Defense

The U.S. Navy's AN/ALQ-99 tactical jamming system, mounted on the Boeing EA-18G Growler, will be replaced by a Next-Generation Jammer (NGJ) that is more effective against current and evolving threats. The NGJ will be more powerful than the AN/ALQ-99, and thus require more energy, primarily to accommodate powerful radio-frequency transmitters.
Defense

Directional airborne antennas typically use dishes mounted to the underbelly of an aircraft that swing and point to communicate. This requires mechanical systems that cost extra to build, install and maintain; their operation limits communication to one point at a time, reducing the number of personnel who can be contacted; and the size and weight of the antenna and assembly can affect aerodynamics. Rockwell Collins set out to design an antenna that would overcome these drawbacks.
Defense

Lightning strikes are a constant threat to aircraft—manned and unmanned—in turbulent environments. Lord Corp. of Cary, N.C., has developed a curable reactive organic compound with conductive filler that is designed to self-assemble into a heterogeneous structure forming a continuous microscopic 3-D strike-protection layer of metal on a polymer-rich composite substrate. The material, which can be used on new structures or to repair damaged conductive pathways, is reportedly no more difficult to apply than an epoxy layer on a composite structure.
Defense

Christina Mackenzie
In one of 16 forts built in the 19th century to protect Paris sits a discreet intelligence service, whose task is not only to protect and advise the French defense establishment but also to protect the technological know-how of French defense companies. It recently unlatched its doors to let DTI have a look inside.
Defense

This month's Cutting Edge features six defense technology-related finalists from the second annual Suppliers' Innovation Challenge, a design competition run by Aviation Week. The winners (civil and military) will be announced later this month. For more information, go to AviationWeek.com
Defense

Paul McLeary (Washington)
Equipping the armed forces of one country during wartime is extraordinarily expensive. Equipping two—as the U.S. has since 9/11 in Iraq and Afghanistan—borders on the absurd. But that's exactly the world we've been living in over the past 10 years, and the bills are beginning to come due.
Defense

Sean Meade
Reviewed By Sean Meade From A to B: How Logistics Fuels American Power and Prosperity By David Axe Potomac Books, 2012 245 pp., $24.50
Defense

Soldiers in the field may soon be trying out goggles that can literally read their unconscious thoughts. The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's Cognitive Technology Threat Warning System (CT2WS) incorporates an array of advanced vision technology, including the ability to detect the wearer's neural signals. The high-tech binoculars are on track for testing, but it “will be summer before a prototype is deployed and tested,” Darpa tells DTI.
Defense

Homemade bombs of the future will not just be a problem for military forces in countries like Iraq and Afghanistan. The threat from improvised explosive devices (IEDs) is rapidly moving from military battlefields abroad to U.S. soil, according to a new Defense Department report, which also warns of future bombs that could be detonated by everything from Bluetooth to 4G devices. The domestic threat is “a relatively recent development,” but is growing quickly, says the new 2012-16 strategic plan of the Joint IED Defeat Organization (Jieddo).
Defense

Graham Warwick
Efforts to commercialize algae-derived renewable fuels are to receive a $14 million boost from the U.S. Energy Department, which aims to fund projects to improve the sustainability and accelerate the availability of algal-based biofuels. The Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) is seeking proposals from small businesses, universities and national laboratories to modify existing facilities into long-term testbeds for new production processes to commercialize algal biofuels.

Graham Warwick
Hawker Beechcraft has welcomed the U.S. Air Force’s Feb. 28 decision to cancel Sierra Nevada Corp.’s $355 million contract to supply Embraer Super Tucanos for the Afghan air force, but whether the competition will be restaged remains unclear. Although Hawker Beechcraft (HBC) says the service has reinstated the company “to the competitive range” under the Light Air Support (LAS) procurement, the Air Force says no decision has been made on whether to restage the competition.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
Congress doesn’t read its witnesses Miranda rights before they testify, but past Pentagon statements were certainly used against Air Force leaders during a Feb. 28 hearing. Given that the Air Force has rolled out a list of controversial cuts that gore oxen in congressional districts across the country for its fiscal 2013 budget request, Air Force Secretary Michael Donley and Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz had to expect some heat on Capitol Hill.
Defense

By Jay Menon
New Delhi – India has approved a proposal to acquire 18 new aircraft worth more than $1 billion for the indigenous aircraft carrier (IAC) currently being built for the navy. The permission to procure nine Medium Range Maritime Reconnaissance (MRMR) aircraft and limited series production of another nine carrier-borne Tejas Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) was granted by the Defense Acquisition Council (DAC) headed by India Defense Minister A. K. Antony late last week, a senior defense official told Aviation Week.
Defense

U.S. Department of Defense
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Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON – The Future Anti-Surface Tactical Missile that is being considered by France and the U.K. as a collaborative development program would have both helicopter and attack aircraft roles.
Defense

David A. Fulghum
The U.S. strategy to reorient its forces to the Western Pacific Ocean is coming under pressure from financial, force structure, personnel and technology changes. For example, greatly desired, high-reliability, long-range active, electronically scanned array (AESA) radars installed in the Air Force and Navy’s best warplanes – including the F-22, F-35 and EA-18G – are vulnerable to cyberattack.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON – Having declared an initial operating capability with the Lockheed Martin AGM-158 Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile in December, the Royal Australian Air Force is planning to reach full operating capability this year. The operational status is a sharp turnaround for the missile program that, in 2010, was added to Australia’s name-and-shame “Projects of Concern” list, before being removed late last year.
Defense

Andy Savoie
NAVY
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON – Global arms sales continued to increase, but only at 1% real growth, in the latest figures published by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri). The figures, reflecting 2010 data, show total sales of military arms and services of $411.1 billion. One of the main trends is “a continuing increase in the sales of military services – including systems support, training, logistics, and maintenance, repair and overhaul,” Sipri notes.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
Leading senators on defense matters are divided over the issue of whether to provide weapons to those fighting against the government of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) argue that it is time for the U.S. to lead other nations in aiding the fight against the Syrian government, including providing weapons and financing to the Syrian people.
Defense

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy recently awarded Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Newport News Shipbuilding division a $383 million contract option to continue planning work for the refueling complex overhaul (RCOH) of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, underscoring the Defense Department’s carrier investment plan. If all contract options are exercised, the cost-plus-fixed-fee, level-of-effort for CVN-72 could reach $678 million.
Defense

By Jay Menon
India's agreement to purchase 12 helicopters from Italy is likely to be investigated in India after reports suggested irregularities in the contract.
Defense

Paul McLeary
FORT LAUDERDALE – Spend a little time around Army acquisition staffers these days and you’ll hear the term repeated again and again: the Agile Process. Unlike some of its more obtuse cousins, however, this latest bit of Pentagonese is actually pretty easy to wrap your head around. Once the Army identifies a capability gap that it decides it needs filled, it kicks off the acquisition process by first sitting down with industry to determine what mature capabilities they already have that might fit the bill.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON – Ultra Electronics is continuing its search for acquisition opportunities as the defense and aerospace supplier looks to tap growth areas in the declining U.S. and U.K. defense markets. The focus on high-end, niche capabilities is largely behind the company’s ability to deliver organic revenue growth of 2% – overall revenue was up 3% to £731.7 million ($1.16 billion).
Defense