_Aerospace Daily

Lisa Troshinsky
U.S. Joint Forces Command (JFCOM)'s latest NATO/Partnership for Peace Program (PFP) exercise, Cooperative Nugget 04, is using simulation and modeling to improve the handling of information and legal, medical, and procurement issues, as well as more accurately applying NATO standards, according to U.S. Army Reserve Maj. Gen. Thomas Matthews, vice commander, Joint Warfighting Center and exercise director.

Staff
JSF ANTENNAS: EDO Corp. will design and develop landing-aid antennas for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter under a $2 million, multi-year contract from Northrop Grumman, the company said. The contract covers the JSF's system development and demonstration and low-rate initial production phases. The contract includes the design and manufacture of antennas for aircraft-carrier and runway landings and the development of a network to transfer information from external sensors to on-board communications systems.

Staff
RECOVERY: United Defense Industries will build three additional M88A2 Hercules tank-recovery vehicles for the U.S. Marine Corps under a $7.1 million contract from the Army's Tank-automotive and Armaments Command. Deliveries are scheduled through January 2005 for the vehicles.

Kathy Gambrell
The U.S. Department of Defense needs a full-time top-level manager to oversee the agency's massive financial system to meet a 2007 deadline for streamlining and restructuring its accounting practices, according to the administration's top auditor. U.S. Comptroller General David M. Walker and DOD Comptroller Dov S. Zakheim told the Senate Armed Services Committee's readiness subcommittee that aggressive changes would have to be made to meet Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's 2007 goal of transforming the agency's financial management systems.

Staff
TRAINING SYSTEMS: Bombardier Aerospace's Military Aviation Training business has been awarded the CF-18 Distributed Combat Training System contract by the government of Canada. The $202.5 million, eight-year contract is to provide Canadian CF-18 pilots with simulator training, the company said.

Lisa Troshinsky
Enigma Inc., which provides equipment maintenance software for U.S. defense systems, such as the Marine Corps' Light Armored Vehicle (LAV) and the Navy Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC), will announce a "significant" Army contract as early as this week, John Snow, the company's vice president of marketing and business development, told The DAILY. Enigma's 3C Platform software allows the warfighter in the field and mechanics and engineers back at bases to quickly assess what is wrong with military equipment and fix it, Snow said.

Staff
DYNCORP TECHNICAL SERVICES of Fort Worth, Texas, will provide maintenance and modification services for part of NASA's aircraft fleet under a contract that could be worth up to $200 million. The Aircraft Maintenance and Modification Program Services contract includes support for Johnson Space Center operations at Ellington Field and other facilities, NASA said. The award is a follow-on to an existing services contract. Major subcontractors include Qualified Technical Services Inc., Muniz Engineering Inc., Avpol International and Lockheed Martin Space Operations.

By Jefferson Morris
An active protection system for ground vehicles that is a leading candidate for inclusion in the Army's Future Combat Systems (FCS) will resume testing in the third quarter of this year, according to Mark Middione, program manager at United Defense.

Marc Selinger
Northrop Grumman announced March 22 that it has added BAE Systems to its team competing to be the prime contractor for the U.S. Army-led Aerial Common Sensor (ACS) intelligence-gathering aircraft.

Kathy Gambrell
Senate appropriators are being asked to restore funding to the National Institutes of Standards and Technology's Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) after an attempt to do that was defeated last week by the House Budget Committee. The White House cut funding for MEP, which assists defense contractors and others with technical and business support, in an effort to eventually eliminate the program. The Administration wants to avoid subsidizing competition, according to budget documents.

Lisa Troshinsky
A Boeing/Sikorsky industry team has received instructions from the U.S. Army on what components to continue manufacturing from the canceled Army RAH-66 Comanche program, an Army official said. "The Army issued a partial termination for convenience March 18 to stop all work, make no further shipments, and place no further orders relating to the contract, except for the following efforts through September 30," Bob Hunt, a spokesman at the Army Aviation and Missile Command, told The DAILY March 22. Work is to continue on:

Marc Selinger
A joint venture between Lockheed Martin and Raytheon announced March 22 that it has been awarded a $1.1 billion contract to develop the Non-Line-of-Sight-Launch Space system (NLOS-LS) for the U.S. Army. The sole-source contract, whose award had been expected (DAILY, Oct. 13, 2003), is for a six-year system development and demonstration (SDD) phase. Lockheed Martin and Raytheon are expected to split the contract funding evenly.

Staff
The Air Force successfully launched the 50th Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite, GPS IIR-11, aboard a Boeing Delta II rocket from Cape Canaveral, Fla., March 20. The three-stage rocket lifted off from Launch Complex 17B at 12:53 p.m. EST, according to Boeing. The spacecraft was deployed to a transfer orbit 68 minutes later. Lockheed Martin built GPS IIR-11, which features a number of upgrades including an advanced antenna panel that will provide greater power and performance for GPS receivers, according to the company.

Staff
SURVEILLANCE: DRS Technologies will provide major electro-optical subsystems for the U.S. Army's Long Range Advanced Scout Surveillance System (LRAS3) under a $24.3 million subcontract from Raytheon's Network Centric Systems, the company said March 22. LRAS3 enables Army troops and Stryker Brigade Combat Teams to conduct surveillance and reconnaissance missions from safe distances, the company said. The work will be done by DRS Technologies' DRS Optronics unit, of Palm Bay, Fla.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Navy plans to begin deploying an Aegis destroyer in the Sea of Japan in September to provide a forward-based sensor for the Army-operated Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system, officials said March 22.

Brett Davis
A problem with some space shuttle components probably won't hurt the return-to-flight schedule as much as agency officials feared last week, program manager William Parsons said March 22.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - A deal between India and the United Kingdom for 66 Hawk 100-Y advanced jet trainers is back on track after overcoming a last-minute cost dispute. India and the U.K. Ministry of Defence (MOD) agreed on a memorandum of understanding (MOU) March 19 on the $1.5 million deal and plan to sign it this week.

Lisa Troshinsky
PORTSMOUTH, VA. - One of the goals of the Joint National Training Capability (JNTC) is to integrate Combat ID and Blue Force Tracking across Department of Defense operations, according to Joint Forces Command (JFCOM) officials said at a conference here March 18. Combat ID is the process of accurately identifying objects to enable the use of the correct military options and weapons. Blue Force Tracking is a satellite-based system installed in ground vehicles and helicopters that monitors the movement of friendly forces.

Kathy Gambrell
Senators return to Washington this week to resume consideration of the Department of Defense's $401.7 billion budget request for fiscal 2005, with House members so far unwilling to go along with a Senate Budget Committee effort to trim that request by $7 billion.