_Aerospace Daily

Staff
LAND VS. DITCH:While ditching a plane loaded with classified data and equipment into the ocean is an option for a pilot whose aircraft is in trouble, there is no DOD policy nor U.S. Navy policy to do so, according to the Pentagon. "It is the pilot's judgment call," one source tells The DAILY. That protocol may differ during war time, though, he says. In the case of the Navy EP-3E that made an emergency landing on Hainan Island, China, "It is not a hostile country. It is an international country," says the source.

Staff
REVIEWS CONTINUE: The numerous ongoing strategy and program reviews being conducted by the Pentagon are "moving along very well," says Rumsfeld. But, they have "not been laced together yet," he says. While officially the Pentagon is not providing many more details of the reviews, what is known is that there are several reviews conducted separately which examine various strategies, specific programs and military capabilities. The service chiefs report the have had some input into the reviews. Rumsfeld says President Bush has not yet been briefed.

Staff
UAVs KEY: UAVs could take up the slack for the Navy as it replaces its aging fleet of P-3 aircraft. "We need to replace this force," says Vice Admiral Edmund P. Giambastiani. Calling continuous cycles of P-3 repair and maintenance a "very expensive, very tough way to operate," he believes that high-endurance UAVs can pick up part of the surveillance and reconnaissance load as the aircraft are retired.

By Jefferson Morris
The final design review for the Navy's Fire Scout Vertical Takeoff and Landing Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (VTUAV) has been completed and hardware is now being built in anticipation of systems integration tests this summer. "Engineering and manufacturing development fabrication assembly is well-underway," said Doug Fronius, vice president of Advanced Development for Northrop Grumman's Unmanned Systems product team.

Staff
TAKEOVER OPPOSITION: Three members of the Senate Armed Services Committee are urging President George W. Bush to block ASM Lithography (ASML) of the Netherlands from buying San Jose, Calif.-based Silicon Valley Group Inc. (SVG), whose subsidiary, Tinsley Laboratories, "has unique capabilities" to make precision optics for reconnaissance satellites, sensitive military applications, and semiconductor tools. In an April 10 letter, Sens. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), Tim Hutchinson (R-Ark.) and Bob Smith (R-N.H.) express doubt that U.S.

Stephen Trimble ([email protected])
The U.S. Air Force and Lockheed Martin are exploring ways to resurrect NASA's futuristic X-33 reusable launch vehicle as a military plane and to secure roughly $14 million in bridge funding this year. The U.S. Air Force and Lockheed Martin are exploring ways to resurrect NASA's futuristic X-33 reusable launch vehicle as a military plane and to secure roughly $14 million in bridge funding this year.

Staff
CHINA POLICY: The Bush Administration should take a hard line with Beijing in upcoming talks on the recent collision between a U.S. reconnaissance aircraft and a Chinese fighter jet and the future of U.S. reconnaissance flights near China, according to House International Relations Committee ranking Democrat Tom Lantos (Calif.). "I trust the president will not cave to Chinese demands to stop the flights or take any other action that harms U.S. national security," Lantos says.

Staff
X-43 FLIGHTS: The first of three unpiloted X-43 vehicles in NASA's Hyper-X program will soon begin hypersonic flight from the space agency's Dryden Flight Research Center, Calif. They will be flying from seven to 10 times the speed of sound, using air-breathing scramjet engines instead of traditional rocket power. Briefings on the program are planned for this week.

Marc Selinger ([email protected])
The U.S. aerospace industry's international trade surplus plunged last year by $10.7 billion or 29 percent to $26.7 billion, as exports declined and imports set a record high, the Aerospace Industries Association said April 12. Exports fell $7.7 billion to $54.7 billion, while imports rose $2.8 billion to $27.9 billion. The 2000 surplus was down $14.3 billion from a peak of $41 billion in 1998 and was at its lowest level since it reached $26.6 billion in 1996.

Linda de France ([email protected])
Boeing's X-32B short takeoff vertical landing (STOVL) Joint Strike Fighter concept demonstrator conducted its first-ever airborne transitions from conventional to vertical flight Friday above Edwards AFB, Calif.

Staff
Maj. Gen. Joseph Cosumano received Senate confirmation last week to be commander of the Army's Space and Missile Defense Command (SMDC) after Sen. Bob Smith (R-N.H.) agreed to stop blocking the appointment because the Army reassured him about its commitment to the kinetic energy anti-satellite (KE-ASAT) program.

Staff
XM SATELLITE RADIO's first satellite, "Rock," has achieved several critical performance milestones and is moving toward its final orbital position. The company's second satellite, "Roll," is scheduled for launch May 7, according to the company. "We have a bird in the air and another bird ready to fly," said XM President and CEO Hugh Panero. "XM is on schedule for its summer rollout.

