_Aerospace Daily

Rich Tuttle
Pratt & Whitney confirmed June 16 that its engine for the Joint Strike Fighter has successfully passed the milestone of critical design review (CDR), showing that requirements of the system development and demonstration program are being met.

Stephen Trimble
LE BOURGET, France - U.S. officials guiding development of the Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) are willing to negotiate opening assembly lines for its international partners. An early round of talks begin in August when U.S. officials hope to learn what each of its 10 international partners desire for the production phase of the contract that starts in 2006, said Col. Dennis Dwyer, deputy director of the international directorate.

By Jefferson Morris
A fledgling DOD system for sharing security information with federal, state, and local law enforcement is gaining momentum across the country, according to Lt. Col. Rolf Palmer of the Defense Intelligence Agency's (DIA) Joint-Intelligence Task Force for Combating Terrorism (JITF-CT). The Joint Regional Information Exchange System (JRIES) was developed in response to the unique needs of the JITF-CT, Palmer said. Stood up shortly after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, one of JITF-CT's missions is to provide force protection at DOD facilities.

Nick Jonson
SES Astra awarded Lockheed Martin Commercial Space Systems a production contract for two communications satellites, the companies said June 17. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The contract calls for the production of two A2100 geosynchronous satellites to provide direct-to-home broadcast services across Europe. SES Astra is a subsidiary of SES Global.

Robert Wall
LE BOURGET, France - "Chronic underfunding of defense programs in Europe in the face of robust U.S. spending is a recipe for several unappealing results," said Lockheed Martin's senior vice president for corporate business development, Robert Trice.

Stephen Trimble
LE BOURGET, France - A top Boeing executive is downplaying the threat of a congressional challenge to the Defense Department's proposed $15 billion lease of 100 Boeing 767-400ER tankers. The U.S. Air Force is drafting a report to send to four Capitol Hill defense committees, which will launch a mandatory 30-day review period before a contract can be approved. "I don't think it will be as difficult to get through the congressional reviews as you might think," said Howard E. Chambers, Boeing's vice president for airlift and tanker programs.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - India is displaying its Advanced Light Helicopter, Dhruv, at the Paris Air Show, marking its first time to fly outside India. "It will in fact be the first time a helicopter fully conceptualized and built in India will be put up for demonstration in any international air show," said an Indian defense ministry official.

Stephen Trimble
LE BOURGET, France - BAE Systems CEO Mike Turner criticized the United Kingdom's increasing reliance on private financing initiatives (PFIs) to fund military acquisition programs. "PFIs don't work," Turner told reporters here at the Paris Air Show. PFIs allow the government to lease certain kinds of equipment and services. The U.K. Ministry of Defence (MOD) uses the financing tool to reduce capital expenditures from the government's budget.

Stephen Trimble
LE BOURGET, France - Many transatlantic industrial leaders agree the political rancor that curbed U.S. participation at the 43rd Paris Air Show isn't likely to alter financial bottom lines in the short term, or long-term plans to forge closer cooperation on defense projects. In what Scott A. Harris, president of Lockheed Martin's division in Europe, on June 16 called a "particularly tense transatlantic moment," industrial leaders are striving to strategize amid a political rift caused by France and Germany's opposition to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

Stephen Trimble
LE BOURGET, France - Singapore is requesting full access to manufacturers' source code as a key condition for buying up to 20 fighters, a top minister told reporters June 15 here at the Paris Air Show. Singapore is scrutinizing six candidates to replace its A-4 fighter fleet - Boeing's F-15E and F/A-18, Lockheed Martin's F-16 Block 60, Dassault's Rafael, Eurofighter's Typhoon and Sukhoi's advanced Sukhoi-30, said Cedric Foo, Singapore's minister of state for defense.

Stephen Trimble
LE BOURGET, France - Lockheed Martin's AGM-158 Joint Air to Surface Standoff Missile (JASSM) will fly again in an operational test June 20, a company executive said June 16 at the Paris Air Show. This would be the first flight since program officials reported two test failures out of three recent tests. The U.S. Air Force is pressing ahead with the original test schedule despite the setbacks, said Randy Bigum, Lockheed Martin's vice president for strike weapons. Two missiles will be launched during the test, he said.

