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Military Transformation Uplink: September 2007

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Military Transformation Collage

Militaries around the world are moving to modernize and transform themselves to meet the challenges of the 21st century. Our mission is to deliver a regular cross-section of relevant, on-target stories, news, and analysis that will help experts and interested laypeople alike stay up to speed on key military developments and issues. Stories are broken down by military category and presented as fast bullet points that orient you quickly, with accompanying links if you wish to pursue more in-depth treatments.

Some of This Month's Targets of Opportunity Include: Aging aircraft; F-22; F-35; India's big fighter contest; 2018 bomber; Next-gen gunships; Japan's stealth aircraft; JCA: just confusing; Poseidon down under; Boeing's invisible man; Odd new satellite; unmanned fighters & swarms; Cell phones & Patriots; Huge IT contracts; DARPA's Deep Green; Lots of MRAP; FCS spinouts; Fire Ball; Better body armor; Australia's new fleet; Korea: us too!; Britain's new carriers; US Navy's new bills; Russia's stealthy Stereguschiy; Remote firefighting; Coast Guard cutters; ADVENT of breakthrough jet engines; $1M wearable power prize; Sub-finding 'shark'; UK's Grand Challenge & flying saucers; Boeing's new plane design; DARPA's robot dog; New Russian nukes; Britain's new maintenance concept works; Israel prepares; Counter-insurgency air needs; Export controls and their blowback; CSAR-X: rescue me!; And much, much more...

This briefing comes from a team a team that includes professional publications Defense Industry Daily and The Aviation Week Group, with Winds of Change.NET acting as "neutral ground." It covers events over the summer season. To contact us with story tips, email transformation, over @windsofchange dot net.

Air & Space Sector

AIR_F-22_Top_Desert.jpg
F-22A Raptor
(click to view full)
  • Aging aircraft attracting attention. The pilots are still roughly the same ages - but their planes are not. This is becoming a global issue for military aircraft fleets, and the average age of America's fleets will continue to rise even if the Pentagon gets everything they're asking for. DID offers a round-up of links and resources.

Strike

  • F-22: Afterburners lit. The F-22A Raptor super-fighter had a busy summer, racking up over $7 billion in contracts as part of a new multi-year deal. DID's FOCUS Article covers the aircraft, the controversies, program developments, and those heavy-duty contracts.

Other

  • Guns a Blazing. The U.S. Air Force's AC-130H/U gunships continue to support operations in Afghanistan and Iraq [see video], but planners are already looking at what would be needed for a future gunship. It may look very different, and relate to other efforts like the new AJACS transport aircraft, or even future bombers. AW story | DID AJACS story.
  • A New Hawkeye. US carriers are already suffering from shrinking strike range, and expanding ship-killer ranges. The new, improved E-2D Hawkeye AWACS aims to improve carrier group surveillance ranges and detect small, stealthy aerial and ground targets, and even ballistic missiles. AW first flight coverage | DID Focus Article.

Tech

  • New eyes for US fighters. They can bust radar stealth, and enable long-range missile attacks with no radar warning. Many new fighters have them, but most American planes don't. Could the solution be... a fuel tank?
  • Japan: scrap the fighters, buy the pods. Once, you needed modified fighter aircraft to do battlefield aerial reconnaissance. Once, you needed a free arm and shoulder, plus a backpack, if you wanted to take your music with you. Neither is true any more. For the same reasons.

Space

  • Secret Sat Shuttered. A US National Reconnaissance Office imaging satellite program thought to be called Misty was recently canceled after drawing major criticism from key lawmakers

UAVs

  • Skat - A Preliminary Filleting. Unmanned Combat Air Vehicles are under development in the USA, Britain, Europe... and now Russia. MiG's entry into the UCAV business has been hinted at for some time, and was recently unveiled. AW offers pictures, and some preliminary analysis.

C4SI Dimension

ELEC_JOC_CFC-Afghanistan_Concept.gif
JOC, Afghanistan
(click to view full)
  • Electronic Attack for the Infantry. AW says that upgrades to the EA-6B Prowler aircraft, and links to Marine Corps radio battalions, will give the infantry an on-call electronic attack capability.
  • ITES-2: the $20B soap opera. This multi-year I.T. contract should be called "Yikes," given all the legal challenges and hassles it has faced. DID looks at the contract, the participants, and some of the trends it suggests.
  • GSA's $50B Alliant Contract. The US General Services Administration acts as a one-stop buyer for many US federal departments. So the $50 billion, multi-year I.T. services contract it recently issued is a big deal in every sense of the term.
  • DARPA's Deep Green. The folks who brought you the Internet are trying to create a system to support battlefield commanders that would fit smoothly into a Heinlein novel. DID looks at the system, and the odds of success.

Land Sector

LAND_Cougar_Explosion_Test.jpg
MRAP testing...
(click to view full)
  • MRAP-II. As the USA finally wakes up to the need for mine-resistant rides, it's pushing the pedal to the medal with a second MRAP contract for up to 20,000 vehicles before the first is even done. The new contract has some new requirements, and will probably have some new competitors. AW coverage | DID coverage.
  • Fire Ball. Mortars are a common and effective infantry support weapon, but they aren't accurate - which means lots of civilian casualties in cities. New from Israel: a GPS-guided, laser-homing 120mm mortar bomb that can hit precise targets up to 15 km away. AW coverage | Defense Update profile.
  • Better body armor. While body armor controversies rage on Capitol Hill, the US Army is fielding a new and improved version of its Interceptor system.