Staff
ALBERT E. SMITH of Lockheed Martin is the likely choice to succeed Keith Hall as director of the National Reconnaissance Office, according to former Air Force Secretary F. Whitten Peters. "The scuttlebutt is" that Hall will be replaced by Smith, Peters told The DAILY. Smith is executive vice president of Lockheed Martin Space Systems Co. and is also an officer of Lockheed Martin Corp. The NRO confirmed April 11 that the Bush Administration has decided to accept Hall's resignation, which was tendered when the Administration took office (DAILY, April 12).

Staff
HEICO Corp. announced its Electronic Technologies Group has acquired Analog Modules, Inc. (AMI), a leading designer and manufacturer of electronic products primarily for use in the laser and electro-optics industries, for about $15.6 million in cash paid at closing. AMI's products, including Laser Rangefinder Receivers, amplifiers, photodetector-amplifier modules and others serve military, medical, scientific and industrial markets.

Linda de France ([email protected])
Responding to reports that his aircraft carrier fleet may in trouble under the Pentagon's current strategic and program review, Chief of Navy Operations ADM Vernon E. Clark yesterday denied the ships are vulnerable to being scaled back. "Maybe someday that will be true," said Clark, "it's not true today."

Staff
A test flight of a solar sail sponsored by the Planetary Society has been delayed due to a pre-launch testing accident that damaged the spacecraft, the society announced April 11. The sub-orbital test flight had been scheduled for launch on April 26 from a Russian Delta III Class submarine in the Barents Sea. Cosmos 1 - the first mission to be launched by a private space interest organization - was to be lifted into a 30-minute suborbital flight during that test (DAILY, March 5). Damage extent unknown

Staff
TRANSTECHNOLOGY CORP. of Liberty Corner, N.J., announced April 12 it will divest itself of its fastener business and become solely a manufacturer of niche aerospace products. The company said it is the world's leading manufacturer of rescue hoists, hooks and hold-open rods for commercial and military aircraft. The company has 14 manufacturing facilities in the U.S., Canada, England, Germany and Brazil.

Staff
GE's aircraft engine business helped power the corporation's record-breaking, 16% increase in first-quarter earnings, the Fairfield, Conn.-based company reported April 12.

Staff
Expedition Two crewmembers on the International Space Station Alpha transmitted the first science data to scientists on the ground Wednesday night using the station's Ku band antenna, NASA announced April 11. A "massive" 610 megabytes of data, representing 61 files of tests with the Middeck Active Control Experiment - MACE - were transmitted from the station to NASA ground controllers, who distributed it to experimenters, according to NASA.

Staff
New rules for operating aircraft over long distances are due out this summer from a Federal Aviation Administration-industry working group that would apply not just to twin-engine aircraft but also to multi-engine aircraft, Aerospace Daily affiliate Aviation Daily reported.

Staff
OHB SYSTEM GMBH and ASTRIUM are working with the German federal government, the Land of Bremen and the German Aerospace Center in Cologne to develop a demonstrator for reusable space transport systems, as part of the national ASTRA program. "Development of PHOENIX will be the first step towards the realization of a European, reusable space transport system," said Josef Kind, member of the board of management of Astrium N.V.

Rich Tuttle ([email protected])
The U.S. intelligence community is looking at revolutionary new technologies that could significantly boost the ability of satellites to monitor activities of other countries in the areas of weapons of mass destruction, a top Air Force officer said April 12.

Linda de France([email protected])
For nearly 10 years, the United States has watched the military strategy, forces and budget mismatch grow and grow, to the point where the services are now short of resources, said Chief of Naval Operations ADM Vern Clark. Meanwhile, the Navy must recruit, retain, train, maintain and be ready to handle future commitments, Clark said yesterday at an address to the Navy League in Washington.

Staff
NASA has selected 27 research proposals for negotiation of Phase 2 contract awards for its Small Business Innovative Research program. The selected projects, which have a total value of about $16 million, will be conducted by 25 small, high-technology firms in 13 states. A total of 267 proposals were submitted by SBIR contractors completing Phase 1 projects. Phase 2 continues development of the most promising Phase 1 projects. Funding for Phase 2 contracts could be up to $600,000 for a two-year performance period.

Staff
A trend toward parity in spending on defense and non-defense research and development would be reversed in the Bush Administration's fiscal year 2002 budget, according to an analysis of R&D spending compiled by the Democratic staff of the House Science Committee. Research and development outlays as a percentage of discretionary spending in the Bush Administration's fiscal year 2002 budget will be 12.6%, a figure that has been relatively constant since the 1970s, according to the analysis.