Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.) have announced plans to introduce legislation to require anti-missile technology on commercial aircraft. In a Jan. 17 letter to James Loy, the head of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), Boxer said she is "extremely concerned" about the threat shoulder-fired missiles pose to U.S. commercial aircraft. In November, terrorists tried to shoot down an Israeli airliner over Kenya using an SA-7 shoulder-fired missile.
EXPERTISE: The Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DRTA) is seeking industry's help for a number of sensitive areas, including weapons and target technologies, hazard assessment technology and systems engineering, says a contract notice posted last week. DTRA plans to award multiple indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contracts for such expertise. The notice calls for contractors to conduct, implement and sustain DTRA's capabilities in those areas.
AIRLAND CHAIR: Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) is the frontrunner to become chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee's airland subcommittee in the new Congress, while Sen. James Talent (R-Mo.) is the leading candidate to head the seapower subcommittee, congressional sources say. A decision on the chairmanships is expected within the next week or so. The Senate Armed Services Committee is getting new subcommittee chairmen as part of the Republican takeover of the Senate.
OUTLOOK CLOUDY: Recent statements by Geoffrey Hoon, the United Kingdom's defense minister, have clouded predictions about whether BAE Systems is likely to win a competition to build two aircraft carriers for the Royal Navy, a report from Merrill Lynch says. Hoon said last week that BAE Systems could no longer be considered a British company because the majority of its investors reside outside the U.K. The company is competing with the Thales Group of France for the $4.7 billion Future Carrier (CVF) contract, expected to be awarded later this month.
KEEPING SPACE: Lockheed Martin Corp. won't shut down or sell its Commercial Space Systems business, the company said Jan. 17, but will seek to continue "improving efficiencies and focus on winning new business in 2003" for the unit.
CONGRESSIONAL CLOUT: The recent decision by the House Armed Services Committee to make its subcommittee structure similar to that of the Senate Armed Services Committee (DAILY, Jan. 10) could boost the clout of both defense authorization committees, analysts say. The different subcommittee structures often have prevented the House-Senate defense authorization conference from finishing its annual funding recommendations in time to influence authors of the annual defense appropriations bill.
The teaming agreement between Lockheed Martin Corp. and German shipbuilder Blohm+Voss GmbH to compete for the design contract for the U.S. Navy's Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) may well be "a marriage made in heaven," according to naval analyst Stuart Slade of Forecast International/DMS. Officials with Lockheed Martin Naval Electronics & Surveillance Systems-Marine Systems announced the teaming agreement last week during the Surface Navy Association Symposium in Crystal City, Va.
COMING BACK: The EP-3E reconnaissance aircraft that made a forced landing on China's Hainan Island in 2001 after colliding with a Chinese fighter should be back in service early next year, a Navy spokesman says. The crew returned to the U.S. after being detained for 11 days. Several months later, their $80 million plane was partially disassembled and flown to the U.S. in a Russian An-24 cargo plane. Since then, Lockheed Martin has done $16 million worth of work on the EP-3E.
SAN DIEGO - The United States military cannot rely on the script that succeeded a decade ago in Desert Storm, because most potential adversaries learned from that conflict what not to do when challenging it, according to Rear Adm. Doug Crowder, who heads the Navy's Deep Blue think tank. The number one lesson from Desert Storm was, "You can't give America time to mass forces, because we will kick your butt if you do that," Crowder said at the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association and U.S. Naval Institute West 2003 Conference here.
Jan. 23 -- Precision Strike Association presents Winter Roundtable 2003 - Global Strategy for Joint Precision Strike. Crystal Gateway Marriott, Salon A, 1700 Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington, Va. For more information call Leslie Mueller at (301) 475-6513 or email [email protected]. Jan. 26 - 28 -- National Defense Industrial Association presents 2003 Tactical Wheeled Vehicles Conference. The DoubleTree Hotel & Monterey Conference Center. For more information contact Angie De Kleine at (703) 247-2599 or email [email protected].
