Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — Russian arms exporter Rosoboronexport is denying reports that it has already lost Indian air force (IAF) competitions for heavy-lift transport helicopters and refueling aircraft. A senior Indian defense ministry official indicated in October that Boeing’s CH-47F Chinook had emerged as the lowest bidder for India’s heavy-lift helicopter deal, besting an upgraded Russian Mi-26T2 after life cycle costs were calculated. At the same time, there also were reports that the Russian Il-78MK-90 aerial tanker aircraft had lost to the Airbus A330 MRTT.
Defense

By Guy Norris
Hypersonic technology is extremely difficult to master and high-speed travel generally involves long distances. These simple, but axiomatic principles of hypersonic studies not only dictate key areas of research but also, increasingly, influence who teams with whom.

By Jen DiMascio
Senate floor action on the annual U.S. defense policy bill remained at a standstill Nov. 27, with a dispute over how to handle legislation regarding military detainees. But a senator involved in the dispute indicated he was open to a resolution that would allow the bill to proceed.
Defense

Anthony Osborne
LONDON — The U.K. Royal Navy is to boost the capability of its Type 45 anti-air warfare destroyers by fitting them with the Boeing RGM-84 Harpoon anti-ship missile.
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — Following a successful test-firing of its Advanced Air Defense (AAD) system, India says it is likely to deploy its first ballistic missile defense (BMD) shield in 2014. The indigenously developed supersonic interceptor missile, launched from a defense base in India’s eastern state of Odisha, hit an incoming ballistic missile target at around 12:52 a.m. local time Nov. 23, according to Ravi Gupta, an official at the Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO).
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — Russia is likely to carry out fresh sea trials of INS Vikramaditya next April, after a failed propulsion trial of the refurbished aircraft carrier further delayed the delivery to India until the last quarter of 2013.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
LONDON — The German government has given the green light for the deployment of the Eurocopter EC665 Tiger attack helicopter to Afghanistan. The deployment will see four Tigers transported to Mazar-e-Sharif in the north of the country. From there the aircraft will be used to deliver fire support to ground troops, conduct convoy protection and provide an escort capability for transport helicopters such as the Sikorsky CH-53Gs being used by the German forces in the region.
Defense

Amy Svitak
The U.K. Defense Ministry plans to equip six Royal Navy mine-hunting ships with military X-band satellite communications gear over the next five years, with the first vessels to be outfitted by spring 2013. The ships will be the first to use SCOTPatrol 0.8-meter X-band satellite terminals developed by EADS-Astrium Services, a smaller version of the company’s legacy SCOT 5 terminals in service with 11 navies worldwide, including Britain.

Amy Butler
Lockheed Martin's Mobile User Objective System launched Feb. 24

By Jen DiMascio
An Ohio congressman wants the FAA to provide a time line for the agency's next step toward establishing six sites in the U.S. for testing unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) in civilian airspace.

By Maksim Pyadushkin
MOSCOW — On Nov. 22 the Russian air force received its first two Su-30SM fighters, domestic variants of the export best seller Su-30MKI. Thirty aircraft were ordered in March 2012. Deliveries to the military will continue in 2013 and last through 2015.
Defense

Leithen Francis
Singapore — Antonov is hoping to persuade Vietnam’s air force to upgrade its fleet of Antonov An-26s rather than phase out the aircraft. Industry executives say Vietnam’s air force is looking to replace its An-26s with new aircraft. Meanwhile, Antonov’s president, Dmytro Kiva, was in Hanoi this month as part of a Ukraine government trade delegation headed by the country’s prime minister, Nikolai Azarov.
Defense

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING — Chinese national space contractor CASC has revealed a new medium-altitude, long-endurance UAV, the CH-4, which is primarily a civil aircraft, despite its exhibition at the Zhuhai air show this month toting bombs and surface-to-air missiles.
Defense

Leithen Francis
SALE SOUGHT: Indonesia’s state-owned aircraft maker Indonesian Aerospace (IAe) is hoping to secure a deal soon for the sale of more IAe CN-235s to the local armed forces. An IAe official says the company is seeking to secure a follow-on order in the coming weeks from the Indonesian navy for two CN-235 maritime patrol aircraft (MPA) and an air force order for one CN-235 surveillance aircraft. The navy ordered three CN-235 MPAs in 2009. The new order would increase the total of CN-235 MPAs in the navy’s fleet to five, the official says.
Defense

Andy Savoie
NAVY
Defense

By Jay Menon
Seeks to replace its air force’s aging fleet of HAL-built Hawker Siddeley 748M Avros
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
An Ohio congressman is trying to prod the FAA into providing a timeline for when it will take the next step toward establishing six sites in the U.S. for testing unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) in civilian airspace.

Andy Savoie
AIR FORCE Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co., Marietta, Ga., (FA8625-07-C-6471, P00160) is being awarded a $38,333,017 contract modification for support of the C-5 Reliability Enhancement and Re-engining Program (RERP) to procure two spare C-5 RERP RFI engines and RFI engine kits. The location of the performance is Marietta. The work is expected to be completed by May 30, 2014. The contracting activity is AFLCMC/WLSK, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.
Defense

Andy Savoie
Selected aerospace and defense contracts for the week of Nov. 19-23, 2012. AIR FORCE Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co., Marietta, Ga., (FA8625-07-C-6471, P00160) is being awarded a $38,333,017 contract modification for support of the C-5 Reliability Enhancement and Re-engining Program (RERP) to procure two spare C-5 RERP RFI engines and RFI engine kits. The location of the performance is Marietta. The work is expected to be completed by May 30, 2014. The contracting activity is AFLCMC/WLSK, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.
Defense

By Bradley Perrett
Five pilots landed and took off from Liaoning in the Bohai sea.
Defense

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) has found another weapon in the continuing battle to subdue the global piracy scourge: software. NRL has developed the Piracy Attack Risk Surface (PARS) project, which dynamically couples shipping, pirate behavior, and meteorology and oceanography (METOC) to identify areas that are subject to the greatest risk of pirate attack.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
LONDON — The Italian army has unveiled plans to deploy its AgustaWestland AW129 Mangusta attack helicopters at sea. In a move that follows in the footsteps of several European countries, the army wants to be able to operate the Mangusta from the decks of Italian naval vessels — such as the flagship Cavour-class aircraft carrier — and provide “power projection from the sea.”
Defense

Michael Fabey
While replacing the aging Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine remains a high priority, the U.S. Navy needs to make sure it contains costs to keep funding intact for other shipbuilding programs, the service’s director of undersea warfare says. “Another major factor in the cost discussion is ensuring our efforts to build Ohio Replacement are integrated into the overall Navy shipbuilding effort,” Rear Adm. Barry Bruner says in a recent blog.
Defense

Amy Svitak
NAPLES, Italy — French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian says France would favor proposed European legislation to classify electronic surveillance equipment as dual-use technology subject to export control. In testimony before French lawmakers Nov. 22, Le Drian said he backs a German proposal to designate spy software systems as dual-use exports, a move prompted earlier this year with the discovery that Muammar Gadhafi’s regime used a mass-surveillance system purchased from a division of French technology-maker Bull to spy on the Libyan public.
Defense

Jeffery L. Turner, the CEO who transitioned Wichita-based Spirit AeroSystems from a onetime Boeing subsidiary into the industry's largest independent airframe maker, says he will step down early in 2013. He is 60. The board of directors has convened a search committee that will identify internal and external candidates for his replacement.