Defense

By Joe Anselmo
In November 2008, the year Wanda Austin became CEO of The Aerospace Corp., Aviation Week & Space Technology featured her on the cover with a three-page profile inside. “The fact that Austin is a woman and an African-American is impossible to miss,” the magazine wrote.

By Bradley Perrett
Korean Air Lines said last month it aimed to be Asia's strongest aerospace company by 2020. Even by South Korean standards, the assertion seemed a little ambitious, since the company's aircraft and space division is not a fifth of the size of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries' aerospace company, and hardly compares with the sprawling Avic group in China.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
With belts tightening across Europe, the EU is pushing the case for increased defense cooperation among its 27 member states, particularly when it comes to enhancing military capabilities in support of joint security and defense operations. EU leaders in December said the continent's economic crisis ultimately could force Euro-skeptics to share planning and development of key defense requirements in an effort to save money and facilitate interoperability on the battlefield.
Defense

Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.), currently the longest-serving woman in Congress, will now become the first woman to lead one of what is perhaps its most powerful panels, the Senate Appropriations Committee. Mikulski takes control of the committee after the recent death of Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), who had chaired the full committee since 2009 and led Democrats on the defense subcommittee since 1989. And she will serve alongside Sen. Richard Shelby (Ala.), who will lead Republicans on the panel.

Amy Butler (Washington)
The Pentagon and Lockheed Martin have met two major milestones for the F-35 this year just under the wire—establishing a contract for the next production lot that targets an incremental cost decrease and laying the foundation to start training pilots in January. Both are major steps forward for the $400 billion Joint Strike Fighter program managed by Lockheed Martin. But both came only after months of wrangling.
Defense

Teeing up an issue for Congress in 2013, Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) and Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas), have introduced a bill that would push the FAA to begin setting privacy rules for the use of UAVs in civilian airspace. UAVs can carry “infrared thermal imagers, radar and wireless network 'sniffers,' with the capability to collect sensitive detailed information while operating in the skies above,” according to Markey. As such, he is seeking to regulate their use.

Bell Helicopter has signed an agreement with the Turkish government for the supply of five Bell 429 rotor craft. The 429s will be operated by the Turkish General Directorate of Forestry (TGDF) to protect forest resources and coordinate firefighting operations.
Aerospace

By Jen DiMascio
One of the toughest aspects of making laws is balancing the needs of the federal government while staying true to the voters at home. Such is the case in this year’s fight to maintain the Air National Guard (ANG) and Reserve, the force lending a hand to the active duty military while serving all 50 states.
Defense

By Maxim Pyadushkin
MOSCOW — By the end of 2012 Irkut Corp., a subsidiary of Russia’s United Aircraft Corp., will have managed to significantly increase its order book.
Defense

Anthony Osborne
LONDON — AirTanker, the consortium providing the U.K. with new aerial refueling tanker aircraft, has secured its Civil Aviation Authority Air Operating Certificate (AOC) and taken delivery of its third aircraft. The organization received the Airbus A330 Voyager tanker on Dec. 19 from Cobham in Bournemouth, which had converted the A330 into the tanker configuration. The arrival now means AirTanker has three aircraft — two tankers and a single standard A330 that is being used for transport or trooping flights.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
With negotiations over the nation’s debt and deficit ongoing, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta issued a memo on the matter of across-the-board spending cuts due to take place at the start of the new year that should relieve some anxiety among department personnel. He issued guidance to the Pentagon’s civilian workforce reminding them that sequestration will not be a government shutdown and that workers should still report for duty on Jan. 3.
Defense

By Jay Menon
At company facilities in Seattle, Boeing has made an on-site delivery of the first P-8I long-range maritime reconnaissance and anti-submarine warfare aircraft to the Indian navy. “India will receive this aircraft and two more of its eight contracted P-8Is in 2013. The program is progressing on schedule as Boeing assembles the fourth and fifth P-8Is,” the company said in a statement Dec. 20.
Defense

By Maxim Pyadushkin
MOSCOW — The revenue of Russia’s United Aircraft Corporation in 2012 is expected to reach 180 billion rubles (about $5.8 billion), the corporation’s CEO Mikhail Pogosyan said Dec. 20. By the end of the year UAC will have delivered 20 commercial aircraft and 35 military aircraft for the Russian Defense Ministry. For the first time in UAC history, deliveries to the Russian military will outnumber exported combat aircraft, Pogosyan said.
Defense

Graham Warwick
A system developed to provide precise positioning in areas denied signals from navigation satellites is to be deployed to enable testing of military GPS receiver performance during jamming. The ground-based non-GPS positioning system from Locata is also being looked at as a backup at critical national infrastructure sites that use GPS for precise timing, such as mobile communications, electronic commerce and power-grid synchronization.

