_Aerospace Daily

Staff
Czech radar maker HTT Tesla Pardubice has announced that it will sell one of its Tamara counter-stealth passive detection systems to an as-yet unidentified country of the former Soviet Union. According to company officials, the unnamed country is "trustworthy and politically stable," and will not likely spur any opposition from the U.S. They said they do not want to identify the country because rival companies could exert pressure to scrap the deal.

Staff
LITTON SYSTEMS INC., San Jose, Calif., received a $54.4 million increase to an earlier contract from the U.S. Air Force on July 21 for 87 AN/ALR-56M Advanced Radar Warning Receivers for F-16 aircraft operated by Taiwan. The contract was awarded by Air Force Material Command.

Staff
The German government has delayed its selection of a new targeting pod for Tornado aircraft that are undergoing a mid-life upgrade. Initially slated for July, a decision on a supplier for the roughly 20 pods is now not likely to be made before the German parliament reconvenes in September. An industry official said the Luftwaffe wants to take a closer look at the proposals.

Staff
Combest's IC21 intelligence review has turned up a lot of concern about human intelligence (HUMINT) assets and a good deal of praise for technical collection capabilities, including satellites. But that doesn't mean Congress has no concerns about technical issues. Sen. Robert Kerrey (D-Neb.), ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, worries about long lead times for collection systems in an era when targets are evolving and changing much more rapidly than in the past.

Staff
Fixing the F119 Advanced Tactical Fighter turbofan's high-pressure turbine vibration problem involved changing the stator count and re-tuning the turbine blades to change their curvature, Pratt&Whitney's F119 VP, Walt Bylciw, told The DAILY. The redesign worked well enough that P&W and the U.S. Air Force decided last month to drop efforts to come up with a back-up turbine design (DAILY, June 28, page 492), but until this week details on that design were sketchy.

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The Senate Appropriations Committee has added $135 million to the U.S. Air Force's request for the Space Based Infrared System (SBIRS) and directed the service to accelerate deployment of the low-Earth orbit (LEO) portion of the early warning satellite constellation.

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The Senate Appropriations Committee Friday voted 29-0 to clear a $242.7 billion fiscal 1996 Pentagon money bill that cuts the Joint Advanced Strike Technology (JAST) program by $103 million and shows a clear preference for procuring and modifying older aircraft instead. The Senate's defense funding bill is $1.4 billion below the House Appropriations Committee version. It is uncertain whether the Senate Appropriations bill will be considered by the Senate before the August recess scheduled to begin Saturday.

Staff
Pentagon acquisition chief Paul Kaminski has set aside two days in August to focus on the Joint Advanced Strike Technology program. He will meet with program officials early on Aug. 22 and then spend the rest of that day and Aug. 23 talking with JAST contractors Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and McDonnell Douglas/Northrop Grumman. A Defense Acquisition Board meeting also is scheduled for the end of August, following a Joint Requirements Oversight Council review of the JAST Joint Initial Requirement Document.

Staff
In the world of information warfare, communications satellites aren't likely to be targets because a country that destroys such a spacecraft may end up eliminating its own communications, Caldarella says. "I don't think people would ever physically or directly attack a satellite because right now everyone shares satellites," he says.

Staff
Information age advances also pose a challenge to intelligence from a policy standpoint, Robert Kimmitt, former executive secretary of the National Security Council, tells Combest's IC21 review. "A report by a CNN stringer in a far-off land, who coordinates and clears with no one but his camera and sound crews, is much more likely to stimulate a policy-level response than a coordinated, yet later-in-time intelligence product," he says.

Staff
Lt. Col. Steven Hampton, now assistant deputy commander for the operations at the U.S. Air Force's 561st Fighter Squadron, will be the commander of the 11th Reconnaissance Squadron that was activated Saturday at Nellis AFB, Nev., the AF said.

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The U.S. should halt cuts to its intelligence budgets until it can assess the new demands placed on the intelligence community by the end of the Cold War, former National Security Advisor Gen. Brent Scowcroft said yesterday. "I think its time to level off and see where we are because the nature of the threat has changed so dramatically," Scowcroft told the House Intelligence Committee. "We may have already gone too far."

