ANALYTICAL GRAPHICS INC., Malvern, Pa. Kevin Flood has been promoted to director of product management. ARMOR HOLDINGS, Jacksonville, Fla. Robert R. Schiller has been named president, effective Jan. 1. Robert F. Mecredy has been named president of the AHI Aerospace & Defense Group. BOEING, Chicago Charles "Chuck" Allen has been selected as vice president and program manager for Boeing's Orbital Space Program, headquartered in Huntsville, Ala.
House and Senate appropriators agreed Nov. 5 to partially fund the Bush Administration's fiscal 2004 budget request for new nuclear weapons initiatives, while another group of congressional negotiators was nearing a compromise on the fiscal 2004 defense authorization conference report. The conference committee for the FY '04 energy and water appropriations bill approved $7.5 million for research on the high-yield Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator (RNEP), a $7.5 million cut from the Administration's request.
General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems will provide management and technical support services to U.S. Joint Forces Command for advanced concepts technology demonstrations (ACTDs), the company said Nov. 4. Under the five-year contract, which could be worth $19.7 million, the company will analyze, validate and plan demonstrations and exercises for ACTDs, which help fast-track promising technologies.
Turkey may be close to deciding whether to buy Bell Helicopter Textron's King Cobra attack helicopter, industry and Turkish government sources said Nov. 4.
A study conducted by the U.S. Air Force and the Boeing Co. concludes that an effort to put new engines on the Boeing bomber would pay for itself with future fuel savings.
NEW DELHI - A U.S. Air Force team has begun a 10-day aerial survey of Sri Lanka's vital military installations, allowing the country to assess the security of its bases and ongoing military operations. The Air Force team is training local military forces to monitor the security of their bases, logistics and other operations, as part of military assistance to Sri Lanka that Washington agreed to after signing an Acquisition and Cross Servicing Agreement (ACSA) last year (DAILY, Aug. 27, 2002).
U.S. defense policies are pushing European countries to create a "fortress Europe," according to Gordon Adams, director of the George Washington University's Security Policy Studies Program. "This global relationship, which is primarily transatlantic, has the opportunity to go in one of two directions," Adams said in a presentation at the Defense Symposium in Washington, organized by Deutsche Bank, the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and Defense News.
Wind-tunnel tests show that a Lockheed Martin-designed vehicle would be stable in the maneuvering required to save astronauts from a launch pad disaster, the company said. The tests conducted in September and October at Lockheed Martin's High Speed Wind Tunnel in Texas show that the vehicle would be able to fly the required profile, Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company said Nov. 3.
The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) is planning a new science and technology (S&T) program devoted to nonlethal weapons (NLWs) in fiscal year 2005, according to Alan Schafer, director for plans and programs for the DOD's Director of Defense Research and Engineering (DDR&E).
U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) needs help from industry in developing nonlethal weapons for four purposes: incapacitating individuals in groups, clearing facilities without entering them, deterring or delaying pursuit by the enemy and stopping ground vehicles.
Implementing new policies will not be enough to overhaul export licensing procedures, a necessity for facilitating closer transatlantic industry cooperation and involvement, according to a panel of defense analysts. Strong leadership will be needed to change the perspectives of the colonels in the Pentagon reviewing technology-sharing requests, they said.
TRAINING: Lockheed Martin will provide C-130J training systems and services to the U.S. Air Force under a contract that could total $287 million if all options are exercised, the company said Nov. 4. The deal includes simulators that have been subcontracted to CAE of Toronto, Lockheed Martin said.
NASA has selected five candidate proposals for funding under its Explorer Program of lower cost, rapid-development scientific spacecraft, the aerospace agency said Nov. 4. NASA will select two of the proposals by fall 2004 for full development as Small Explorer (SMEX) missions, which would launch in 2007 and 2008.
PRAGUE - The F-16 Fighting Falcons that the United States has offered to sell to the Czech Republic will be fully NATO interoperable and upgraded to the level of many other F-16s sold throughout Europe, The DAILY has learned. The U.S. has offered 12 F-16A Block 15 Air Defense Fighter aircraft and two F-16B Block 10 Operational Capabilities Upgrade (OCU) aircraft for the contest to supply the Czech air force with 14 supersonic aircraft for temporary airspace cover beginning in 2005.
PRAGUE - In a surprise move, the Swedish government said it has offered new supersonic fighters to the Czech Republic as part of a competition that was expected to involve only older aircraft. Sweden's ambassador to the Czech Republic, Harald Falth, told journalists in Prague Oct. 3 that the Swedish offer of 12 new one-seat and two two-seat JAS-39 Gripen fighters is within the Czech ministry of defense's stated available budget.
NEW DELHI - India will develop military space systems for command and control functions as part of a new Aerospace Command, the head of the air force said Oct. 31 at the end of an annual air force conference. "We are prepared to use space for ... projection in future use," Air Chief Marshal Sriniwaspuram Krishnaswamy told The DAILY. "[Space systems] will be used for command and control purposes and not for weapons delivery."
Some U.S. Defense Department practices, such as capping contractor profits, may have to be revisited for the defense industrial base to remain healthy and respond to the demands of transformation, a senior Lockheed Martin official said Nov. 3. Chief Operating Officer Robert Stevens said Lockheed Martin and other defense contractors are among thousands of companies in the U.S. competing for investors' capital.
Lockheed Martin delivered the first HC-130J Super Hercules airlifter to the U.S. Coast Guard Oct. 31. The HC-130J is intended eventually to replace the Coast Guard's oldest HC-130H maritime patrol aircraft, some of which were built in the early 1970s, Lockheed Martin said.
The first Coast Guard cutter installed with new electronics equipment as part of the Integrated Deepwater Systems program has gone to sea, officials with Integrated Coast Guard Systems (ICGS) said Nov. 3. The Coast Guard Cutter Northland was outfitted with international maritime Satellite B Services, which connects the ship with the Defense Department's Secret Internet Protocol Network (SIPRNET).