Defense

Andy Savoie
AIR FORCE Boeing Satellite Systems Inc., El Segundo, Calif., is being awarded a $376,523,860 firm-fixed-price contract for the modification of the Wideband Global SATCOM (WGS) Block II follow-on contract. This contract exercises the option to produce, process, launch, and activate on-orbit Satellite Vehicle 9 as previously negotiated. The location of the performance is Fort Worth. The work is expected to be completed by May 2013. SMC/PKJW, El Segundo, Calif., is the contracting activity (FA8808-10-C-001/P00020).
Defense

Jim Swickard
After a review of the latest round of tests of the GPS interference potential of LightSquared’s proposed wireless network, the National Space-Based Positioning, Navigation and Timing (PNT) Executive Committee has determined that “both LightSquared’s original and modified [plans] would cause harmful interference to many GPS receivers.”

Congressional Research Service
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Defense

Richard Mullins
Iran’s military ambitions mean that the U.S. is going to need more aircraft with stealth and more range, a new defense study argues, because access to nearby bases in the region can no longer be taken for granted. On Jan. 17, the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) released its study, “Outside In: Operating from Range to Defeat Iran’s Ant-Access and Area-Denial Threats,” which outlines an “operational concept” to deal with the time when Iran could advance what military strategists call “Anti-access/Area denial” (A2/AD) in the Persian Gulf.
Defense

Amy Butler
Pentagon officials are working to improve the fuze on the Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP), the largest conventional munition in the U.S. Air Force arsenal. The MOP project began in response to an urgent need in 2003 for a capability to penetrate deeper than with any current U.S. munition; at the time, U.S. forces were early in their Iraq campaign.
Defense

Paul McLeary
In the latest annual report from the Pentagon’s Director of Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E), the U.S. Air Force ranks last among the services in testing performance, with a mere 27% of programs reviewed meeting their reliabiliity thresholds. DOT&E chief J. Michael Gilmore writes that of the 311 Major Defense Acquisition Programs that his office scrutinized in fiscal 2011, 67 experienced either significant delays and/or Nunn-McCurdy breaches, with thirty-six actually breaching Nunn-McCurdy cost-growth caps.
Defense

Andy Savoie
AIR FORCE Lockheed Martin Corp., Space System Co., Newton, Pa., is being awarded a $238,489,236 cost-plus-incentive-fee with award fee contract for exercise option contract line item number 0016 to begin production of GPS III Space Vehicles three and four. The location of the performance is Newtown, Pa. Work is expected to be completed by Jan. 24, 2016. SMC/GPK, El Segundo, Calif., is the contracting activity (FA8807-08-C-0010).
Defense

Michael Fabey
While the Pentagon has made some progress in developing a procurement and operational plan for dealing with changes in the Arctic climate, more needs to be done, a recent U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report says.
Defense

Michael Fabey
To retain and maintain its strength in the Pacific as China grows as a naval force, the U.S. needs to augment its naval fleet size, a noted think tank asserts. The current stated objective U.S. Navy fleet size is 313 and current budget cuts threaten to slice that number. The U.S. will need more ships, the Center for a New American Security says in its January report.
Defense

Congressional Research Service
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Defense

By Jen DiMascio
LEWIS DEPARTS: After 33 years in Congress, Rep. Jerry Lewis, the former chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, has announced he will not run for re-election. The Republican from Southern California is legendary in defense circles and in a sense represents a style of lawmaking that is being squeezed by an emphasis on government-wide belt-tightening. Lewis led the defense subcommittee dealing with Pentagon spending from 1999 to 2005, which included the early years of the Bush boom in military spending.
Defense

Amy Butler
The U.S. Army and Air Force are in the final throes of hashing out a memorandum of agreement on the light cargo lift mission, the latest chapter in a years-long saga over this mission despite two wars and one fizzled buy of the C-27J. The agreement is being made by the chiefs of staff of both services. At issue is which service will manage the light cargo support mission; this includes the shuttling of small loads of supplies to forward Army units in the field.
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
President Obama is asking Congress to let him merge six government agencies dealing with trade and commerce to save money and streamline operations.

