_Aerospace Daily

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DEFENSE INDUSTRIES INTERNATIONAL, Los Angeles John E. Krings has been named as lead U.S. defense industry consultant. EADS, Amsterdam Pierre de Bausset has been appointed senior vice president of investor relations and financial communication. Fabrice Bregier will become president and CEO of Eurocopter, as of April 1, 2003. He will succeed Jean-Francois Bigay. Bregier also will become deputy to the president of Eurocopter as of Jan. 1, 2003. Marwan Lahoud will become president and CEO of MBDA.

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The Army and TRW Inc. completed the first test drop of live Brilliant Anti-Armor (BAT) submunitions from a Hunter unmanned aerial vehicle last week, the company said Oct. 15. In a test at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., on Oct. 11, a Hunter UAV dropped two Northrop Grumman BATs, incapacitating a moving tank and destroying an armored personnel carrier, TRW said. The company and the Army had dropped two unarmed BATs in a test on Oct. 9, and in September dropped a simulated bat to ensure it would release cleanly from the Hunter (DAILY, Oct. 9).

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LAUREL, Md. - Army Materiel Command (AMC) will look at alternative fuel sources, modular containers and fewer sizes of ammunition, an Army logistics official said here Oct. 15. The AMC is seeking to respond to critics that want gear, food and fuel shipped faster to the front, said Robert Whalen, who addressed the Precision Strike Technology Symposium at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. "If we want to reduce logistics, we've got to do something with these things," said Whalen, director of the Army Research Laboratory.

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LAUREL, Md. - The Air Force is gaining interest in a replacement for its dwindling supply of 15,000-pound BLU-82 "daisy cutter" bombs, a senior Air Force armaments official said Oct. 15. An already low supply of daisy cutters shrank further during Operation Enduring Freedom, as the C-130-released weapon was needed to clear caves and psychologically sting Taliban forces. "We're essentially out of them, or almost out of them," said Steve Butler, director of engineering at the Air Armament Center at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.

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NEW DELHI - The Indian navy has decided to mount the BrahMos missile on its eight Tupolev Tu-142 maritime surveillance aircraft instead of its Ilyushin IL-38s, after a recent crash between two IL-38s left the aircraft in short supply. Two of the navy's five IL-38s were destroyed in an Oct. 1 collision during an air show in Goa (DAILY, Oct. 3). The BrahMos, a supersonic anti-ship cruise missile also called PJ-10, was developed jointly by Russia's NPO Mashinostroeniya and India's Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO).

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SUPPORT: CACI International will provide technical and engineering services to the Naval Surface Warfare Center's (NWSC) Dahlgren Division, in Dahlgren, Va., the company said Oct. 15. The work will be done under a $48.5 million contract, the company said. CACI will test fire control software, which ensures the precise targeting of Trident submarine missiles. NWSC Dahlgren supports the Trident fire control systems through its K Department.

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PRAGUE - High winds were responsible for a Czech military search and rescue helicopter crash at the Line air force base near Plzen last month, a preliminary air force commission report has concluded. Three mechanics were injured when a W-3A Sokol helicopter flipped over during engine tests on the ground (DAILY, Sept. 26).

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The Boeing Co. could lose its dominance of the narrow-body jetliner market for discount carriers if easyJet Airline Company Ltd., can operate its Airbus fleet for less than Boeing-made aircraft, according to a report from Deutsche Bank. The report, released Oct. 14, followed an announcement by easyJet that it has agreed to buy 120 A319 aircraft from Airbus Industrie, with options for another 120 A320 and A321 aircraft.

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A House-Senate panel has added almost $30 million to the Bush Administration's fiscal 2003 budget request for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter's interchangeable engine program, an increase designed to help keep the engine effort on track.

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The Defense Department has announced President Bush's nominees to head the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), hold the second-ranking job at Army Materiel Command, and handle acquisition issues at the Air Force. Navy Rear Adm. Lowell Jacoby has been acting director of the DIA since July and would take the job on a permanent basis if confirmed by the Senate. He also would become a vice admiral.

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The Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) has launched an operational test and evaluation process for six upgraded AP-3C Orion patrol planes delivered by Oct. 14, according to the Australian Defense Organization (ADO). The RAAF's Maritime Patrol Group Acceptance Transition and Evaluation Unit must certify the reconnaissance aircraft's various roles and develop new tactics and procedures, ADO said in a statement. The evaluation will include training exercises with the Australian Navy's Collins submarines and Anzac frigates.

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ENGINE TEST: The Boeing Co. has completed a key hot-fire test of the RS-68 engine, which powers the first stage of its new Delta IV booster, the company said. The test was part of a second launch dress rehearsal for the rocket's first flight, slated for mid-November, and was the last major Delta IV development milestone, the company said.

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L-3 Communications Corp. Chairman and CEO Frank Lanza expressed concern Oct. 15 that funding cuts and program changes to the Army's transformation plans being contemplated by the Defense Department could prevent the service from fully transforming. Plans by the Army to develop its fast-moving Objective Force represent "a whole new world of doctrine and deployment" that is being studied by the prime contractors and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Lanza said during a third quarter conference call with investors and analysts.

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A Raytheon-built exoatmospheric kill vehicle (EKV) successfully intercepted a Minuteman II target in the latest test of the Missile Defense Agency's Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) program, MDA said late Oct. 14. The test marked the fifth successful intercept, and the fourth consecutive one, for the GMD program, MDA said.

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NEW DELHI - The United States and Pakistan will conduct joint military exercises in Pakistan beginning Oct. 15, the first such exercises since Washington lifted sanctions against Islamabad in September 2001. The exercises, dubbed "Inspired Gambit," will involve a U.S. infantry company and a Pakistani infantry battalion, U.S. embassy officials said.

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NEW DELHI - The Indian navy has set up an overhaul center for its fleet of Sea Harrier maritime attack aircraft. The center is being set up at the naval aircraft yard at Kochi in southern India, at a cost of $64.5 million. A senior Indian navy official told The DAILY that the Sea Harriers' Pegasus engines, built by Rolls-Royce, previously had to be sent to company facilities in the United Kingdom for repairs and overhaul.

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Astronauts completed the third and final spacewalk of the STS-112 mission to the International Space Station on Oct. 14, finishing the installation and checkout of the station's newly installed truss segment. David Wolf and Piers Sellers installed fluid jumpers to allow ammonia coolant to flow between the already installed Starboard Zero truss and the new Starboard One truss segments, among other tasks.

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EW TESTING: The Air Force's CV-22 Osprey completed electronic warfare testing in the Benefield Anechoic Facility (BAF) at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., earlier this month, the Air Force said. The Air Force tested the Suite of Integrated Radio Frequency Countermeasures, which includes the radar warning receiver and electronic countermeasures.

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Congress has approved a legislative provision aimed at ensuring that the U.S. Export-Import Bank can continue to finance exports of dual-use items.

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RAYTHEON CO. will provide AIM-9M Sidewinder missiles to the air forces of Oman, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the Czech Republic, the company said Oct. 14. The countries have signed letters of offer and acceptance with the U.S. government, Raytheon said. The missiles will equip Oman and UAE F-16s, and the Czech Republics' L-159 aircraft. The total value of the orders is more than $35 million, according to Raytheon.