26 July 2007

July 2007 News

In this month’s issue:

1) Nonkinetic weapons arm U.S. and foes

2) Bandwidth, Not Unmanned Aircraft, Needs Attention, General Says

3) Air Force Training UAE to Operate AOC

4) F/A-18E/F To Get New Air Combat Sensor

5) Hot War Seen From Cool `Crow's Nest'

6) Air operations center opens at Tyndall

7) Air Force Unveils First-Ever CONUS "WARFIGHTING" CAOC

8) Boeing-Lockheed Martin Conduct First SDB II Flight Test

9) AESA comm capabilities link demonstrated

1) Nonkinetic weapons arm U.S. and foes

Aviation Week & Space Technology 06/18/2007

Author: David A. Fulghum

Direct military action could become a diminishing part of the next-generation, U.S. and enemy arsenals.

In fact, U.S. military planners have already reached out to senior industry officials in finding new, subtle and more intense ways to apply pressure while allowing foes to back away from a confrontation.

"If I'm asked to come up with a solution to a military event, I'm going to bring all forces to bear," says Lt. Gen. Chip Utterback, 13th Air Force commander. "That may include bringing in my friends from Bank of America to help find an innovative solution to diverting the enemy, [that does not include] a blockade or restriction on sales." The basic idea is to offer a way to defuse the situation and provide a face-saving off-ramp for a potential adversary.

"A banking system is vulnerable to network attack," he says. "If you could bring economic pressure to bear--I'm talking about shutting it down--in a disciplined, organized and integrated fashion, just like we build a [bombing] campaign, it could have as much impact as B-52s and F-22s."

The lure and threat of cyberwarfare has also led to an information operations squadron being switched earlier this year from Air Combat Command to Pacaf's Maj. Richard Bong Air and Space Operations Center (AOC), says its commander, Col. Mike Boera.

"We [are putting] an IO cell on the floor in the AOC so that they bring their skills directly to the fight," Boera says.

Classification has often kept intelligence from getting to warfighters that need it or need cyber-weapons employed in their behalf. But Boera thinks the walls are falling.

"It's still difficult, but progress has been made so that the players that need the capabilities know they're there," he says. "There's more conduits [into the IO world] than there used to be." Division chiefs that have to include nonkinetic capabilities in the air tasking order are informed, as are key members of the master attack planning and strategy teams that assemble plans of action. These plans are "briefed here, fully vetted and thought through," he says.

Many of the tools for such operations --cyber-, nonkinetic and nonlethal weapons--have great contemporary value because they don't blow up anything or kill bystanders. Cyberwarfare can range from electronic attack to invading computers to communicating to entire populations.

But there is a big, worrisome unknown about them.

"There are no rules of engagement and no legal basis from what can be done through electronic means," Utterback says. "Cyber war is incredibly important, but I'm going to sit down with my lawyers and talk about it."

He also intends working with his civilian contacts to determine how to avoid damaging critical functions unintentionally, and with his military specialists to think through how to think through battle damage assessment when nothing visible changes.

"You don't want to go after a target and by accident take down respirators in a hospital, the circuits for tele-surgery or a railroad system," Utterback says.

In the cyber world, China's Internet system is already notorious as the source or relay site for regular surveillance of and probing attacks against foreign computer systems, particularly those associated with the Pentagon.

The potential for damage was illustrated this spring when Russian spammers buried Estonia in a flood of unwanted digital data that clogged government, banking and newspaper web sites. Experts are sorting through the chaos for lessons learned from what's being called the first cyberwar.

Pacaf's 613th AOC, a critical communication and planning node for any regional military or natural emergency, is preparing for such attacks. It also has taken on the onerous task of sorting out what U.S. attacks do to foes.

"Our strategy team has taken on the challenge of ops assessment across the spectrum of operations," Boera says, including computer network, high-power microwave, nuclear electromagnetic pulse and other types of attack. "It's hard to come up with true, effects-based assessments of how we are doing in attack and defense. It's a work in progress. I look at it every week and put out an air ops directive that looks at how we've done."

If the AOC experiences a computer network attack, the staff has honed its ability to wipe programs and replace them within seconds, Boera says. There is a core staff of about 370 people that can expand to more than 1,000 personnel handling at least 1,300 sorties and possibly 2,500 sorties per day.

"Logic tells you that the more intrusive you become in electronic warfare, the more battle damage assessment you have to do," Utterback says. "Electronic attack [EA] is a realistic tactical tool with strategic implications. I think we'd be crazy not to look at high-power microwave capability both from an offensive and defensive sense. But, second and third order effects happen at the speed of light. You have to think them through before you pull the trigger. I'm not suggesting a cautious approach to EA, but rather a deliberate and disciplined effort with a strategic focus."

They also have a plan for the possibility that despite their efforts, an AOC somewhere in the region is disabled by earthquake, tsunami or missile attack. Plans are that each AOC has a partner somewhere in the U.S. that has its data stored and ready to re-create operations.

"We've just worked through a cooperative effort, using network-centric capabilities, to publish the air tasking order for another theater--Korea," Boera says. "The intent is survivability and robust backup capability. As the threat grows greater in the Pacific, my mission is to have backup capability [for Hawaii's AOC] in the AOC at Davis-Monthan AFB, Ariz." Moreover, he is looking at an international capability as well. "I'd love to have more computers here so that I could have systems loaded, ready to go for some of our bilateral partners like Japan and Australia."

2) Bandwidth, Not Unmanned Aircraft, Needs Attention, General Says

Defense Daily 06/05/2007

Author: Ann Roosevelt

While the services discuss who buys and operates unmanned aerial systems (UAS), it's the information that must reach those who need it that matters most, according to a top Army general.

"I'm more concerned about bandwidth," Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Richard Cody told reporters last month. "Nobody's working that. Bandwidth is not controlled by anybody."

It's not the aircraft, but the sensors, Cody said. The sensors produce the flow of data or real-time video combat troops on the ground can immediately use as well as information analysts use to compile intelligence products and add to databases for future reference that are vital to prosecuting the war on terror.

Meanwhile, the Joint Requirement Oversight Council is discussing a wide variety of UAS issues, Cody said.

While the services disagree on UAS, "there's room for compromise," Cody said. "I think the only time we're going to have a problem is when the war is off."

Today, all the services have their own assets, and share information, and soldiers, airmen, sailors and Marines have been able to work together doing the job in combat, he said. "If it's good enough for combat, it's good enough for everybody else."

A March 5 memo from the Air Force Chief of Staff to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, combatant commanders, and military service chiefs concerned designating the Air Force as executive agent for medium- and high-altitude UAS.

The Air Force believes appointing an executive agent for medium- and high-altitude UASs would achieve efficiencies in acquisition and enhance unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) interoperability by providing common architectures for data links and radios. Further, the Air Force contends that to make the best use of limited operational resources, all medium- and high-altitude UAVs assigned to Operation Iraqi Freedom, regardless of service, should be available to the Coalition Forces Air Component Commander for tasking to the highest operational priority at any given time.

At a mid-April hearing airing UAS service disagreements before the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) subcommittee on Air and Land Forces, the Army contended, among other things, that giving up the operational control of any of its UASs would offer more risk to tactical commanders.

Meanwhile, the House has its own ideas about UAS acquisition management and joint operations, expressed in its version of the FY '08 Defense Authorization Bill.

"The issue has not been adequately addressed for the past two years, potentially resulting in waste of limited resources and inefficient operational use of high value, limited UAS assets," the HASC report accompanying the bill said.

Further, the report said there might be potential benefits to a single service being given authorities and responsibilities as an executive agent to guide DoD's acquisition efforts "to include research, development, testing and evaluation activities; procurement; logistics; and training."

The UAS issue also would be addressed in a report required by the House-passed defense-authorization bill directing the Secretary of Defense to review and report on DoD roles and missions.

"The committee firmly believes that if the core competencies of the military services were clearly articulated and the requirements system were aligned with such competencies...that unintended duplication of effort, inoperability issues, and disagreements over authority for operational control of medium- and high-altitude UASs could be mitigated," the report said.

While awaiting that report, the bill directs the Secretary of Defense to present by March 1 a review of UAS-related capabilities to determine if designating a service as DoD executive agent for UAS would be the best way to go. The review also must include "a clear, objective assessment" of operational risk to each military service as a result of any changes.

However, until the reports are presented, nothing prevents the Secretary of Defense from appointing an Executive Agent for medium- and high-altitude unmanned aerial systems pending the outcome of the reports required by this bill and report on roles and missions.

