Defense

Michael Fabey
Despite recent concerns raised by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) and the Congressional Research Service (CRS), the U.S. Navy and Pentagon are maintaining course with their augmented DDG-51 Arleigh Burke destroyer plan.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — As the British government completes its 2012 defense program review, it may be reconsidering what version of the F-35 to buy. The Defense Ministry acknowledges that its carrier strike program is one of the issues being examined as part of PR12 deliberations. The budget review was to have been finished already, but Defense Secretary Philip Hammond’s desire to balance outlay plans with available resources has caused delays as additional cuts are identified. The process is to be completed this month.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — Israel Aerospace Industries’ ELTA unit has started exploring potential use of the Gulfstream G280 as an intelligence-collection platform, even as it presses ahead with work on the G550-based Multimission Airborne Reconnaissance Surveillance System (MARS2).
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
Rep. Norm Dicks (Wash.), who was a tireless advocate for Boeing’s bid to win the U.S. Air Force tanker competition, will retire at the end of this 18th term. “It is my intention to work very hard over the next several months, as the ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, to conduct our committee’s hearings and to complete work on all of the [fiscal] 2013 appropriations bills,” Dicks said in a farewell statement.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — The U.K. expects to start employing Brimstone 2 air-to-ground missiles from Tornado GR4s next year. Brimstone 2 effectively replaces the Dual-Mode Brimstone used heavily during last year’s NATO-led air operations against Libya, as well as in Afghanistan.
Defense

By Guy Norris
SEATTLE — The U.S. Navy is poised to take delivery of the first production version of Boeing’s P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft, opening the way for the start of fleet training at Jacksonville Naval Air Station in Florida.
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — The Indian army has approved an order to buy 100 artillery guns from a state-owned defense manufacturer, the first such procurement of howitzers in almost two decades. “The army has placed orders with the Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) for procuring 100 155-mm, 52-caliber howitzers and this will be developed on the basis of transfer of technology,” says M.M. Pallam Raju, junior minister for defense.
Defense

Robert Wall (London)
If the King Air 350ER is the manned intelligence aircraft inextricably associated with the Afghanistan war, what will the platform for the post-Afghanistan conflict look like? It won't be much different, is the growing consensus among industry officials, who believe the move from large, high-end platforms to smaller, cheaper systems is here to stay. The trend has already spurred a number of system integrators to look at the Hawker Beechcraft aircraft, and developers as well are starting to look at other platforms that could fit the bill.
Defense

Graham Warwick (Washington)
Advanced naval guns that could replace land-attack and anti-ship missiles as well as defend warships from ballistic and cruise missiles have taken a step forward with the start of prototype electromagnetic railgun testing by the U.S. Navy. Railguns can fire guided projectiles farther and faster than conventional guns, rivaling the capability of high-speed missiles, but must overcome challenges with power, cooling and durability before they can be installed on ships. Ultimately, smaller versions could arm combat vehicles and gunship aircraft.
Defense

Asia-Pacific Staff (New Delhi)
India's Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO) and France's Snecma are close to finalizing plans for a new 20,230-lb.-thrust turbofan engine to be developed and built under a joint venture, potentially for the Asian giant's light and advanced medium combat aircraft.
Defense

Russia is moving forward with its aggressive plans to enhance the country's combat aircraft prowess, with commitments to modernize its carrier strike force and long-range interdiction capabilities. On March 1, the defense ministry signed a contract with Sukhoi for delivery of 92 Su-34 bombers through 2020. The deal, estimated to be worth 100 billion rubles ($3.4 billion) is the largest for the ministry since the end of the Soviet era, and brings the total number of Su-34s ordered to 124.
Defense

David Fulghum (Washington)
Syria's new, Russian-built early warning system would pose a challenge to an Israeli or U.S. attack.
Defense

David Fulghum (Washington), Bill Sweetman (Washington)
As the U.S. reorients its forces to the Western Pacific, its strategy is already jeopardized by newly emerging cyberthreats as well as financial, personnel and technology shortages. For example, one key surveillance and targeting tool—the long-range, active, electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, which is installed in the U.S. Air Force's and Navy's best warplanes—is vulnerable to cyberattack.
Defense

