_Aerospace Daily

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - India will sign a $100 million contract with Israel for more Barak missile systems for its navy by the end of the year, sources in the Indian defense ministry said Nov. 26. The Indian navy has purchased seven systems in the last five years and plans to buy 10 more. The aircraft carrier INS Viraat was the first to get the system.

Rich Tuttle
BAE Systems is concentrating its technology and experience on a Department of Homeland Security effort to protect airliners from missile attack, and backing it with top-level commitment, according to a company executive. "BAE Systems has been doing this technology for more than half a century for the military," said Burt Keirstead, manager of BAE Systems North America's response to the DHS initiative.

By Jefferson Morris
Orbital Recovery Ltd. has signed an agreement with Dutch Space of Leiden, the Netherlands, to develop a "space tug" that would launch as a payload adapter on an Ariane 5 rocket, the company announced last week. Orbital Recovery Ltd. selected Dutch Space to develop and build the ConeXpress Orbital Recovery System (ORS) vehicle after performing an international survey of space hardware manufacturers, according to the company.

Nick Jonson
The Australian Department of Defence announced plans Nov. 26 to replace its aging fleet of Leopard I main battle tanks with one of three more modern battle tanks. The tanks being considered include the Leopard II, made by Krauss-Maffei Wegmann of Germany; the Challenger II, made by Alvis Vickers Ltd. of the United Kingdom; and the M1A2 Abrams, made by General Dynamics of the United States.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - A team of Indian and Russian scientists and Indian navy officials conducted the first test firing of the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile from a moving missile destroyer on Nov. 23. The missile was fired from the INS Rajput while it was cruising at 40 knots in the Bay of Bengal. It hit its target, a decommissioned Indian navy ship, 290 kilometers (181 miles) away, the navy said.

Staff
Dec. 1 - 2 -- Shephard's Heli-Security 2003, "Helicopters in the War on Terrorism," Crystal Gateway Marriott Hotel, Washington, D.C. For more information go to www.heli-security.com. Dec. 1 - 4 -- I/ITSEC 2004 (Interservice/Industry Training, Simulation & Education Conference), Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Fla. For more information contact Patrick T. Rowe at (703) 247-9471, email [email protected] or go to www.itsec.org.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE, Czech Republic - Aero Vodochody's dual-seat L-159B is to make its first appearance at the Dubai International Aerospace Exhibition in early December, according to the company. Aero had planned to show the aircraft at Dubai two years ago but withdrew after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the U.S.

Staff
OMNIBUS: House and Senate negotiators have completed work on an omnibus spending bill that funds several federal agencies for fiscal 2004, including NASA, which would get $15.5 billion, $80 million more than in FY '03. The House is expected to vote on the measure on Dec. 8, and Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said the Senate would follow suit "as soon as possible."

John Terino
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. - There is no reason to have test, training and range communications and data transmission systems that differ from those used in combat, according to Brig. Gen. Chris T. Anzalone, deputy commander for support at the Air Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. There also should be no incompatibilities between operational systems, he said last week at the National Defense Industrial Association's Targets, UAVs and Range Operations Symposium here.

Staff
In observance of the Thanksgiving Day holiday, Aerospace Daily will not publish Nov. 27 or 28. The next issue will be dated Dec. 1.

Nick Jonson
Elbit Systems, the Israeli defense electronic manufacturer, announced Nov. 25 it is teaming with ADI Ltd. of Australia to compete for the Australian Department of Defence's JP 129 contract to build a tactical unmanned airborne vehicle (TUAV) for Australian ground forces. The announcement follows the decision of AAI Corp. last month to team with BAE Systems to compete for the contract (DAILY, Oct. 21).

Rich Tuttle
The U.S. Army, responding to missile attacks on its helicopters, is fitting them with newer countermeasure dispensers, according to a spokesman for the service. The M-130 dispenser is being replaced with the ALE-47, which puts out "four times as many countermeasures, flares or chaff, depending on what you're trying to defeat," said Maj. Gary Tallman. Flares defend against heat-seeking missiles and chaff deflects radar-guided missiles.

Nick Jonson
It's not clear if the high-profile firing of Darleen Druyun, general manager of Boeing Missile Defense Systems, could change the defense acquisition process, industry analysts told The DAILY Nov. 25. Loren Thompson, president and CEO of the Lexington Institute, said the acquisition process could change, depending on the details that emerge about the activities of Druyun and former Boeing Chief Financial Officer Mike Sears, who was also fired.

By Jefferson Morris
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) Micro Air Vehicle (MAV) has emerged from a program restructuring larger and heavier than before, but with an extra performance margin that managers hope will help the program avoid further setbacks.

National Air & Space Museum

By Jefferson Morris
The Hypersonic Cruise Vehicle (HCV) that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) hopes to have in operation by 2025 could weigh as much as a million pounds, according to Northrop Grumman. Northrop Grumman is competing with Lockheed Martin and Andrews Space Inc. of Seattle, Wash., in Phase 1 of DARPA's Force Application and Launch from the Continental U.S. (FALCON) program, which is aimed at developing technologies for hypersonic strike weapons systems (DAILY, Nov. 18).

Staff
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has awarded 11 contracts worth a total of $20.5 million to study advanced architectures for the next generation of its Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES-R) program. The contracts cover analysis of space and launch; command, control, communications (C3); product generation and distribution; and end-to-end integration. The studies for NOAA's National Environmental Satellites Data and Information Service (NESDIS) seek to reduce design costs, development costs and schedule risks.

Rich Tuttle
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - City officials and civic planners here like the idea of the Air Force's Space and Missile Systems Center (SMC) moving to nearby Peterson Air Force Base if Los Angeles Air Force Base closes - but an Air Force spokesman said that's a big if.

Staff
The American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) International has formed a new committee that will develop safety and performance standards for unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) systems, ASTM announced Nov. 24. The committee includes manufacturers of UAVs and their components, federal agencies, design professionals, professional societies, maintenance professionals, trade associations, financial organizations and academia, according to ASTM.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA released on Nov. 24 preliminary cost estimates for the space shuttle's return to flight as part of an update to its evolving return-to-flight (RTF) implementation plan. The RTF initiatives that have begun so far totaled $60 million in fiscal 2003 and are projected to cost $175 million in FY '04, according to NASA (see chart).