3) Air Force Training UAE to Operate AOC

Inside the Air Force 06/15/2007

An Air Force team is helping train its counterparts in the United Arab Emirates so the Middle Eastern country's airmen are qualified to work in a theater-based coalition command and control facility, a service official tells Inside the Air Force.

Since April, an Air Force-led team has trained the UAE airmen in air and space control systems and procedures, said Lt. Col. Don Finley, commander of the 705th Training Squadron.

About 200 students are enrolled in intermediate- and advanced-level classes, Finley said. When classes conclude in December, the top 20 or so students with the best English speaking skills will go through instructor training.

The UAE air force built a mini air and space operations center (AOC) in a theater arts-like building using modern computers, displays and communication equipment.

"We think they're trying to be the leader of the GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council] in . . . command and control of air power," Finley said in a June 12 telephone interview from his offices at Hurlburt Field, FL.

"With their new airplanes and trying to learn the AOC business, we think they're well on their way to leading the GCC in that realm."

Founded in 1981, the GCC aims to "promote coordination between member states in all fields in order to achieve unity," according to the UAE ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum's Web site.

Member nations include the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Oman.

The AOC students work on the same systems used by U.S. airmen, however, the ones used by the UAE airmen are unclassified, Finley said. Now in its second year -- the training, which is part of an F-16 fighter foreign military sale agreement -- cost $3 million in 2006 and $3.8 million this year. Students -- some of whom are F-16 pilots -- are chosen by UAE air force leadership.

The UAE air force flies a version of the F-16 fighter that is newer than Air Force Falcons.

In the first year of exercises, the service team conducted five different three-week long training events -- which serve as familiarization courses -- with the foreign airmen, Finley said. At the end of the training in September 2006, senior UAE air force leadership requested a higher level of training that could give them the potential to work in a coalition AOC.

Today the United States does not have an AOC classified access agreement with the United Arab Emirates, so the country's airmen cannot work in a U.S. facility, Finley said.

"Hopefully we'll get them to the level where they'll be comfortable doing so" if they were permitted to work in a coalition facility, he said.

In addition to a coalition partnership, foreign airmen must speak English and have a security clearance in order to work in a U.S. operations center, Finley said.

The UAE airmen are getting introductory training in space operations, he said. Students receive lectures and participate in a number of review of concept drills. Every test scenario is virtual, so no live aircraft are ever part of the exercises.

Mid-level and senior UAE officers "absolutely think this the greatest thing," Finley said.

The U.S. instructors training the airmen include nine contractors from L3 Communications, two communications specialists and one Air Force official, he said. The same instructors also train Air Force personnel in AOC operations back in the United States.

While the AOC training is laying the foundations for the UAE air force, two other nations -- one in the Middle East and another in Asia, are interested in receiving the command and control training from the Air Force team -- Finley said. He declined to name the countries because discussions with the potential partner nations are ongoing, however, no agreements have been signed.

4) F/A-18E/F To Get New Air Combat Sensor

Aviation Week & Space Technology 06/04/2007

Author: Andy Nativi

The U.S. Navy wants to upgrade its F/A-18E/Fs with an infrared search-and-track system out of concern that increasingly sophisticated electronic jamming systems could thwart the fighter's radar system, leaving pilots "blinded" in air-to-air combat.

Although the service has been upgrading the fighter's radar, and the latest version (the APG-79 with active electronically scanned array) should have enhanced ability to nullify hostile jamming, Navy officials are worried about the proliferation of X-band electronic countermeasures systems, which could degrade radar performance. In particular, China's expansive spending on electronic warfare equipment is being carefully monitored. The service fears this build-up could compromise their own freedom to operate in the Pacific.

The addition of an infrared search-and-track system (IRST)--already standard on many Russian and western European fighters--would provide "spectral diversity" to the Navy. Even if the radar is jammed, a pilot would still be able to spot targets using the IR sensor. Also, the new subsystem could augment the radar by helping to detect hard-to-see targets, such as low- and slow-flying cruise missiles. Spotting such weapons can be a challenge for radars due to ground clutter, but missile engine exhaust plumes should be clearly visibly with the IRST.

The service is planning to field 150 of the new device on F/A-18E/F Block 2s in Fiscal Year 2012-13. Start-up development funds of $157.7 million are in the budget request now before Congress.

F/A-18 prime contractor Boeing has chosen Lockheed Martin to provide the sensor. A first prototype is set to be tested on a Super Hornet early next year through a company-funded risk reduction and capabilities demo effort. Enhanced versions of the AAS-42 electronics and optical units used on the F-14 (already available on South Korea's F-15K) will be repackaged in a modified 480-gal. fuel tank. The equipment will also feature an off-the-shelf thermal control unit.

Boeing opted for a podded solution to save money. "Originally, we considered integrating the IRST into the aircraft fuselage, on the upper nose, or on the gunbay doors, but these solutions required significant structural, electrical and cooling system modifications and, in both cases, called for relocating existing antennas," says Chris D. Wedewer, Boeing's F/A-18E/F IRST program manager. "We also investigated the possibility of putting an IRST pod on the right fuselage station, opposite the fuselage-mounted Raytheon [Advanced Targeting Forward-Looking Infrared] targeting pod, but this option came with too many operational limitations in terms of field of view," in particular when weapons are being carried, he adds.

Those limitations drove the decision to place the sensor on the centerline weapon station, traditionally the spot for the fuel tank. Since a fuel tank has already been cleared for that station, using such a device to house the IRST was seen as the next logical step. The IRST will also function as a fuel tank, with a part of a pod still able to accommodate 330 gal., Wedewer notes.

The main change to the external fuel tank will be to the front section, which will house the IRST. A fixed window will be installed, as well as a ram-air intake to provide air flow for the environment control system. The demonstrator system will provide a large air "scoop," but the operational version is supposed to be more streamlined.

One design challenge will be adjusting for weight-distribution center-of-gravity constraints. With most of the IRST hardware in the nose-section of the pod, that will not be easy and designers, as a fallback, are considering simply adding ballast in the rear section of the device to restore equilibrium. On the aircraft side, the installation addition of the IRST should be a non-issue if the F/A-18E/Fs have Advanced Mission Computers; a software upgrade is required, though.

Keeping the cost down--to around $2.5 million per pod--creates operational drawbacks, however. There are field-of-regard restrictions with this installation, which is why fighters generally have IRSR mounted on the radome. Such an installation may come in the future, Wedewer says. On the other hand, using a pod provides flexibility because they can be distributed among fleet users as needed. Initially, pods will likely be deployed with squadrons still flying the older APG-73 radar, which provides fewer counter-countermeasures capabilities than the newer model.

Pilots will have a choice of opting for the radar to cue the IRST or vice versa. A key advantage of IRST is that it remains passive, and by cross-cueing the two sensors a pilot can minimize use of the radar to just before firing a missile.

The IRST uses a long-wave sensor, operating in the 8-12-micron range for maximum detection. The device will provide targeting quality data, although not an imaging capability.

5) Hot War Seen From Cool `Crow's Nest'

New York Times 06/02/2007

Author: Associated Press

A U.S. AIR BASE, Southwest Asia (AP) -- ''We have a downed helo.''

The words, in bright type, riveted Ken Edwards to one of his five computer screens.

From his raised platform -- a ''crow's nest'' at the heart of a cavernous operations room known as the ''Kay-Ock'' -- the Air Force lieutenant colonel glanced up at an electronic wall display. The towering map was alive with ghostly blue figures flitting through its skies, splotches of ''friendly'' troops spread blue among its towns, and now an urgent yellow rectangle, tagged ''TIC,'' troops in contact.

The ever-changing picture was the war in Iraq -- digitized. The TIC marked the site of a U.S. helicopter crash north of Baghdad on Monday. The nervous blue figures were aircraft rushing to the spot.

It's the American way of war, 21st-century style: A life-or-death drama playing out among the palms and heat of the Iraqi countryside was being mirrored in the air-conditioned calm of this secretive military nerve center 800 miles away. By day's end -- Memorial Day 2007, when President Bush loomed large on another giant screen here eulogizing America's war dead -- 10 more would join what he called a ''new generation of heroes.''

Inside the CAOC -- the Combined Air and Space Operations Center -- they weren't listening to Bush's address. The dozens of Air Force officers were too busy at their keyboards orchestrating hundreds of flights over Iraq and Afghanistan -- by strike aircraft, transports and tankers, surveillance planes and now a rescue mission.

''I hardly get a chance to see anything here,'' Edwards said over his shoulder when a reporter pointed out Bush, bigger than life on the TV screen above.

