Defense

By Jen DiMascio
DEFICIT DOOM: Gordon Adams, an American University professor who had a hand in the Clinton administration’s defense build-down, argues that the Obama administration is merely scratching the surface with its newly unveiled defense cuts, because the nation’s debt is so high that the need to cut the federal deficit will continue. “Washington is going to have to find about $4 trillion in spending and revenue changes over the next 10 years if the nation’s debt is to stabilize at 60% of GDP,” Adams said during a Brookings Institution event Jan. 26.
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — China’s plan to launch 12 more Compass navigation satellites and inaugurate their operational use this year is only one of several key satellite activities planned for 2012.

Kerry Lynch
Hawker Beechcraft is stepping up its fight over the U.S. Air Force’s Light Air Support (LAS) aircraft, saying the decision to give the $355 million program to Sierra Nevada Corp. and Brazilian manufacturer Embraer directly conflicts with President Barack Obama’s goal of protecting American manufacturing jobs. The Wichita plane maker has sued to overturn the Air Force decision announced shortly before the new year, and the Air Force issued a stop-work order Jan. 4 to expedite the process of sorting out Hawker’s claims.
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — India’s latest nuclear-capable strategic missile, the Agni-IV, was displayed publicly for the first time on Jan. 26 as the country showcased its military might at the 63rd Republic Day celebrations.
Defense

By Maksim Pyadushkin
MOSCOW — Russia’s defense ministry has released information about its weapons procurement in 2011, and has already approved its buying plan for 2012. According to Deputy Minister Alexander Sukhorukov, the ministry purchased 30 Topol-M (SS-27 Sickle B) and Yars ballistic missiles, four military satellites, 21 aircraft, 82 helicopters, one Stereguschiy class corvette, 8,531 military trucks and other military hardware.
Defense

Source: Aviation Week Intelligence Network, Pentagon Budget Briefing
Click here to view the pdf Fiscal 2013 Budget: Major Programs Affected ($ in thousands) Fiscal 2013 Budget: Major Programs Affected ($ in thousands) Account Line Number Program FY 2012 Reques
Defense

Hawker Beechcraft Defense Company (HBDC) announced today that Jim Maslowski, president, will retire from his positions with Hawker Beechcraft on Jan. 31.. Upon retirement, Maslowski will continue as a consultant to HBDC and its business development efforts with the title of vice chairman.
Maintenance & Training

Graham Warwick
CENTAUR CUSTOMER: Switzerland has become the first customer for Aurora Flight Sciences’ Centaur optionally piloted aircraft, which is based on a Diamond DA42 certified twin-engine light aircraft. Procurement agency Armasuisse has purchased the aircraft for delivery this year to the Swiss defense department’s flight-test center at Emmen, which will use the Centaur as a testbed for sensors and sense-and-avoid systems to allow unmanned aircraft to operate in civilian airspace.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
Rep. Frank Wolf is arguing that recent unrest in Egypt, including raids on nongovernmental groups there, could threaten ample foreign aid to the North African country. The Virginia Republican is circulating with House colleagues a letter he wrote to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that denounces recent raids conducted by Egyptian security and military forces on U.S. non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
Defense

Alon Ben David
TEL AVIV — Israel has taken another step toward fielding a four-layered missile defense with Boeing joining Israel Aerospace Industries in developing the Arrow-3, an upper-tier anti-ballistic missile system.
Defense

Michael Mecham
Boeing says the big news in pulse manufacturing is not limited to production ramp-ups in its 737 factories in Washington. It also is making news in manufacturing satellites on an assembly line in El Segundo, Calif. Boeing Satellite Systems has four identical Global Positioning System IIF satellites pulsing through an assembly line with 13 distinct manufacturing “post” positions as part of a U.S. Air Force contract with a total value of $1.35 billion.

