_Aerospace Daily

By Jefferson Morris
PATUXENT RIVER, Md. - The Joint Staff is identifying Key Interface Points (KIPs) between diverse military systems that are crucial to enabling network-centric operations, according to Navy Capt. David Meadows, division chief for mission assurance at the Joint Staff.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Air Force explored the possibility of replacing its aging KC-135E aerial refuelers with existing commercial airplanes before concluding it would be better off acquiring new Boeing KC-767As instead, the Air Force's acquisition chief said July 23.

Staff
CRASH REPORT: NASA's X-43A hypersonic vehicle crashed June 2, 2001, due to several cases of analytical modeling mistakes, especially on the fin actuation system, aerodynamics and modeling parameters, a NASA mishap investigation board disclosed July 23.

Staff
In financial results announced July 22, Orbital Sciences Corporation posted a net loss of $4.6 million in the second quarter of 2003, although total revenues for the company are up compared with the same period last year. In a statement, Orbital Chairman and CEO David W. Thompson pointed to "disappointing" results from the company's non-core electronic systems business, which offset "solid growth" in the company's core launch vehicle and satellite businesses.

Nick Jonson
The Navy is exploring several ship design concepts that would more efficiently deliver and deploy equipment and unmanned vehicles, according to a Navy officer with the Carderock Division of the Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC). The search for new concepts is being driven by the need to respond quickly to situations with surface ships that provide multiple new technologies, said Capt. Steven Petri, commander of the Carderock Division.

Stephen Trimble
An air-to-ground radar project sponsored by five European militaries has passed a key developmental milestone. The Stand-off-Surveillance and Target Acquisition Radar technology demonstrator (SOSTAR-X) on July 22 cleared a critical design review by the SOSTAR Steering Committee, representing France, Germany, Italy, Spain and The Netherlands, the company SOSTAR GmbH announced.

Stephen Trimble
Despite having "turned the corner" in recent months on avionics instability issues, the F/A-22 Raptor testing program has a new challenge, U.S. Air Force officials said July 23. At least five aircraft are needed to start the Initial Operational Test and Evaluation (IOT&E) period, but an unexpected, two-fold jump in required modifications has forced the Air Force to postpone that phase by three months, said Brig. Gen. Mark A. Welsh, director of Global Power Programs.

Marc Selinger
The House Appropriations Committee late July 21 approved the fiscal 2004 NASA appropriations bill, clearing the way for the full House to consider the legislation as early as the end of the week. Separately, the Republican majority on the House Science Committee July 22 blocked a Democratic proposal that would have required NASA to solicit concepts for increasing the crew survivability of the space shuttle.

Marc Selinger
A dispute over a congressional proposal to increase restrictions on the Pentagon's use of foreign sources likely will be resolved "to the satisfaction" of industry leaders and others who have resisted such legislation, Rep. Curt Weldon (R-Pa.) said July 22.

Rich Tuttle
The U.S. Air Force has picked Textron Systems to develop autonomous ground sensors to provide data on mobile enemy vehicles and other targets. The Wilmington, Mass., unit of Textron Inc. was chosen to develop the Advanced Remote Ground Unattended Sensor (ARGUS) system for the Air Force and the Advanced Air-Delivered Sensor (AADS) system for the Marine Corps, according to Capt. Winston Campbell, who manages the program at the Air Force's Electronic Systems Center, Hanscom AFB, Mass.

By Jefferson Morris
National defense and homeland security requirements in the wake of Sept. 11 are helping shape the government's interagency effort to increase the capacity of America's air traffic management (ATM) system, according to various participants.

Stephen Trimble
Nine months after publicly demonstrating its military capabilities, the Australian Defense Force is deploying unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for the first time on an operational mission. Four Aerosonde UAVs, originally designed as a lightweight weather observer with a 9-foot wingspan, will participate in a stabilization effort in the Solomon Islands. "This is the first deployment of an unmanned aerial vehicle on operations by the Australian Defence Force," Defense Minister Robert Hill said in a statement.

Stephen Trimble
The first acquisition program to participate in a strengthened Joint Staff oversight process called the Joint Capabilities and Integration Development System (JCIDS) fell behind by five months, and more programs could face similar snags during a transition period, a senior defense official said July 22. JCIDS scraps the Requirements Generation System, which was considered too service-specific. The new procedures are designed to identify capabilities needed as new weapons and operational concepts are proposed.

Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense

Staff
Honeywell International and Dynamics Research Corp. have begun negotiations on contracts for the Army's Future Combat Systems (FCS) program, according to company officials The Army's lead systems integrator (LSI) team of Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC) and the Boeing Co. selected Honeywell on July 10 to develop an integrated software program that collects, analyzes and transmits battlefield data on individual combat vehicles and soldiers (DAILY, July 11).

John Fricker
LONDON - The Eurofighter Typhoon has successfully completed air refueling trials while bearing a full load of air defense weapons, manufacturer EADS CASA said July 22. The European Aeronautic and Defense Co. unit said its DA.1 development Eurofighter Typhoon flew the missions. The trials were undertaken for the first time with one of the three hose- and drogue-equipped Boeing 707 tanker/transport aircraft of the Spanish air force. They followed similar initial trials last year with a Spanish Lockheed KC-130H Hercules.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE - The Czech Republic will continue most of its commitments to NATO despite the government's announcement of new, sweeping cuts in its military forces, defense officials said. The military, which already was facing substantial decreases in personnel and equipment under military reform proposals, has been told that the cuts will be "faster and deeper" than originally planned following new national finance reforms. Those reforms will trim the annual military budget from 2.2 percent of GDP to about 2 percent.

Staff
ELECTRONICS SALE: The Boeing Co. said July 22 it plans to sell its commercial airline electronics business. The business, located Irving, Texas, and Puget Sound, Wash., supplies avionics equipment and flight controls for all Boeing wide-body and narrow-body jets except the 717.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE -- A former Czech defense minister who once criticized state-run Aero Vodochody's L-159 advanced light combat plane is being put forward for a place on the board of the company, which is the Czech Republic's leading aircraft manufacturer.

Stephen Trimble
A week after Senate appropriators moved to cancel the controversial Total Information Awareness (TIA) program, top Pentagon research officials rose to defend the 18-month-old project's progress in the first public hearing on the issue July 21. TIA, a Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) effort headed by Vice Adm. John Poindexter (USN-Ret.), ignited a civil liberties controversy earlier this year because of its mission of seeking signs of terrorist activity in cyberspace, including probing bank accounts and credit card transactions.

By Jefferson Morris
The General Accounting Office (GAO) is recommending that the defense secretary direct the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) program office to ensure that international supplier planning takes full account of the possible risks of transferring technology out of the United States. A large number of export authorizations must be processed to ensure that prospective suppliers from the eight international JSF partner countries have the opportunity to compete for key contracts and subcontracts on schedule, the GAO said in a report released July 21.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - The Indian Air Force has decided to ground at least 20 Type 69 MiG-21 trainer aircraft following a MiG-21 crash last week in which both crewmembers were killed. The service has lost more than 220 aircraft in the last ten years, the majority of which were MiGs. An Air Force source confirmed that the trainer has been grounded, adding that these aircraft were bought from Ukraine in the last six to seven years. He also disclosed that the aircraft in which the two crewmembers were killed was bought second-hand from Ukraine three years ago.