The Air Force had allowed a journalist a glimpse of the CAOC in action, on condition that no security-sensitive information be disclosed and the host country not be identified because of its sensitivity to being spotlighted as the site of a large U.S. air base.

The vast, state-of-the-art CAOC opened just before the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, in a three-story-high space of some 20,000 square feet, a ''warehouse'' where 500 military personnel work in round-the-clock shifts to oversee the daily ATO -- the Air Tasking Order whose flight assignments last Monday covered some 170 pages.

Across the darkened floor, the faces of Air Force professionals in jumpsuits glowed in the light of computer monitors as they quietly did their jobs in 11 ''cells,'' from space satellite reconnaissance, to midair refueling, to search and rescue.

On the soaring wall above, a dozen outsized video screens displayed weather forecasts, video from Predator surveillance drones aloft in the war zones, even a view of Iraq from space, watching for the telltale flame of an anti-aircraft missile launch.

Edwards' Combat Operations unit is charged with real-time execution of the ATO drawn up by Combat Plans, a division whose informal symbol, a house of cards, denotes the fragility of each day's well-laid plans.

This day was no different.

At ''1421 Zulu,'' 6:21 p.m. Baghdad time, Edwards spotted the ''helo down'' alert on one of the 13 military chat groups he monitors, computer forums linking aviation operators.

A two-man OH-58 scout helicopter from the Army's Task Force Lightning had ''put down for an unknown reason'' in Iraq's embattled Diyala province, he explained.

Edwards, 47, an A-10 fighter pilot from Potomac, Md., quickly determined that Baghdad air staff had diverted a pair of home base-bound F-16 fighters to the scene. But the Air Force jets, low on fuel, soon gave way to ''Voodoo 51,'' a mission of two Navy F-18s pulled from a job nearby to ''overwatch'' the downed helicopter site.

Within minutes, one of the unmanned Predators, code-named ''Judge,'' flew into the area and began sending live video to a CAOC wall screen, and a small television at Edwards' elbow. But the drone, crisscrossing above date-palm groves and Diyala brushland, somehow couldn't find the crash site.

''A QRF is on its way!'' an Army liaison shouted up to Edwards.

Task Force Lightning had dispatched a QRF -- quick reaction force -- of six Bradley fighting vehicles and Humvees, 24 soldiers. Unconfirmed word came that the OH-58 apparently was brought down by enemy fire. Then Edwards learned that the two crew had been lifted out by a rescue helicopter.

Still the pressure mounted, now to protect the undefended chopper and its arms and equipment from the insurgents.

''Sir, I need to take this Predator away!''

It was Edwards' senior intelligence aide, Maj. Jason Arnold, across the operations platform, reminding his boss that Judge had been pulled off a priority mission nearby tracking a ''high-value'' insurgent suspect. ''They're going to get antsy,'' said Arnold, 32, of Brighton, Mich.

Edwards wasn't moved. ''Damn, I'd really like to see if we can get eyes on that bird,'' he told Arnold. ''I don't want anyone messing with that aircraft.'' The Predator stayed in the hunt.

Then, at 7:16 p.m. Baghdad time, a new murmur arose on the floor: A TIC had developed in Afghanistan.

Intense but cool, the bespectacled Edwards turned to this new contingency, meticulously taking notes on a small pad while also checking back on the Diyala situation.

Minutes later, that situation turned worse. The CAOC was informed that the two helicopter crewmen were dead.

The Predator remained overhead, looking for signs of an ambush by roadside ''improvised explosive devices.''

''The important thing now is to make sure the guys coming in the QRF don't get hit by IEDs,'' Edwards said.

At this point, with the ground force reported less than 15 minutes from the chopper, and as a sandstorm built outside the CAOC in the desert day's dying heat, the reporter had to leave the crow's nest.

In the coming hours, at CAOC and in Baghdad, the full extent of the Diyala losses would emerge. The ground force was, indeed, hit by a roadside bomb or bombs, and six of its men were dead -- eight killed in all, out of 10 U.S. fatalities in Iraq this bloody Memorial Day. It was confirmed that the OH-58 had been shot out of the sky by insurgent fire.

''They did not want war, but they answered the call when it came,'' Bush said in his holiday speech, speaking of this new roll call of American dead.

In a war as unpopular at home as any America has waged, the world's greatest military and technological power has been fought to a standstill by Iraqis taping together makeshift bombs.

The military professionals at the CAOC and other critical posts, meanwhile, have used the four years of war to hone skills and perfect technology, to prepare for more -- in this case in a new, next-generation CAOC scheduled to open in 2008 on this low-profile base.

6) Air operations center opens at Tyndall
by Master Sgt. Linda E Welz
1st Air Force Public Affairs

6/4/2007 - TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (AFPN) -- First Air Force celebrated the opening of the 601st Air and Space Operations Center here June 1 with a ceremony and tour of the 37,000-square-foot, $30 million combat center.

First Air Force, which also serves under the North American Aerospace Defense Command as the continental U.S. NORAD Region, provides air security and air sovereignty defense for the continental United States. Airmen at the new AOC plan, direct and assess air and space operations for NORAD and the United States Northern Command.

Conceived in the aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, the state-of-the-art AOC further enables 1st Air Force Airmen to protect America's airspace from attack as well as coordinate life-saving relief during natural and man-made disasters.

Debra Burlingame, co-founder of 9/11 Families for a Safe and Strong America, and director of the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation, served as the ceremony's keynote speaker. Her brother, Charles Burlingame III, a retired military aviator, was the pilot of American Airlines Flight 77 that was hijacked by terrorists and flown into the Pentagon.

Ms. Burlingame said when times are difficult, Americans pull together as a nation toward a common goal.

"We are a country of achievers who dream big and fight hard to the end," said Ms. Burlingame. "We love to win (and) this spectacular new facility is here because people will never again let a tragedy like 9/11 happen; not on our watch."

As the newest combat center in the war on terrorism, the AOC operations floor employs a high-tech, two-story, 16-screen data wall in a media-based theater reminiscent of a space-age control center.

America's AOC employs the Theater Battle Management Core Systems that the joint forces air component commander uses to task and re-task theater assets by providing real-time feeds to pilots, navigators and air battle managers, allowing them to make better-informed decisions.

It also employs, through its Western and Northeastern Defense Sectors, the Battle Control System-Fixed program, to collect input from a network of radars to alert operators of airborne activity in continental U.S. air space. BCS-F provides key technology for the protection of the sovereign airspace over the continental U.S., Canada and surrounding waters.

Gen. Ronald Keys, the Air Combat Command commander, spoke of the many sorties, evacuations, rescues, firefighting missions and other missions that the command had completed since the 2001 terrorist attack.

He called the opening of the new AOC a red-letter day.

"We stand here on the first day of hurricane season knowing well that these Florida Air National Guard warriors are on the job," said General Keys.

"Americans can sleep well knowing their Air Force is awake and engaged here at America's AOC."

Maj. Gen. Hank Morrow, the 1st AF commander, called the AOC opening another step in the continuing mission to keep America safe.

"As we continue to hone America's technological edge we are able to strengthen our homeland defenses and bring military and civilian authorities together under on roof," he said. "Our team is an operational example of how our total force is engaged to keep our skies safe."

7) Air Force Unveils First-Ever CONUS "WARFIGHTING" CAOC

5/9/2007 - Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz. --

Headquarters Twelfth Air Force and Air Forces Southern unveiled the U.S. Air Forces' newest Falconer, the Gen. James H. Doolittle Combined Air and Space Operations Center, today during a ribbon-cutting ceremony.

The CAOC is the "nerve-center" for the Combined or Joint Forces Air Component Commander (C/JFACC) and serves as the hub of all air and space activities during combat and humanitarian operations.

"This world-class facility will serve as the home of the only continuously operational Falconer in the continental United States -- we're proud to be facilitators of such an essential weapons system," said Lt. Gen. Norman Seip, commander, Twelfth Air Force and Air Forces Southern.

The 612th Air Operations Group runs the centers day-to-day activities including disseminating and monitoring air tasking orders for on going operation in Central and South America.

The CAOC serves as the air and space component to U.S. Southern Command. The command and control capabilities of the new facility provides the Southern Command commander a tremendous capability. Staffed by a total force of Airmen, Soldiers, Sailors and Marines it is responsible for maintaining the air picture for the Southern Command, in Central and South America, as well as Caribbean operations.

"This newest CAOC will provide a tremendous capability to plan, command, control, execute, and assess both U.S. and coalition air and space operations throughout Southern Command's area of operations," said Col. John Marselus, CAOC and 612th Air Operations Group commander.