COUNTDOWN: China's Shenzhou V launch vehicle is undergoing final assembly, according to sources with the Shanghai Aerospace Bureau, and the first Chinese manned space flight is likely to be set for this fall. China announced it plans to conduct a human space flight after several successful launches of unmanned vehicles, including the Shenzhou III and Shenzhou IV (DAILY, June 12, 2002, Jan. 7). China plans nearly 10 launches this year, including the Shenzhou V. Long-term space plans include a space station, according to Chinese officials.
The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) program office is close to hammering out an agreement with Israel and Singapore on a unique international sales strategy, a senior JSF official said Jan. 17.
The Defense Department is ramping up research and development support for the struggling munitions technology sector, forming a DOD-wide consortium for launching new R&D projects with industry and academia. The freshly minted Defense Ordnance Technology Consortium's (DOTC) charter was approved Dec. 20 by E.C. "Pete" Aldridge Jr., undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics (AT&L). It replaces and enlarges the Army's four-year-old Warheads and Energetics Technology Center at the Picatinny Arsenal, N.J.
With an eye toward supporting its Transformational Communication System (TCS) effort, the Department of Defense is interested in a proposed laser communication system being developed for use on the International Space Station (ISS). TCS is designed to dramatically increase the bandwidth available to the military by linking ground-based fiber optic cables to space using lasers to transmit data to and from the ground, and between satellites (DAILY, Sept. 4, 2002).
Three House Democrats - Reps. Anna Eshoo (Calif.), Rush Holt (N.J.) and Dutch Ruppersberger (Md.) - have been appointed new members of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Six Democrats have been reappointed to the committee for the new 108th Congress: Reps. Jane Harman (Calif.), Alcee Hastings (Fla.), Silvestre Reyes (Texas), Leonard Boswell (Iowa), Collin Peterson and Bud Cramer (Ala.). Harman is replacing new House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) as the panel's ranking Democrat (DAILY, Jan. 10).
Navy and Marine Corps leaders for the first time have unveiled details of a cost-saving plan to reduce its warplane fleet by integrating their tactical aircraft squadrons. An outline of the plan was announced last summer, but the services officially disclosed the framework of the effort this month in a command message to Navy and Marine squadrons obtained by The DAILY.
SAN DIEGO - Lockheed Martin and Consera Software Corp. will offer the U.S. Navy unique software designed to improve computer-driven combat systems and other military systems, the companies said. The software will increase automation and reduce workloads for crews aboard ships and on shore, Frank Artale, Consera's president and CEO, told The DAILY. A joint marketing agreement between the companies was announced Jan. 15 at the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association and U.S. Naval Institute West 2003 Conference here.
Senate appropriators have cut NASA's fiscal 2003 budget request for the Orbital Space Plane (OSP) and the International Space Station as part of an effort to reduce domestic spending by billions of dollars. The original version of the Senate's FY '03 NASA appropriations bill was silent on the OSP because it was drafted before NASA proposed spending $165 million to begin developing the space plane. A newly revised version of the bill, unveiled Jan. 16, endorses the OSP but provides $115 million for the program, $50 million below the request.
Averting a crunch on a bandwidth supply used to channel the military's communications and control signals requires more than adding satellite capacity, Air Force Space Command [AFSPC] chief Gen. Lance W. Lord said Jan. 16.
Senior Navy officials said Jan. 16 that the number of Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) the Navy will buy depends on the ship's capabilities and design features. "The number is probably more than 30 and less than 1,000," Rear Adm. Mark Edwards said during a panel discussion at the Surface Navy Association Symposium in Crystal City, Va. "But until we get it out there and know what it can and can't do, I think it would be premature to comment on that."
SHUTTLE LAUNCH: Space Shuttle Columbia launched Jan. 16, carrying the first Israeli astronaut and six crewmates on a mission devoted to round-the-clock science. The astronauts plan to conduct more than 80 experiments by working in 12-hour shifts. The shuttle is due to return to Earth on Feb. 1.