Staff
The U.S. government needs to support U.S. aerospace companies in the post-Cold War marketplace through the advancement of trade, by strengthening the domestic industrial base, and by promoting technology development and application, a new Aerospace Industries Association study says.

Staff
Non-lethal technologies are not a major growth area for the Energy Dept.'s Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico because the military requirements for them aren't clear, according to lab director Siegfried Hecker. So far, the field of non-lethal technology development is made up mostly of scientists with a lot of ideas and "fascinating" technologies, he said. However, there's "not a great tie" to military applications, Hecker told reporters yesterday during a breakfast meeting in Washington.

Staff
An amendment to kill the International Space Station program and shift the funds to veterans, housing and NASA science programs failed in the House yesterday, but not before a longtime general in the Station budget battles changed sides and voted against the program to protest the "budget cutting frenzy" that has afflicted the U.S. civil space effort.

Staff
NORTHROP GRUMMAN said yesterday it has decided not to file a formal protest with the GAO over selection of Raytheon's entry in the JPATS competition. The company had two entries-the Super Tucano, on which it teamed with Brazil's Embraer, and the S. 211A with Italy's Agusta. Northrop Grumman is the last of the losing JPATS competitors to decide whether to protest. Cessna and Rockwell filed GAO protests earlier this month, while Lockheed Martin opted not to.

Staff
The German-built main engine on the Galileo spacecraft ignited for a "flawless" five-minute burn early yesterday, setting up a gravitational ballet with Jupiter that will position the spacecraft to collect up to 75 minutes of data as its atmospheric probe parachutes into the planet's clouds on Dec. 7.

Staff
Russian Space Forces have orbited a trio of satellites for the domestic Glonass global positioning system, bringing the system just one launch shy of a complete deployment for a fully operational constellation. The three satellites, officially named Cosmos 2316, Cosmos 2317 and Cosmos 2318, were launched July 24 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome by a Proton launch vehicle at 15:52 GMT (11:52 a.m. EDT).

Staff
Choose one: The Non-Developmental Airlift Aircraft is A) a waste of taxpayer dollars, diverting money that could be spent on military-unique airlifters and on leasing cargo capability from the airlines; or, B) a cost-effective complement to the U.S. Air Force fleet of military cargo planes, capable of flying between 70% and 80% of today's typical airlift missions and plugging the airlift capacity gap a decade ahead of schedule.

Staff
Unions representing most unsalaried employees in the aerospace business hope to merge by the year 2000, creating a single industrial union with more than two million members, union leaders reported yesterday. The heads of the unions representing auto workers, steel workers and machinists signed a "unity declaration" committing them to the deal after the executive boards of the three unions-the United Auto Workers, the United Steelworkers of America, and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers-gave their approval.

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SIGNAL TECHNOLOGY CORP., Sunnyvale, Calif., said it has received multiple contracts from Hazeltine Corp., valued at $5.1 million, to produce power supplies and RF components used on the AN/APX-113 identification- friend-or-foe system on the F-16 aircraft. The work will be carried out by Signal Technology's ST Olektron and ST Microwave (Arizona) subsidiaries. ST Olektron also manufactures RF components for Hazeltine's AN/APX-111 IFF system used on the F/A-18 aircraft. Signal Technology Corp.

Staff
A study of the non-U.S. market for electronic warfare systems projects a $1.5 billion growth by 2001, and says it will be driven by demand in Asia and the Middle East.

Staff
The recently elected Chirac government is studying defense cuts that may wind up forcing France out of the Future Large Airlifter program it has championed for years, which could in turn cause the eight- nation program to collapse.

Staff
SANDERS, Nashua, N.H., has delivered the first 6-1/4 by 6-1/4 inch cockpit display it is producing for the F-22 fighter. The advanced demonstration model of the display, delivered to Lockheed Martin Aeronautical Systems in Marietta, Ga., will be installed in a simulator for testing with other cockpit hardware and software, said Sanders, a Lockheed Martin company.

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The Senate Armed Services Committee wants the Defense Dept. to set up an office for non-lethal systems and technologies and has authorized $37.2 million in its fiscal 1996 bill to do so. The program would be managed by DOD's Office of Strategic and Tactical Systems of the Under Secretary for Acquisition and Technology, "which has demonstrated a commitment to systemization and fielding of mature [non- lethal weapons] technologies," says the SASC report, which was issued last week.