Staff
DREAMLINER: The Boeing Co.'s new 7E7 will be named "Dreamliner," the company said June 16. Boeing also named some partners for the program - Alenia Aeronautica, Fuji, Kawasaki, Mitsubishi and Vought Aircraft will participate in the design and construction of large airframe subassemblies, Boeing said at the Paris Air Show.

Tamir Eshel
LE BOURGET, France - A newcomer at the Paris Air Show is EMIT, an Israeli UAV design specialist that has three new UAVs on display - Sparrow, Butterfly and Blue Horizon. Sparrow was designed as a 'sub-tactical' low-altitude observation and surveillance UAV, capable of deployment from land or sea. Launched by bungee or pneumatic launcher, the 40-kilogram (88-pound) Sparrow can carry a payload of 12 kilograms (26 pounds) on a six-hour mission.

Robert Wall
LE BOURGET, France - On home turf and fresh from two major program milestones, EADS is poised to show off the breadth of its operations in the next few days. The European aerospace giant recently registered key program launches that give it a boost going into the Paris Air Show.

Marc Selinger
The Pentagon is forming a Defense Safety Oversight Council (DSOC) to lead its new initiative to reduce aviation accidents and other mishaps throughout the Defense Department. The council will review accident trends and recommend safety improvements to the defense secretary, according to a draft of DSOC's charter that was obtained by The DAILY. The council will be expected to look to other government agencies and the private sector for ideas on reducing mishaps, the charter says.

By Jefferson Morris
To remain in step with future commercial Internet technology, the Department of Defense (DOD) plans to make all its computer networks compatible with Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) by 2008. DOD's Internet and intranet communications currently use Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4), as does most of the rest of the world. IPv6 is expected to supersede IPv4 over the next several years.

Staff
LE BOURGET, France - Continental Airlines has extended its contract with Honeywell to provide 10 years of wheel and brake service. The $115 million contract covers Continental's Boeing 737, 757 and 767 fleets, amounting to more than 350 aircraft. "Continental's contract extension reflects our customer's confidence in Honeywell Aircraft Landing Systems' technological expertise in wheels and brakes," said Peg Billson, Honeywell Aircraft Landing Systems vice president and general manager.

Marc Selinger
The House Appropriations defense subcommittee is expected to add $42 million to the U.S. Navy's fiscal 2004 budget request for procurement of Raytheon's Joint Primary Aircraft Training System (JPATS), a congressional source said June 16. The increase would be contained in the FY '04 defense appropriations bill that the subcommittee tentatively is scheduled to take up June 18.

Stephen Trimble
LE BOURGET, France - Pending final approval of a roughly $15 billion deal to lease aerial tankers, the Boeing Co. plans to "aggressively" apply similar alternative financing methods to some other Pentagon programs, a top company executive said June 16 here at the Paris Air Show.

Nick Jonson
The market for electro-optical equipment for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) is likely to double to nearly $500 million annually by 2010, according to a June 16 report by the Teal Group of Fairfax, Va. Although nearly half the current market consists of research, development and equipment testing for the high-endurance Global Hawk UAV, that percentage will decrease as unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) and other programs come online, according to the report, "UAV Electro-Optic/Infrared (EO/IR) Sensor Market Overview."

Staff
NEW MISSILE: Rafael of Israel has introduced the Python 5, the latest member of its Python air-to-air missile family, the company said June 12. The missile can be launched from very short range to beyond visual range and is resistant to countermeasures, Rafael said. The missile incorporates a new dual-waveband imaging seeker, the company said. The missile keeps the Python 4's airframe, inertial navigation system, rocket motor, warhead and proximity fuze.

Marc Selinger
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has announced it will begin a study later this year to help define the shape of a future missile defense architecture for the alliance. During a June 12 meeting in Brussels, Belgium, NATO defense ministers agreed to kick off the 18-month review when they meet informally in Colorado Springs, Colo., in October. Before the launch, multinational consortia led by Lockheed Martin Corp. and Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC) are expected to bid for work on the project.