The new facility is one of five "Falconer" CAOC weapons systems used to support geographic combatant commanders worldwide-- this designates an air operations center that is fully connected and capable of facilitating air, space and information operations worldwide. The other Falconer CAOCs are located in Southwest Asia, Europe, Korea and Hawaii. Each Air Operations Center has responsibility over a specified geographic location and mission.

"The Combined Air Operations Center weapons system at Davis-Monthan is designed to support operations worldwide," added General Seip. "This CAOC is up and running helping to execute operations in the US Southern Command region, but we're ready for any contingency."

8) Boeing-Lockheed Martin Conduct First SDB II Flight Test

Defense Daily 06/08/2007

Author: Michael Sirak

Boeing [BA] and teammate Lockheed Martin [LMT] late last month successfully completed the first flight of the Small Diameter Bomb Increment II (SDB II) system that they are offering to the Air Force as a means of attacking moving targets, the Chicago-based company announced on Wednesday.

The team is competing against a Raytheon [RTN]-led consortium for the rights to supply the SDB II system, a winged, 250-pound-class, all-weather, air- launched weapon, which is envisioned for fielding around the middle of next decade. The Air Force expects to choose the winning design by late 2009.

The free flight of the Boeing-Lockheed Martin design took place on May 22 at Eglin AFB, Fla., after successful completion of ground tests and captive-carry flights there, Boeing said. An Air Force F-15E fighter aircraft released the bomb, which thereupon opened its control fins and wings and flew its planned mission, the company said.

Boeing said the flight test demonstrated the compatibility of the SDB II with the BRU-61 pneumatic carriage system, which was originally developed for the now-operational first increment of the SDB (SDB I) that the company builds. The test also showed the compatibility with the SDB logistics system and the SBD I air vehicle and autopilot design, the company said.

"As we expected, our SDB II air vehicle and flight control system performance is excellent for the moving target version of SDB," Dan Jaspering, director of Direct Attack Weapons at Boeing Integrated Defense Systems, said of the flight test in the company's June 6 statement. "This allows us to focus on systems integration of Lockheed Martin's multi-mode seeker and our network data link system for the remainder of the reduction phase of the competition."

Raytheon told Defense Daily that it continues to work closely with the Air Force to provide "the best SDB II possible," but did not divulge if it has already flight tested its design or when it plans to do that.

"We are confident that we are executing very well to our SDB II development plan in all key areas: system performance and reliability, air vehicle, multi-mode seeker, software and total systems integration," a company spokesman said.

The SDB I has been operational since last October on the F-15E and has been used in combat in Iraq. The bomb, which the Air Force designates the GBU-39, is designed to attack fixed and stationary relocatable targets with great accuracy in all weather and day or night. Its comparative small size allows a single aircraft to carry more munitions on a sortie and strike many more targets than is possible when carrying larger conventional bombs like Boeing's 500-pound Joint Direct Attack Munition.

The Air Force wants the SDB II to build upon the first increment by adding a terminal seeker and datalink so that the weapon can be employed against moving objects on land and at sea from standoff ranges. Originally Boeing won the winner-take-all rights to build SDB I and SDB II when the Air Force chose it over Lockheed Martin in the original SDB competition in 2003. But after the illegal activities of former senior Air Force procurement officer Darleen Druyun came to light, the service agreed to recompete the SDB II in response to a successful protest by Lockheed Martin with the Government Accountability Office.

Boeing and Lockheed Martin then joined forces on the SDB II. Last April, the Air Force awarded risk-reduction contracts to the Boeing-Lockheed Martin and Raytheon teams to mature their respective designs until the downselect (Defense Daily, April 18, 2006 and May 4, 2006).

Boeing leads the partnership with Lockheed Martin, supplying the air vehicle, which is a derivative of the SDB I airframe, and the bomb's datalink. Lockheed Martin provides the multi-mode seeker for terminal guidance.

Randy Bigum, vice president of Strike Weapons at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, said a system that can strike moving targets in all weather from standoff distances is a much-needed capability.

"We will enhance the capability of Boeing's proven SDB I system with the addition of our advanced multi-mode seeker, resulting in the best possible SDB II system," he said.


9) AESA comm capabilities link demonstrated
Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 06/14/2007


Northrop Grumman Corp., L-3 Communications and Lockheed Martin Corp. have successfully completed the first in-flight communications link with an active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, Northrop announced June 13.

"We took our targeting radar and turned it into a "talking" radar by enabling it to transmit and receive unprecedented amounts of information," said Teri Marconi, vice president of Northrop Grumman's combat avionics business unit. The Air Force has been promoting the radar as a possible communications sensor. The Radar Common Data Link (R-CDL) represents an advanced concept and approach in providing a high-speed pipeline to offload data and imagery from a tactical platform. R-CDL uses the AESA radar's fire control transmitter and antenna to perform high-data rate, two-way communications at
long ranges.

Synthetic aperture radar map imagery and streaming video were relayed from a Northrop Grumman BAC 1-11 test aircraft to an L-3 Communications ground station. During the mission, the team transmitted and received in full duplex at 274-megabits per second burst rate. The airborne and ground terminals used off-the-shelf L-3 programmable modems with the addition of a new R-CDL waveform.

June 2007 News

In this month’s issue:

1) Beijing close to buying Backfire bombers

2) Military leaders devise programs for moving-target munitions

3) ISR general calls for emphasis on sensors

4) U.S. mulls ending troubled Lockheed missile

5) Army Aviation Manned/Unmanned Teaming Shortens Sensor To Shooter Time, General Says

6) Air Force Aligns Air Intelligence Agency Under Air Staff's ISR Directorate

7) JFCOM Experiment Considers Information Sharing

8) Military challenges demand rethinking of military, RAND says

9) AIM-120 Recast As Ballistic Missile Interceptor

10) New JSOW variant seeks moving maritime targets

11) ISR director: Analysis, sharing key to intel

1) Beijing close to buying Backfire bombers
Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 05/24/2007


China probably will order 10 to 20 Tupolev 22M supersonic bombers as soon as this year and may build them under license, a Japanese newspaper has reported. The move will bolster Beijing's efforts to deter U.S. intervention in any Chinese attempt to forcibly recover Taiwan. Russia used the Tu-22M Backfire as a naval strike aircraft primarily designed to attack U.S. aircraft carrier battle groups. The Sankei newspaper, citing Japanese and Taiwanese military sources, also said an anti-ship version of the Dongfeng 21 ballistic missile will have infrared terminal guidance. Radar would have been an alternative homing system.

Development of such a DF-21 version has been reported from time to time over the past few years. It would present a great challenge to naval air-defense systems, although such a ballistic missile would itself have the difficulty of getting distant targeting data before launch and, as its maneuvering warhead descended, discriminating one ship from another.

Special concern

The combination of cruise-missile carrying Tu-22Ms and ship-homing DF-21s is a particular concern. A simultaneous assault by both types of weapon would present special problems for any single defending ship if its radar could not handle low and close threats while at the same time looking for high and distant
ones - a reported limitation of the U.S. Navy's Aegis system. But several ships working together could each attend to a different threat sector. Fixed-target DF-21s have been deployed since the 1980s. They are credited with carrying a 600 kilogram re-entry vehicle more than 1,800 kilometers (1,100
miles). The Tu-22M has an unrefueled combat radius of 2,000-2,500 kilometers. China has been trying to buy the aircraft from Russia since 1993.
- Kazuki Shiibashi

2) Military leaders devise programs for moving-target munitions
Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 05/02/2007


Enemies in Iraq and Afghanistan have made their mobility a key skill, so U.S. military leaders have documented a need for greater capability to attack moving targets and are moving forward with programs to adapt existing weapons, officials said recently.

"Based upon feedback from the combatant commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan - and subsequently approved as a capability gap documented by the Joint Chiefs of Staff - the department of the Navy plans to improve our ability to attack and strike moving targets," said William Balderson, deputy assistant Navy for air programs.

Two programs in particular seemed directed to the effort: the Direct Attack Moving Target Capability (DATCM) and the Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW). But the efforts face collateral-damage concerns, a growing issue on irregular battlefields as well as on Capitol Hill. The Navy and Marine Corps' fiscal 2008 budget requests $29.1 million next fiscal year, and $214.5 million across the five-year defense spending plan, for the DAMTC program. It would modify the existing inventory of "direct-attack" Joint Direct Attack Munition and Laser Guided Bomb weapons for a dual-mode weapon that is capable of hitting moving targets up to 70 miles per hour, Balderson and Bruce Clingan, the Navy's director for air warfare, told the Senate Armed Services airland subcommittee on April 26.

