Defense

Winder
Ted Lin has been named director of marketing for Asia at New York-based Guggenheim Aviation Partners. He was VP of DVB Bank.

Winder
Samuel Hill has joined the Strategic Advisory Council for Bye Aerospace of Denver. He is senior VP-sales and marketing at Honda Aircraft Co.

Winder
Russell Ryan (see photo) has been promoted to managing director-treasury, from senior director-fleet acquisition, at Hawaiian Airlines.

Winder
Paul Chun has become managing director of KLM UK Engineering, based in Paris and Amstelveen, Netherlands. He held the same role at Epcor, where he will be succeeded by Romain Helmer, who headed KLM Engineering & Maintenance's Boeing 737 unit. Ton Dortmans was named executive VP-engineering and maintenance of KLM E&M, succeeding Peter de Swert.

Winder
Andreas Knoepfel (see photo) has joined Swiss Aviation Consulting of Huenenberg/Zug as managing director of Swiss AeroRisk Management and a board member of Swiss AeroHoldings. He was a senior aviation manager for an insurance broker.

Winder
U.S. Army Gen. (ret.) Rick Lynch and Paul McDuffee have joined the board of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International, Arlington, Va. Lynch commanded the 1st Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Div. at Fort Hood, Texas. McDuffee is Insitu's principal interface with the FAA on the commercial viability of unmanned aircraft.

Winder
Alan E. Calegari has become CEO of Alenia North America in Washington. He was president and CEO of Ansaldo STS USA.

Gunjan Bagla
French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the management of Dassault are elated, as Rafale is the apparent winner of the $10.4 billion Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft order for India's air force. France also has an order backlog with India that includes the Scorpene submarine and $2.4 billion in retrofits to the Mirage 2000 fleet.
Defense

Douglas Nelms (Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
The U.S. Army is not expected to issue final requirements for its planned Armed Aerial Scout (AAS) helicopter until after evaluation flights scheduled for the second quarter. Essentially, these flights are intended to allow the competing manufacturers to show what they have, what it will cost, and to help the Army decide what it can get for what it can afford.
Defense

Graham Warwick (Washington)
The move is largely an administrative step after Airbus determined the entire fleet would likely suffer component cracking due to a manufacturing process flaw.

Winder
David Russell has joined Gogo, Itaska, Ill., as senior VP and general manager of Europe and the Middle East for commercial aviation. He was VP-strategic programs for SITA Group.

Pierre Sparaco
The true meaning of Dassault Aviation's highly publicized victory in India extends well beyond a major combat aircraft commitment. In the third quarter, the Indian air force is expected to sign an order for 126 Rafale multirole fighters and could buy 40 additional aircraft at a later date. Eighteen will be manufactured in France, and the remaining 108 are scheduled to be assembled by Bengaluru-based Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd.
Defense

U.S. Government Accountability Office
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Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — India has approved new guidelines to enable state-run defense firms to form joint ventures (JVs) with local and overseas companies, as the country engages in modernizing its armed forces. “The objective is to have better risk-management, greater efficiency, shorter timeframes for delivery to meet the increasing demands of the armed forces, and for enhancing self-reliance in the defense sector as a whole,” a government official said Feb. 9.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — Despite looming cuts to some of its U.S. defense programs, Rolls-Royce is projecting an increase in underlying revenue and profit in 2012.

By Jen DiMascio
With looming slowdowns to the development of a new generation of U.S. ballistic missile submarines and a nuclear bomb life-extension program, the House of Representatives is set to become the battlefield for a growing fight over potential reductions to what the Obama administration had pledged to spend on nuclear modernization over the next 10 years.
Defense

Andrew Compart
Global Aviation Holdings, a casualty of the ends of wars and some poor planning, plans to jettison 16 of its 30 aircraft leases as part of its restructuring under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

Graham Warwick
The U.S. Air Force is preparing to flight test “alcohol-to-jet” (ATJ) biofuel in a Fairchild A-10 as a prelude to certifying the fuel across its aircraft fleets to help achieve the target of meeting half its domestic fuel needs with alternative sources by 2016. Biofuels startup Gevo is supplying the fuel for the feasibility demonstration, says Jeff Braun, director of the Air Force Alternative Fuels Certification Office. The company won a contract in September to deliver 7,000 gal. of fuel for the tests, with an option for another 4,000 gal.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — The British parliament’s defense committee plans to start a review of the country’s future maritime surveillance needs following the government’s decision not to field the Nimrod MRA4 maritime patrol aircraft. The decision to cancel future Nimrod MRA4s and dismantle ones already built was made in 2010 as part of the Strategic Defense and Security Review, but has remained controversial. Legislators have repeatedly expressed concern over the capability gap, in part because the government has not said how it will be addressed.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
NEW BLOOD: The U.S. State Department is looking for a few new members of a private-sector advisory panel to advise Andrew Shapiro, assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs, on defense trade regulations and export reforms for the next two years. The panel’s changeover comes as the Obama administration is in the process of overhauling the U.S. munitions list. Forty-five people served on the Defense Trade Advisory Group from 2010 to 2012, and it has been led by George Sevier of MK Technology and Joyce Remington of BAE Systems.
Defense

David A. Fulghum
The U.S. Air Force is concerned about cyber-theft and sympathetic to industries that are victimized by digital attack, but the service is not going to pick up the bill by adding cost to its acquisition programs.
Defense

Andrew Compart
Global Aviation Holdings, a casualty of the ends of wars and some poor planning, intends to jettison 16 of its 30 aircraft leases as part of its restructuring under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

The Turkish air force has halted flights with its Cessna T-37 jet trainers to perform technical checks on the type, Flightglobal.com has reported.
Aerospace

Michael Fabey
ABOARD THE EL DIABLO — On just about any other watercraft, the sight of land approaching with such speed and proximity would be cause for concern, to say the least. But here on this Landing Craft, Air Cushion (LCAC) vessel, the mission is to hit the beach as quickly and efficiently as needed.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — The U.K. will acquire an eighth C-17, Prime Minister David Cameron tells parliament. The Royal Air Force (RAF) has long sought more of the Boeing airlifters. The U.K. has been increasing its C-17 fleet incrementally, initially leasing four aircraft more than a decade ago. The aircraft is due for delivery to the RAF in July. As with previous C-17s delivered to non-U.S. operators, the U.S. Air Force has given up a production slot to satisfy an ally’s needs. The eighth RAF airlifter comes off the line in March.
Defense