Anthony Osborne
LONDON — The U.K. Ministry of Defense has signed a £258 million ($419 million) contract for support of its Sea King fleet in its final years of operation. The deal with AgustaWestland secures a three-year extension to the Sea King Integrated Operational Support (SKIOS) contract that covers technical and maintenance support for the 90-strong fleet of Sea Kings operated by the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy.
Defense

Amy Butler
ANOTHER TRY: The U.S. Air Force is planning to use the RL10B-2 engine for a late February flight of the fifth Wideband Global Satcom satellite on a Delta IV rocket, according to Dave Madden, who directs the Air Force’s military satellite communications system program office. The Delta IV, which uses the RL10B-2 to power the upper stage, malfunctioned during an Oct. 8 GPS IIF launch and has not flown since. Air Force officials have yet to find a root cause for the low-thrust anomaly.

Kerry Lynch
Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.), fearing that the FAA is failing to address privacy concerns involving unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), is taking steps to mandate privacy protections and public transparency as the agency begins to facilitate the introduction of UAS into the national airspace system. Markey on Dec. 18 introduced a bill, H.R.6676, the Drone Aircraft Privacy Transparency Act, calling for disclosure about the use of UAS and for warrant requirements for law enforcement use.

The Royal Air Force of Oman has formally agreed a $4.2 billion deal with BAE Systems for Typhoon and Hawk aircraft.
Defense

Anthony Osborne
LONDON — NHIndustries has set a trio of milestones as it steps up deliveries of the land-based and naval versions of the NH90 helicopter. NHIndustries — the joint venture of AgustaWestland, Eurocopter and Fokker — is set to deliver the first Tactical Transport Helicopter (TTH) variant to the Belgian Air Component on Dec. 21 following the first flight of the aircraft on Sept. 18. On the same day, the consortium will also deliver the first NH90 in the “Step B” NATO Frigate Helicopter (NFH) configuration to the French navy.
Defense

Amy Svitak
ISTRES, France — French defense procurement agency DGA is in talks with the U.S. Air Force to acquire the General Atomics-built MQ-9 Reaper as a possible interim solution to its medium-altitude, long-endurance UAV requirement. Speaking to reporters here Dec. 19, DGA chief Laurent Collet-Billon said he is discussing the option of purchasing the drones through the U.S. Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program.
Defense

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING — Selection of an aircraft for South Korea’s F-X fighter Phase 3 competition will not be made until the first half of next year. The country’s Defense Industry Committee, chaired by the defense minister, says negotiations are stuck on the point of offsets and other conditions, rather than price. The decision to order heavy attack helicopters, almost certainly Boeing AH-64 Apaches, has also been deferred until the first half of 2013.
Defense

Kerry Lynch
Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.), fearing FAA is failing to address privacy concerns involving UAVs, is taking steps to mandate privacy protections and public transparency as the agency begins to facilitate the introduction of UAVs into the national airspace system. Markey on Dec. 18 introduced a bill, H.R.6676, the Drone Aircraft Privacy Transparency Act, calling for disclosure about the use of UAVs and for warrant requirements for law enforcement use.
Defense

Graham Warwick
Doubts still hang over the military utility of small satellites, holding back progress on low-cost, quick-reaction systems that could be launched at short notice to fill gaps in space coverage. To prove their viability, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) has begun a program to demonstrate that small satellites produced and launched on demand can provide imagery on request directly to individual soldiers.

By Jen DiMascio
MOVING UP: Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) will lead the Senate Appropriations Committee, replacing Sen. Daniel Inouye, a Hawaii Democrat who died earlier this week of respiratory complications. She picks up the gavel after Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), who was next in line in terms of seniority, opted to remain the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Defense

Anthony Osborne
LONDON — Officials at the U.K. Ministry of Defense are to assess how to meet the country’s future maritime patrol needs following the cancellation of the BAE Systems Nimrod MRA4 maritime patrol aircraft program in 2010. Findings of a study carried out by the House of Commons’ Defense Committee inquiry into maritime surveillance will be handed to the Military Capability Board (MCB) in April, and options that “merit further investigation” will be examined prior to the next Strategic Defense and Security Review (SDSR) due to take place in 2015.
Defense