of Scaled Composites, John Carmack of Armadillo Aerospace, Elon Musk of SpaceX, Jeff Greason of XCOR Aerospace, Peter Diamandis of the X PRIZE Foundation and Mojave Airport Manager Stuart Witt.