An open acquisition will be carried out "expeditiously to respond to an urgent warfighter need" for a fixed-wing aircraft-based moving target weapon," Balderson said. Initial operating capability is slated for FY '09. "This low-cost, rapid integration program adds significant capability while leveraging the existing industrial base to procure 17,720 DAMTC weapons," according to Clingan.

Meanwhile, a JSOW C-1 version will provide a moving target capability to the standoff JSOW via the addition of a datalink and guidance software improvements to the JSOW-C variant, they said. The budget includes $24.9 million to continue development of the "network-enabled" JSOW-C-1 to fill a critical mission capability gap against moving ships at tactically significant ranges.

The request also outlines $131.3 million to procure 421 JSOW-Cs, which employ an imaging infrared seeker, GPS/INS and an augmenting charge with a follow-through penetrator bomb for use against hardened targets. Inventories remain below approved Non-Nuclear Ordnance Requirements, they said.

But production of other JSOW variants are still being deferred as the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the services try to resolve unexploded battlefield ordnance issues that are a concern to U.S. officials and allies, the officials testified. In February, Democratic Sens. Diane Feinstein (Calif.) and Patrick Leahy (Vt.) introduced legislation that would ban the use of U.S.-made cluster bombs in civilian areas. While the proposal highlighted cluster bombs, it also focused attention on collateral damage concerns from "dud" munitions among populations.

3) ISR general calls for emphasis on sensors

Air Force Times

By Paul Richfield - Staff writer
Posted : Friday May 25, 2007 5:30:04 EDT

OMAHA, Neb.America’s national defense spending emphasis should migrate from weapons to sensor platforms, but “fifth-generation” manned fighter aircraft are still needed, according to the three-star Air Force general who oversees the service’s ISR programs.

Speaking Thursday at the first 55th Wing ISR Symposium in Omaha, Neb., Lt. Gen David Deptula, the deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, said “ISR will lead the fight in the year 2025, and will be the key technology to get us from here to there.”

“We can’t imagine what perils await us in the future,” Deptula told the gathering of intelligence officers, flight crews and defense contractors. “All we’re certain of is that the magnitude and speed of change will be the defining aspects of the future.”

“The enemy is evolving and adapting, and is highly malleable, like a liquid that gravitates toward our weakest points and defies our efforts to hold it in our grasp. Infesting urban areas and hiding among the civilian population, just finding the enemy has become our greatest challenge.”

Meeting this challenge, he said, will require a decisive shift from a Cold War mind-set, which placed ISR in a distant, supporting role: “Then, we had the luxury of an adversary that was monolithic and predictable, and peering over the Iron Curtain was all we had to do.”

Deptula said the Cold War left the U.S. with a “shooter-heavy footprint,” that is no longer applicable to today’s fight. What’s needed now, he said, is an investment that makes ISR platforms and programs the centerpiece of the “global war on terror.”

“Today’s enemy is not massing on the other side of the Fulda Gap,” he said. “One of their primary goals is to deny us a target and negate our firepower advantage, so ISR now makes up the majority of our current operations.”

We still need “fifth-generation” fighters such as the F-22, Deptula said, and need to discard the idea that such aircraft are just air-to-air combat platforms. Their capabilities, in his view, run the gamut of Air Force ISR, electronic warfare and precision strike missions. “It’s not just an F,” he said. “It’s also an F/A, an EA, an AC, RC and a G.”

Systems already in the inventory, such as targeting pods used for “nontraditional ISR” are not being sufficiently exploited, according to Deptula.

“We need to capitalize on the investment we’ve already made,” he said, adding that the top priority should be to eliminate ISR as a “low-density, high-demand” asset. “A forward-leaning strategy should be our goal — ISR has never been more important than it is today.”

4) U.S. mulls ending troubled Lockheed missile

Reuters News 05/17/2007

Author: Jim Wolf

(C) Reuters Limited 2006.

WASHINGTON, May 17 (Reuters) - The U.S. Air Force is considering killing a troubled $5.8 billion-dollar Lockheed Martin Corp. cruise missile as well as other options "to get this program well," the service's top weapons buyer said Thursday.

"Termination is one of the things on the table" for the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile, Sue Payton, assistant secretary for acquisition, told a breakfast session.

"We don't want to throw out the baby with the bath water here," she said. "At this point, we do not think that we have a design flaw."

The missile, known as JASSM, is designed to destroy high-value, well-defended, fixed and relocatable targets.

Its GPS en-route guidance system and terminal imaging infrared seeker are supposed to provide pinpoint accuracy in difficult environments.

Payton said the Air Force would know more about recent flight-test problems in 30 days after reviewing data.

Lockheed Martin had no immediate comment on Payton's remarks.

But it said anomalies were experienced with four JASSM weapons test-flown in early May as part of an Air Force weapons evaluation program.

"An investigation is under way to identify the most likely cause of those anomalies," said Don McClain, a spokesman for Lockheed's Missiles and Fire Control business unit in Orlando, Florida. "Until this process is completed, it would be purely speculative to comment on potential factors contributing to the anomalies."

In a move unrelated to the test failures, the Defense Department told Congress in April that the program's costs had increased enough to require a full review of whether it should continue.

By law, the Pentagon's review must assess whether other solutions may be available to meet the mission and, failing this, affirm that the program's management is sound enough to proceed without further problems.

Lockheed has blamed the JASSM breach of a law known as Nunn-McCurdy on a range of factors, including procurement of an extended-range variant, which more than doubled the overall JASSM buy; previous Congressional budget cuts; and implementation of reliability improvements.

"Lockheed Martin has maintained its cost and schedule, and the reported budget increases have come principally from growth in the quantity of missiles ordered and additional capability requested by the Air Force," McClain said.

President Bush has asked Congress for a total of $213.3 million for the JASSM program in fiscal 2008 starting Oct. 1, including $201.1 million for Air Force procurement and $12.2 million for research and testing.

Lockheed shares were down 75 cents at $98.89 in late- morning New York Stock Exchange trade.

5) Army Aviation Manned/Unmanned Teaming Shortens Sensor To Shooter Time, General Says

Helicopter News 05/15/2007 Author: Ann Roosevelt

ATLANTA--The Army's teaming of manned and unmanned aviation assets is producing effects better than the service ever expected, the Vice Chief of Staff of the Army said recently.

"We're getting persistent stare on the battlefield in ways that we never imagined," Gen. Richard Cody said in the keynote address to the Army Aviation Association of America conference here.

Back in the early 1990s, the Army was talking about teaming unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) with rotorcraft. However, technology was not ready.

The Army built Task Force ODIN (Observe, Detect, Identify and Neutralize) to go after targets such as bomb makers, bomb emplacers and suicide bombers, Cody said. It is built around a C-12 aircraft with special mission package, and a Warrior UAV with special mission packages and command and control systems to get a common operating picture of the air and ground.

The idea was to shorten the sensor to shooter link.

What the service found out was that linking a C-12, Warrior and AH-64 Apache and OH-58 Kiowa Warrior helicopters didn't necessarily mean helicopters in the air patrolling and seeking targets. The helicopters could be on the ground, on strip alert.

"We've been able to increase the survivability of our aviation fleet and our ground convoys because of the quick sensor sharing and common operating systems," Cody said.

While Cody wouldn't cite specifics, nor share tactics, techniques or procedures, he has seen the effects on videos, read the reports and talked to the soldiers.

"Suffice it to say, the routes they looked at, the enemy doesn't know they're up there," he said. The enemy can't hear or see the UAVs.

In the tactical operations center, the combat aviation brigades have situational awareness and understanding of what the manned or unmanned system is saying, and knowledge of where aviation assets are.

"I'm going from sensor-to-shooter killing in less than five minutes," Cody said.

"We are on the cusp of fully understanding how to get persistent stare," he said.

6) Air Force Aligns Air Intelligence Agency Under Air Staff's ISR Directorate

Defense Daily 05/16/2007

Author: Michael Sirak

The Air Force's Air Intelligence Agency (AIA) will formally have a new name and parent organization come June 8, the service announced on Monday.

As part of sweeping changes that the Air Force announced earlier this year to optimize its intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) functions, AIA will become the Air Force ISR Agency and report directly to the Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for ISR (A2) in Air Force headquarters as a field operating agency, the service said. Previously, the AIA was aligned under Air Combat Command.