By Jen DiMascio
CRS: UAVs Make Up 41% of DOD Aircraft more recent than #1 story
Defense

Robert Wall
LONDON — The U.K. will not set a firm plan until at least next year for when it will begin fielding the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The government has long said it plans to have F-35Cs in service for the launch of its new aircraft carrier around 2020, but has been coy about details of its acquisition strategy. Peter Luff, minister for defense equipment and support, tells Parliament, “We will not set a firm in-service date until after our next Main Gate decision in 2013.” Main Gate is the milestone at which the formal procurement phase begins.
Defense

Paul McLeary
While the U.S. Army’s budget is set to shrink and its end strength decline by about 100,000 over the next several years, the service’s top brass aren’t planning to pull back on overseas deployments any time soon. That was the takeaway from Unified Quest 2012, an annual three-day event sponsored by the Army that uses war games and planning events to help determine what capabilities the service will need to confront future threats and challenges.
Defense

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) JAN. 9 - 12, 2012 — American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics 51th Aerospace Sciences Meeting & Exhibit, Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center, Nashville, Tenn. For more information call (703) 264-7622 or go to www.aoaa.org/events

Robert Wall
LONDON — A key planning document the U.K. Defense Ministry has been working on to spell out its industrial strategy in the wake of the Strategic Defense and Security Review is now not expected to emerge until February. The document, which industry hopes will pinpoint areas the U.K. government will continue to support, was due last year. But release of the so-called White Paper encountered several delays, in part because of the change in the defense secretary position; Philip Hammond replaced Liam Fox in October.
Defense

Alon Ben-David (Tel Aviv)
In yet another show of force, amid the intensifying uprising against Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad's regime, the Syrian army held an extensive exercise last month. On display were two recent additions to its arsenal—the medium-range Buk-M2 self-propelled air defense system and the Bastion coastal defense system.
Defense

In an item about F-15 sales, Washington Outlook in the Jan. 2 edition (p. 23) erroneously referred to the “Royal Singapore Air Force.” Singapore is a republic and has no royalty.
Defense

Kerry Lynch (Washington), Michael Bruno (Washington)
The U.S. Air Force might be turning away from Hawker Beechcraft's T-6 trainer, but Mexico is rolling out the red carpet and company representatives hope the move could lead to a long relationship for the embattled Wichita manufacturer south of the border.
Defense

David Fulghum (Washington)
The next-generation battlefield—whether high- or low-intensity—may not appear less busy to the unaided eye, but the number of soldiers and airmen immediately involved and in danger will shrink significantly. Instead of troop-carrying helicopters, manned reconnaissance and close air support aircraft, the battlefield and the air over it are going to be thickly populated with a few heavily armored manned vehicles, a lot of robotic ground vehicles, airborne standoff weapons and both unmanned strike and reconnaissance aircraft, say Israeli and U.S. officials.
Defense

David Fulghum (St. Louis)
The biggest problem with creating an anti-electronics attack missile is to control the electromagnetic interference (EMI) created by its directed-energy warhead that could affect actuators, flight controls, onboard computers and communications of the vehicle that carries it, say airborne electronic attack specialists.
Defense

Alon Ben-David (Tel Aviv)
Israel is considered a world leader in electronic warfare, but the country's military analysts fear that for the first time in 40 years new Russian air defense systems could have an edge over the Israeli air force (IAF). In the last two years, the Syrian army has deployed Russian Pantsyr-SE1 (SA-22 Greyhound) guns and missiles, short- to medium-range air defense systems and the medium-range Buk-M2 (SA-17) systems. Moscow is still denying constant Syrian requests to procure the S-300PMU (SA-20) air defense system.
Defense

Michael Fabey (Washington)
The future of U.S.-led missile defense around the world could come down to hard decisions about two ships that were never intended for the mission.
Defense