Leithen Francis (Singapore)
Japan recently decided to order Lockheed Martin F-35s and now the air force has set its sights on aerial refueling tankers. But Tokyo's budget woes and political instability are factors to watch, as they may undermine those procurements. The current government is shaky. Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's approval rating is just 29%, according to a Kyodo News poll conducted on Feb. 18-19. Noda has been in the top job for only eight months, which is not too surprising considering that Japan has had six prime ministers in the past five years.
Defense

Amy Butler (Washington), Graham Warwick (Washington)
Not one year after U.S. Air Force officials closed the door on the controversial saga of choosing a contractor for the KC-135 refueler replacement, the service is once again being forced to investigate a source-selection foul-up.
Defense

Andy Nativi (Rome), Michael Bruno (Washington)
Italians are developing a grudge when it comes to Pentagon procurement, and it may come back to haunt the U.S. government. The latest source of frustration is the U.S. Air Force's proposal to mothball 21 C-27J Spartans now on contract with U.S. prime L-3 Communications and the aircraft's maker, Finmeccanica's Alenia Aermacchi unit. At least 13 C-27Js have been delivered, and the Air Force plans to continue production of the final eight—in various stages of construction in Italy—because it would cost more to terminate the contract.
Defense

Michael Mecham
Anderson Leveille grew up in Stowe, Vt., and got his first high-school job in the circa-1820 sawmill his dad owned. There were no blueprints or tolerance gauges, so maintaining the wooden teeth on the mill's bevel gears, which were lubricated with sheep tallow, taught Leveille the value of creative engineering.

By Jen DiMascio
The U.S. budget crunch is exacerbating long-burning tensions over how to modernize the nation's most sensitive arsenal of nuclear weapons.
Defense

U.S. Department of Defense
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Defense

Graham Warwick
Citing concerns with the procurement process, the U.S. Air Force has canceled Sierra Nevada Corp.’s (SNC) $355 million contract to supply 20 Embraer AT-29 Super Tucano light attack aircraft for operation by the Afghan air force. The decision to set aside the contract is a victory for Hawker Beechcraft (HBC), which took the Air Force to court after its offer of the AT-6 aircraft was disqualified, leaving SNC as the only bidder for the Light Air Support (LAS) program.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — EADS Cassidian is exploring a more mobile version of its Spexer security surveillance radar, as well as a potential aerostat application of the system. The X-band radar family currently includes the Spexer 2000, a coastal surveillance version of the system, and the smaller Spexer 1000. A new member of the family will be launched this year that will weigh less and allow for greater mobility, says Stefan Jack, head of sales for security radars at Cassidian. The goal is also to add a lower-cost offering to the sensor family.
Defense

Robert Wall
NEWPORT, Wales — EADS researchers are examining what the emerging threat from tactical high-energy lasers and high-power microwave weapons could mean for the company’s own systems. The question being asked is “What can we do to protect against those weapons?” says Aimo Buellte, vice president and head of research and technology at EADS Cassidian’s defense unit. “How do we harden our equipment” is the problem being looked at, he adds, with avionics, radar systems land and maritime systems.
Defense

Leithen Francis
Singapore — Japan’s air force has a requirement for more aerial refueling tankers, while the navy is moving ahead with plans to phase out its NAMC YS-11 transports.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — Sweden needs to retain a fleet of at least 60-80 JAS-39 Gripen fighters, the country’s military has told the government in a new report. As part of the effort to retain the combat capability, modernization of the fighters should begin in 2020 and run through the next decade. The modernization will take place in partnership with another country, which the Swedish military has not identified. That partner would be Switzerland, after the country’s decision last year to acquire 22 Gripen NGs.
Defense

Amy Butler
ORLANDO, Fla. — The U.S. Air Force is assessing whether the health of three UH-1Ns from the Marine Corps is suitable to introduce them — and as many as 22 more — into the nuclear support and executive lift helicopter fleet, says Lt. Gen. James Kowalski, commander of Air Force Global Strike Command.
Defense