"The realignment of the newly designated, Air Force Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Agency under Air Force A2 will underscore the nature of ISR as an Air Force- wide enterprise," Lt. Gen. David Deptula, deputy chief of staff for ISR, said in a statement.

The move will give the agency direct access to the Air Force's senior intelligence officials, the service said.

Deptula said the agency "will now be responsible for broadening [its] scope beyond the signal intelligence arena to include all elements of ISR. The intent is to provide unmatched ISR capability to our nation's decision makers and combatant commanders."

The renamed agency will remain at Lackland AFB, Texas, but its force structure will include the 70th Intelligence Wing and the Air Force Cryptologic Office at Fort George G. Meade, Md.; the National Air and Space Intelligence Center at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio; and the Air Force Technical Applications Center at Patrick AFB, Fla.

The Air Force Information Operations Center at Lackland, formerly a part of AIA, was reassigned on May 1 to 8th Air Force at Barksdale AFB, La., to fall under the service's new cyberspace command.

"The organizational realignments will enable the Air Force ISR Agency to transform our approach to ISR by managing systems, programs, and personnel through a capabilities-based construct, rather than focus on ownership or myriad unconnected budget lines," said Brig. Gen. Jan-Marc Jouas, vice commander of Air Force ISR Agency.

The Air Force announced its plans to transform its ISR operations in January, although service officials say the conceptual work began internally last August (Defense Daily, Jan. 19). The goal is to make the Air Force's ISR enterprise a preeminent organization, with the most respected personnel and the most valued capability by addressing how the Air Force provides ISR to joint warfighters as well as how it is organized to do this and how it trains and fosters a cadre of ISR professionals, service officials have said.

"This realignment is the result of nine months of hard work by ISR professionals in the Air Force and civilian sector," Maj. Gen. Craig Koziol, Air Force ISR Agency commander, said of the changes to his organization. "Air Force ISR transformation will allow us to treat intelligence as an Air Force-wide enterprise, coordinate and integrate ISR capabilities, and present those capabilities to joint warfighters and national users."

Koziol said he intends for the agency to become the focal point for Air Force ISR development and modernization.

"Our team must keep one thing in mind though; this is about delivering the best trained forces and most effective capabilities and how we can conduct integrated ISR operations, with precision at all levels, for air, space and cyberspace missions," he said.

"It's also about organizing, training, equipping, presenting and integrating multi-intelligence all-source ISR capabilities for joint forces commanders through the coalition/joint force air component commander," Koziol continued. "I am also looking forward to developing even stronger relationships with the combat support agencies within the national intelligence community--these organizations continue to play a vital role across the entire warfighting spectrum."

The changes with the agency are important steps in moving toward seamlessly integrated tactical and national ISR operations, he said.

7) JFCOM Experiment Considers Information Sharing

Defense Daily International 05/18/2007

Author: Ann Roosevelt

An early insight from the U.S. Joint Forces Command Noble Resolve 07-1 experiment is how to properly balance the needs of operational security and the need to share information between the military and homeland security personnel, according to an official.

There's a need to work on this issue because there's "a dynamic tension between [operational security] OPSEC and the need to share information...especially between DoD and some of our state and local responders," Mark Wolfe, deputy director for the Noble Resolve campaign, told sister publication Defense Daily in a recent interview.

Noble Resolve grew from an Army-JFCOM war game in 2006 finding a need for homeland defense experiments. It combined a terrorist scenario--a ship heading toward the United States from Africa with a radiological device on board, with a hurricane descending on the Tidewater area of Virginia.

The April 23-27 experiment at JFCOM facilities in Suffolk, Va., included at least a dozen coalition partners, representatives from the combatant commands, Coast Guard, Department of Energy, FEMA, Port of Norfolk, Maersk Line, the city of Portland, Ore., Defense Threat Reduction agency, University of Virginia, the Virginia Modeling, Analysis and Simulation Center and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Early results can be expected by the end of the month with an executive report to follow, officials said.

Wolfe said part of the problem in studying maritime domain awareness with homeland security and homeland defense is how to share information among all the interested players, and at what level of security.

Some nations, such as Finland and Sweden, have an excellent cooperative network sharing information constantly on the Baltic Sea, he said. Others do not.

Eighty percent of the world's cargo is traded on some 50,000 ships. This trade is under regulated and not well protected, while economic damage could be enormous for a small terrorist investment.

Wolfe said one insight was that "we don't need an enormous 'uber alles' type of C2 structure to be top down driven like a U.N.-driven type of organization for maritime awareness...maybe just a system of systems," Wolfe said. "We're going to expand that look as we go into [Noble Resolve] NR 2, looking at a baseline idea on maritime domain awareness."

JFCOM's sophisticated modeling tool, called G2, looked at the processing of information among the parties involved in the experiment.

"G2 looked at all sorts of different emergency management and first responder and DoD and DHS types of information," Wolfe said.

Noble Resolve 07-1 worked with the Virginia Emergency Response Team Exercise (VERTX) fusion center, a fairly new construct, Wolfe said. There are some half-dozen of them in the United States, mostly funded by the Department of Homeland Security. The center had homeland security representatives, Virginia State Police, FBI, law enforcement, and analysts to review at all sorts of information flowing in.

Another early indicator, and a positive insight, was that "these fusion centers probably do need to have information on what's going on," Wolfe said.

Some "amazing" lessons are being learned, he said. For example, fusion centers and the information sharing that needs to go on: "a lot of eyes opened with that. You want to be able to get ahead of the threat...especially a natural threat, to plan ahead properly...and make good sound decisions before event occurs."

One benefit of an experiment like Noble Resolve is that it "frees us up a lot, not tie our hands to [tactics, techniques and procedures] TTPs, allows us to discuss freely what we think we would do as a changing situation occurs," Wolfe said.

Now, there's a fairly sophisticated effort to get the information about the experiment out, officials said, because there's high interest across the nation and among various allies in the discussions and insights that will be forthcoming.

For example, the command is working with the association of Adjutant Generals and likely all the governors within the next few months.

Among the efforts that "opened everyone's eyes" was the use of the Joint Semi-Autonomous Forces (JSAF) tool that modeled the environment in 3-D, the effects of a hurricane in Hampton Roads, Va., how a tidal surge of 10 feet from the hurricane climbed the sides of buildings in nearby Norfolk. That type of tool can be used to help "plan evacuations, how to position your first responders--firemen police, construction, to assist folk," Wolfe said.

A long term JFCOM goal is to transition JSAF to those who need it. However, while the federal government knows how to share things among agencies, how to share it with states, or mayors, for example, have to be worked out. "Everyone understands it's the right thing to do."

JSAF is just one of the planks of the modeling and simulation consortium JFCOM is building to make a homeland defense/homeland security experiment environment, Wolfe said.

A Hurricane Prediction Tracker, shared by U.S. Northern Command, modeled the path and predicts hurricane effects. Such a tool helps officials, for example, determine at what stage traffic needs to be reversed out of the area, and how defense support to civil authorities fits, and where assets need to go.

JFCOM is adding complexity to its simulations and tools so states would be able to take advantage of them for planning.

Overall, Wolfe assessed Noble Resolve 7-01 as "a big success." Now planning is underway for future experiments, to include Noble Resolve 07-2 in August, and TOPOFF 4, a Department of Homeland Security exercise scheduled for October. The multi-year Noble Resolve experiment plans two more efforts in 2008.

Essentially, JFCOM believes policy should be a guide, not a hamper, and expects to work to rapidly transition learning from this experiment to those who would benefit.

8) Military challenges demand rethinking of military, RAND says

Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 05/21/2007

MORE RETHINKING: "Complex" military challenges facing the United States will require all four military services to rethink the way forces are manned, equipped and deployed, according to a RAND Corp. study issued May 17. "U.S forces are being called upon to perform new missions far outside their normal repertoire, from confronting terrorism spawned by radical Islam to the possibility of fighting new nuclear powers," says Andrew Hoehn, director of RAND's Project Air Force and a former deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy. The primary roles for the Air Force and the Navy will be to conduct large-scale "power projection" operations, while the Army, Marine Corps and Special Forces will be used more to promote stability worldwide, RAND reports. Similarly, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Ike Skelton (D-Mo.) is pushing legislative language under the fiscal 2008 defense authorization bill that would require the Defense Department to reassess its roles and missions

9) AIM-120 Recast As Ballistic Missile Interceptor

Aviation Week & Space Technology 05/21/2007

Author: David A. Fulghum

Raytheon is trying to win the international race to develop an air-launched weapon that can shoot down ballistic missiles within tens of seconds after launch. Its entry is a new, longer-range version of the AIM-120 Amraam that could be carried by manned fighters or unmanned surveillance or combat aircraft.