Maritime Sector

SHIP_CVF_2005_Delta_Design.jpg
Britain's CVF
(click to view full)
  • Australia's New Fleet. A pair of big wins for Spanish firm Navantia will build the future core of Australia's surface fleet: 3 Hobart Class AEGIS air/missile defense frigates, and 2 Canberra Class LHDs that can embark troops, helicopters - and even jets. AW report | DID Hobart Class in-depth | DID Canberra Class LHDs in-depth.
  • Stealthy Stereguschiy. The first stealthly corvette of Russia's new Project 20380 class was displayed in public for the first time at the IMDS 2007 maritime defense show in St Petersburg. This could become a popular export item; AW-DTI's Ares looks at the design, and what it signifies.
  • Non-simulated stability. The sea moves. You move on it. Sometimes, that's not so great. Could aircraft simulator technology, and an innovative idea from a Netherlands university, hold the key to fixing this?
  • Remote firefighting. Imagine this horror scenario: a naval helicopter loses power on takeoff and crashes back onto the flight deck of a frigate -- rupturing its fuel tanks and causing a blazing fuel fire on deck. Could the same kind of technology used for remote weapons system like CROWS hold the answer?
  • Deep water: The US Coast Guard's National Security Cutters. They're the size of a frigate, and at $300-400 million per ship, they cost about as much. The Bertholf Class is a centerpiece of the USCG's $25 billion Deepwater program, but they're mired in controversy. DID's Focus Articles describes the cutters, the controversy, and the contracts.

R&D: Far Out Concepts

LAND Robot BigDog and Controller
DARPA's Dog
(click to view full)
  • ADVENT of a new jet engine. What if your car came with a morphing engine that could offer compact car mileage, or sports car performance, with almost no compromise at either end? What if they could design jet engines that way? The ADVENT program just pledged over $500 million to find out. DID looks at the overall program | AW explains some of the technologies.
  • The U.K.'s Own Grand Challenge. Inspired by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's 2004-05 Grand Challenge, and the 2007 Urban Challenge for unmanned ground vehicles, the U.K. Ministry of Defense launched its own Grand Challenge last fall. This one may feature flying saucers.
  • X-47B Flies. "Blended Wing Body" aircraft have the potential to radically improve aerodynamic efficiency, lifting capacity, and even aircraft noise, resulting in a new generation of cargo and passenger aircraft. Boeing's X-48B test aircraft has now made its first flight.
  • DARPA's Robot Dog. It's a lot bigger than Sony's AIBO, and it's designed to carry loads right alongside infantry troopers as they cross rough terrain. Next step: advanced leg-lifting algorithms.
  • Robot Racecar Swims Upstream. It's one thing to get a robot to fly through the air or crawl around on the ground. The air is mostly devoid of obstacles; on the ground, the obstacles are pretty numerous but at least you're only moving on roughly one plane.

Strategic Weapons & Missile Defense

nuke
  • Russia's Bulava Missile Gets Production Go-Ahead. Russia's navy chief Admiral Vladimir Marossin says the new Bulava-M intercontinental nuclear missile, with features designed to evade ABM defenses, has been given the serial production go-ahead.

Supply & Support

AIR_Tornado_Maintenance_Nose.jpg
Tornado maintenance
(click to view full)
  • Thumbs up for UK's new maintenance contracts. In our June briefing, we talked about Britain's new approach of paying for available vehicles & aircraft, not parts and hours. The national auditor has taken a hard look - and says it's working.
  • DTCI. Take a system where hundreds of bases and depots contract locally for transportation and freight. Figure out how to turn it into a centralized system for 1/3 of military cargo shipments within the USA that will use corporate 3PL principles, save money, and improve service. Good luck to the US military, because they're trying to do exactly that with this recent contract award. And the winner is...

Policy & Doctrine

PUB RAND 2007 Airlift Capabilities COIN
  • Israel: Si vis pacem... With rumors of war from Iran and Syria on the horizon, Israel has issued a stream of formal requests to re-equip its Air Force with bombs and missiles. It has also considered the lessons of the last proxy wart in Lebanon, and laid its multi-year "Tefen" military procurement plan in response.
  • Counter-Insurgency Airlift. Counter-insurgency and stabilization fights have some unique characteristics that affect the kind of airlift support required. RAND explains, and looks at the current US transport fleet. Is it properly set up for this job?
  • A COIN for Blackwater. The astronomical cost of operating high-end fighter jets as surveillance and light attack planes is starting to renew a niche for cheaper counter-insurgency aircraft. Private sector security forces have noticed.
  • U.S. Technology? No Thanks. The only way to resolve technology access and U.S. government export restrictions imposed by ITAR is by "not including any U.S.-sourced technology into our products," said the President of the Aerospace and Defense Industries Association of Europe (ASD). Hate to say we told you so...
  • UK MoD's bid for savings. Buying office supplies isn't exciting. But when you buy them using the largest-ever Public Sector reverse auction, and achieve the greatest savings ever by using an auction process, that's something.
  • Sarkozy's Defense Plans Stumble. France's new President Sarkozy came into office promising a serious boost to French defense spending, but when an expected Parliamentary landslide fell short, he appears to have recalibrated his plans.
  • CSAR-X: Rescue Me! America's combat rescue helicopter program is in trouble. Beset by ongoing political and quasi-legal challenges, the USAF has tried to power its choice through against all opposition. Will they be shot down - and if so, who will come get them? DID coverage | AW on rotor downwash | a Project Sandblaster solution?

2 Comments

I have given you a HT here

and here

With a few thoughts.

Thanks for that. The video was useful, so I added a link in the briefing.

By the way, the reason the video is using FLIR infared imaging is that the gunships are often restricted to night operations. A C-130 flying in slow circles (guns are only on one side) makes for quite a $100+ million target - even if any 14.5mm machine gun that hits it may not survive long to enjoy it.

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