U.S. Navy
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Defense

Madhu Unnikrishnan
Boeing CEO James McNerney predicts that more of the company’s military sales will originate overseas, as the U.S. defense budget comes under pressure. McNerney told analysts Jan. 25 that with “tough U.S. defense budgets,” the company sees “significant upside in the international defense market” for Boeing Defense, Space and Security (BDS). He forecasts that as much as 25-30% of revenues for the unit could come from international sales “in the next few years.”

Andy Nativi
GENOA — Even as France’s Safran considers a bid for it, Avio says it is still planning at least a partial initial public offering this year, one it had postponed from the end of 2011 due to Europe’s financial crisis.

Paul McLeary
Additional autonomy will be key if U.S. unmanned aircraft are to operate in the contested airspace of the future, according to the U.S. Air Force’s first deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.
Defense

AWIN analysis of H.R. 2055
Click here to view the pdf Fiscal 2012 Appropriations: Missiles & Space ($ in thousands) Fiscal 2012 Appropriations: Missiles & Space ($ in thousands) U.S.
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — India has become the sixth country to operate a nuclear submarine with the commissioning of the leased Russian Akula-II class K-152 Nerpa on Jan. 23, contributing to the fledgling third leg of India’s nuclear triad. The 8,140-ton Akula II, capable of remaining underwater for months, was rechristened INS Chakra. It has set sail from a Russian base near Vladivostok and is expected to reach India within a month. The submarine will be based at the southern port of Visakhapatnam. Its 10-year lease is worth $920 million.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
PLANE APPEAL: Fourteen former top U.S. Air Force officials are asking the leaders of the House and Senate armed services committees to keep investing in Boeing’s KC-46A tanker program, Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and the Next Generation Bomber, despite the nation’s deficit reduction efforts. “Decisions that we make today will govern the national security options available for decades into the future,” the officials write on behalf of the Air Force Association. Signing the letter are former Maj. Gen. Curtis Bedke, Gen. John Corney, Lt. Gen.
Defense

Amy Butler
The U.S. Air Force is embarking on an accelerated analysis of alternatives for a future defense weather satellite constellation after initiating the termination of Northrop Grumman’s Defense Weather Satellite System (DWSS) contract.

By Jen DiMascio
The leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) are scheduled to dine with Defense Secretary Leon Panetta Jan. 25 at the Pentagon to discuss the broad outlines of looming defense budget reductions. Their briefing will come one day before the press anticipates a similar readout, as the military considers how to approach a $489 billion reduction to its prior spending plans for the next decade.
Defense

McAleese & Associates
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Defense

Michael Bruno
STRANGE STOCKS: Citing news reports of program cancellations naming the U.S. Air Force Global Hawk Block 30 and the Army’s Humvee recapitalization program, financial analyst Robert Stallard at RBC Capital Markets thinks it strange that Wall Street has seen fit to return many defense stocks back to levels close to where they were before the August 2011 Budget Control Act — even after the administration indicated major defense cuts were coming.
Defense

Graham Warwick
The U.S. Navy has conducted autonomous aerial refueling tests as a step toward a flight demonstration in 2014 using the Northrop Grumman X-47B unmanned combat air system (UCAS). In tests completed in late January, a Calspan-operated Learjet acting as a surrogate unmanned aircraft was flown autonomously behind an Omega-operated Boeing 707 probe-and-drogue tanker.
Defense

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy should do a “thorough analyses of alternatives (AOA) for its future surface combatant program,” the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) recommended in a report released Jan. 24. GAO also found the Navy analysis used to restart the service’s DDG-51 Arleigh Burke destroyer line and scuttle Navy plans for a larger, more modern DDG-1000 Zumwalt class fleet fails to justify the service’s decision.
Defense

Paul McLeary
THROWBOTS: Qinetiq North America announced Jan. 24 that it had received a $5.3 million order from the Pentagon’s Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization (Jieddo) for more than 100 Dragon Runner 10 throwable robots. Weighing in at just more than 10 lb., the 15-in.-long, 13.5-in.-wide and 5.8-in.-tall robot can climb stairs and carry various payloads including sensors, cameras, and robotic arms while maintaining effective wireless communication over long distances. Deliveries will continue into spring 2012.
Defense