The missile's new second-stage, liquid-rocket motor was tested in December, and its seeker will be demonstrated this summer, says Mike Booen, vice president of advanced missile defense and directed energy weapons for Raytheon Missile Systems. The size, center of gravity and aerodynamic shape of the hit-to-kill interceptor are the same as for the AIM-120.

The concept is that long-endurance UAVs the size of the Predator B could carry adequate missiles and fly high enough to set up "launch area denial spheres," Booen says. That area of denial would be big enough to cover the missile launch complex in eastern North Korea from an orbit over international waters in the Sea of Japan. In fact, the missile could be launched from any platform that has the electrical interface for Amraam, including the F-22 Raptor or F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

If you don't want somebody to launch missiles, "you can deny those launches with a UAV combat air patrol well offshore and out of the way," Booen says. The UAV would be positioned in the "launch tube" between the missile's firing point and the target.

The Amraam was initially designed for beyond-visual-range, air-to-air combat. But recent variants have been reconfigured for internal carriage by manned and unmanned aircraft. Others have specialized for head-on attacks of small stealth cruise missiles and for better maneuvering at the terminal stage of its flight. While the new missile is intended for engagements in the boost and ascent phase, it is also expected to have application for the terminal phase as warheads re-enter the atmosphere.

Researchers will test the new interceptor's seeker--carried by a fighter-fired AIM-9X--against a boosting ballistic missile in late summer at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., Booen says. Because two-thirds of the missile is already in production, he predicts the company could begin to field the new weapons for less than $1 million each in about four years. "The services or the Missile Defense Agency [MDA] can adopt these missiles [without] a large logistics bill in the future for introducing this new weapon," he says. Raytheon has offered MDA a series of tests that would leave a residual of 20 production representative missiles for more tests and a small operational capability.

The experiment is called the Network-Centric Airborne Defense Element (Ncade) because it is designed to pull real-time targeting information from many sources, including the Defense Support Program early-warning satellite constellation that provided information of Iraqi scud-missile launches against Saudi Arabia and Israel during the 1991 Persian Gulf war.

Researchers have taken the infrared sensor from the company's AIM-9X short-range, air-to-air missile and integrated it with the AIM-120 Amraam missile body and solid-fuel rocket motor as its first propulsion stage. After firing, the first stage drops away.

A new liquid-fuel second stage--the advanced hydroxyl ammonium nitrate thruster--will provide at least an extra 25-plus sec. of powered flight at more than 150 lb. thrust, Booen says. A variable direction exhaust nozzle will allow rapid maneuvering, without fins, of the missile's front half at exoatmospheric altitudes of 100,000 ft. or more. The thruster was demonstrated in December. Because a liquid-fuel motor can be stopped and restarted, the burn time can be programmed for extended flight or to save fuel for extra axial velocity or maneuvering in the late stages of flight. The liquid fuel will be environmentally friendly.

Raytheon also has fabricated two prototype Ncade seekers, modified to pick a missile body out of exhaust. Their ability to track a booster has been tested in a high-fidelity simulator. The standard AIM-9X seeker has a single point modification of the filter wheel so that hard bodies can be picked out of the bright rocket plume.

Meanwhile, Israel has been flying a secret new Heron II unmanned aircraft with a wingspan of more than 85 ft. expected to carry two Rafael-designed missiles (see p. 32). A version of the Derby beyond-visual-range, air-to-air missile is being developed for boost-phase intercept, and an air-to-ground vision of the Python short-range, air-to-air missile is being eyed for attacking mobile ballistic missile launchers.

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, builder of the Predator UAV family, and Aerojet, maker of the new second-stage motor, have partnered with Raytheon on the project. Initially, the program was focused only on Predator B because of its altitude performance and payload, but veteran fighter pilots "pointed out that in a conflict, fighters carrying mixed loads of ordnance will be flying around the clock," Booen says. "It would be nice to have one of these missiles on the rails, so that if the enemy launched ballistic missiles, we could do something about it." The new UAVs and fighters also will have advanced infrared sensing systems and "could take target information from anywhere."

11) New JSOW variant seeks moving maritime targets
Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 05/25/2007


Raytheon announced May 24 that a March award from the U.S. Navy to develop the Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) AGM-154C1 (formerly JSOW Block III) will provide a capability against moving maritime targets.

The new JSOW variant is scheduled to be produced in 2009. The AGM-154C1 builds upon the JSOW Block II weapon by adding a weapons data link to receive in-flight target updates from F/A-18E/F aircraft. The new JSOW variant includes updated seeker algorithms designed to hit moving targets, a growing requirement identified by Pentagon program officials (DAILY, May 2). The $93.7 million Naval Air Systems Command contract stems from earlier trade studies performed by the NAVAIR and Raytheon team to develop an initial architecture and mission effectiveness assessments for the AGM-154C1, according to Raytheon (DAILY, March 20).

Earlier this year, Raytheon chose Rockwell Collins to develop and qualify a dual UHF and Link 16 weapon data link called Strike Link. Raytheon will use Strike Link in several weapons and, with the assistance of the NAVAIR team, will be the supplier of the Harpoon Block III data link, the company also said.

11) ISR director: Analysis, sharing key to intel

Air Force Times

By Paul Richfield - Staff writer
Posted : Friday May 25, 2007 5:14:33 EDT

OMAHA, Neb. — Since the National Security Agency sets the technical standards for U.S. signals intelligence collection, the Air Force should look to the Fort Meade, Md.-based organization for guidance before embarking on SigInt-related hardware and software acquisitions, according to a top Air Force official.

Col. James Whidden, director of intelligence operations with the Air Force Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Agency, formerly the Air Intelligence Agency, believes acquisitions in these areas will bear heavily on two upcoming ISR programs: the Web-based Distributed Common Ground System and the RC-130, a proposed SigInt variant of the Lockheed C-130 transport aircraft.

“The current focus on sensor capabilities rather than on the old Cold War threat-based approach is fine, but we must not forget that such systems must have the ability to fight, to go into harm’s way,” Whidden said Wednesday at the first 55th Wing ISR Symposium in Omaha, Neb.

“We have to find a balance between collection and all-source analysis, and need to accept that we’re going to collect much more data than we can ever analyze,” he said. “Obtaining a particular piece of imagery is important, but understanding the history of that image — detecting subtle changes — is much more important. And the key to SigInt is providing a precise location of an emitter, right now.”

Whidden cited Air Force inconsistency in the area of intelligence sharing.

In South Korea, he said, Republic of Korea personnel work alongside Americans but this is an exception attributable to a 55-year security arrangement. In most other cases, no mechanism exists for the sharing of SigInt data with coalition partners.

“When we deploy [the RC-135] Rivet Joint, we have no means of involving our allies and this is unacceptable,” he said. “We’re never going to fight alone, and we need to do a better job with establishing the rules for sharing. And it won’t be a case of ‘one size fits all’ — the rules for sharing with the British and with the Colombians will be different.”

Reorganization of the Air Force’s ISR infrastructure is necessary, Whidden said, as the line between intelligence and combat operations becomes less clearly defined. Whidden predicts a time when Title 50 — the guidelines for intelligence agencies — become indistinguishable from Title 10, the legal framework for combatants.

“The services already have authority in both, so what’s needed are ‘Title 60’ organizations” that formalize the arrangement, he said.

May 2007 News

In this month’s issue:

1) JFCom official: Military datalink picture bad

2) Chinese air strike capabilities boost market for new fighters

3) Chinese space, air capabilities growing, Moseley warns

4) Upgraded A-10s will be ready for combat soon, USAF says

5) Rockwell Collins gets $45M more for E-6B C2 system

6) SDB performing well, but some showing aerodynamic wear

7) In Brief: Boeing begins flight testing AC-130U gunship with new 30-mm cannon

8) E-2D Will Pack Next-Generation Sensors Into Old Shape

1) JFCom official: Military datalink picture bad

By John T. Bennett - Staff writer - AF Times

The military’s ability to use aging systems like Link 16 to pass battlefield data from aircraft to ground troops and headquarters-based leaders — as well as plans to replace those older applications — “is not a rosy picture,” says one Joint Forces Command official.

The military’s “datalink picture right now is just bad and ugly,” Douglass “Butch” Cassidy, deputy director of the command’s Joint Integrated Fires division, said April 24 in an address during a Precision Strike Association-sponsored conference here.

Cassidy, a former Navy fighter pilot, said his assessment of the military’s existing datalinks and plans to develop a set of replacement applications is largely based on a briefing he received a few weeks ago from a JFCom team focused on such systems.

The Department of Defense was moving toward using the same “datalink standard” planned for the Joint Strike Fighter, “but that’s up in the air right now,” Cassidy said.

The main problem with Link 16 is it often slows when war fighters attempt to pass large images to other battlefield machines, giving the datalink “no timeliness” in combat, he said.

Link 16 has been used in aircraft, ships and ground systems for years, allowing troops to share pictures, video, radar data and text messages. It also is used by a number of American allies around the globe. But the Pentagon has begun to look beyond the venerable datalink in recent years.

The ability to rapidly pass images among various platforms is becoming crucial in the kinds of battles U.S. forces are engaging in today, several Army officials said during the conference.

2) Chinese air strike capabilities boost market for new fighters

Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 04/20/2007

China's improving networking, strike and reconnaissance capabilities, along with some specific North Korea developments, are spurring programs for advanced aircraft among their neighbors including India, Singapore, Australia, South Korea and Japan.

It also has influenced the U.S. to shift its Boeing F-15Cs with advanced radars (APG63(V)3 AESA) for cruise missile detection to Okinawa from Alaska and to schedule the first air expeditionary force deployment of the Lockheed Martin F-22 to Japan. The stealth fighter also has a small target detection capability. North Korea is developing a medium-range anti-ship missile, the KN-01. The missile could be based on the Russian SS-N-1 Styx airframe design, though this remains a matter for conjecture. In early 2003, a test missile was launchedfrom Sinsang-ri and flew for 70 miles before falling into the Sea of Japan.

Beijing's continuing procurement of two-seat strike derivatives of the Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker, including the Su-30MKK, and the Su-30MK2, is being closely watched by U.S. officials. China also is test-flying an "indigenous" version of the Su-27, the J-11B. The Chengdu J-10 also is entering squadron service. The
single-place Su-27SK is an air superiority interceptor. The fighter has 10 hardpoints and would normally carry four Vympel R-73 (AA-11 Archer) infrared missiles and six Vympel R-27R (AA-10 Alamo) semi-active air-to-air missiles.

The PL-12, known in its export configuration as the SD-10, was developed by the China Air-to-Air Missile Research Academy. The PL-12 has a significantly greater kinematic envelope than the Russian R-77 (AA-12 Adder) active radar-guided AAM. U.S. analysts suggest the development of the PL-12 will
likely bring the People's Liberation Army Air Force's dependence on foreign-made medium-range air-to-air missiles to an end. This poses two problems for Russia. First, it loses its main market, and second, it faces a new competitor - China - in the export arena.

The introduction of the two-seat Su-30MKK provided the PLAAF with its first genuine multirole fighter/strike capability. It can deliver Russian-made precision-guided munitions in all weather, day and night conditions. U.S. officials also note the aircraft is fitted with what they consider to be the highly capable L-150 Pastel radar warning receiver and a version of the Sorbtsiya active jamming pod mounted on wingtip stations.
- David A. Fulghum

3) Chinese space, air capabilities growing, Moseley warns
Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 04/25/2007


China has developed extensive space and air warfare capabilities that make the country a greater force to be reckoned with, according to Gen. Michael Moseley, Air Force chief of staff.

The recent Chinese anti-satellite demonstration shows how vulnerable major commercial and military satellites - American and foreign - are to attack, Moseley told reporters April 24 during a roundtable breakfast meeting. Most of the commercial and imagery satellites operate in the type of low-earth orbit reached by the Chinese test shot, he said. "It's a significant
risk."

What ups the ante a bit, Moseley said, is that the Chinese conducted the test from a mobile ground system, meaning it could be deployed - or exported -out of country and wind up in other theaters. The scale of the threat is significant, he said, and whole satellite constellations could be at risk.

In light of the Chinese anti-satellite test, Air Force space officials are now analyzing space situational awareness, defensive counter-space measures and ways to ensure precious space-based communications links, Moseley said. But he emphasized that none of the current plans or analysis call for anything beyond defensive measures. Any offensive space measures would need to be addressed by policy at higher levels.

While China has been developing its anti-satellite capabilities, the country has been honing its air force as well, Moseley said. China now has AWACS-type [Airborne Warning and Control System] and tanker aircraft rivaling most other countries, as well as an advanced fighter capability with its new J-10s and the new Sukhoi aircraft that is being co-produced with Russia, Moseley said.

China is developing a very capable long-range air force, Moseley said. "It's not an idle notion of a country that's just discovered the Wright brothers' airplane" he said. "They're going beyond Taiwan."
- Michael Fabey

4) Upgraded A-10s will be ready for combat soon, USAF says
Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 04/12/2007


The U.S. Air Force's A-10C Thunderbolts should soon be combat operational with upgraded avionics and enhanced weapons capabilities, said Col. James Ratti, 508th Aircraft Sustainment Squadron commander, and A-10 System Program Manager. Ratti said during an April 11 press briefing that he could not divulge
where and when the upgraded A-10s would see combat. "You can connect the dots," Ratti said. "You know where they've been flying."


The Thunderbolts have been one of the stalwart combat aircraft in Iraq since the war began. With the upgrades, prime contractor Lockheed Martin is turning the A-10 from a near analog anachronism to a digital dynamo, capable of dropping precision weapons, integrating aircraft and combat operations and advanced data links for situational awareness.

As a result, the A-10s should be able to just about double their current combat lifetimes, Ratti said. The average aircraft now has racked up about 8,400 flight hours, and Ratti said the upgraded A-10s should be able to tally twice as many. The entire 356-aircraft fleet is getting the upgrades.

The aircraft should be in flying operations until 2028, Ratti said. Its replacement is the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF). "We'll ramp down when the JSF comes in," Ratti said. "But, of course, that's a bit of a moving target."

The upgrade program is costing about $300 million, with each kit costing about $450,000, excluding installation, Air Force and Lockheed officials say. Altogether, including installation, each upgrade costs about $1.42 million per plane, said Lt. Col. Ralph Hansen, Air Force A-10 requirements director.

The Air Force also has included $23 million for overall A-10 upgrades and other work in its fiscal year 2008 budget request for the fight against terrorism. The baseline Air Force fiscal 2008 budget request includes $167 million for A-10 enhancement procurement and $2 million for research, development, testing and evaluation.

One of the keys to the A-10C upgrade is the advanced avionics, anchored by the new software releases by Lockheed. The upgraded avionics has five times the amount of computer code, said Roger Il Grande, Lockheed Martin Systems Integration, A-10 program director. That kind of enhanced computer capability has enabled the Air Force to bring on new systems about a year earlier than planned, such as the
situational awareness data link and the ability to launch the Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM), a precision weapon, according to service and company officials. There are other improvements the Air Force is still looking for, Ratti said.

For example, the service is installing new A-10 engines, based on a commercial plant being used by Canadian regional jets, to add more thrust to the aircraft. That work is likely to cause other structural changes for motor mounts, aft fuselage and possibly control or display equipment, Ratti said. "We've just
not scoped that out yet," he added.
- Michael Fabey

5) Rockwell Collins gets $45M more for E-6B C2 system

Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 04/17/2007

MERCURY C2: The U.S. Naval Air Systems Command is awarding Rockwell Collins almost $45 million to an existing contract for the E-6B Block I modification program, including the design, development, installation and testing of a fully integrated airborne command and control communication system, the Pentagon said April 13.

Most of the work will occur in Waco, Texas, and the rest in Richardson, Texas, and should be finished by December 2009. Boeing delivered the final upgraded E6-B Mercury aircraft, a Boeing 707 variant, to the Navy in Jacksonville, Fla., in December. The Mercury serves as an airborne command post and is the Navy's largest and heaviest aircraft.

6) SDB performing well, but some showing aerodynamic wear

Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 04/30/2007

SDB GLITCH: Lt. Gen. Donald Hoffman, the U.S. Air Force's top uniformed acquisition officer, says the new 250-pound Small Diameter Bomb (SDB) continues to perform well since being deployed to support Iraq operations last year on the F-15E. The Boeing-made weapon has, however, had a glitch. Officers
noticed what Hoffman says is "wear and tear" on some weapons that were not dropped on their first sortie. Those weapons experienced more aerodynamic forces and showed some minor problems, he says. This has been seen before when some of the Air Force's past air-to-air missiles were first deployed. Hoffman says fixes have been minimal and no design changes were required to continue using the SDB.

7) In Brief: Boeing begins flight testing AC-130U gunship with new 30-mm cannon
Aerospace Daily & Defense Report 04/30/2007


GUNSHIP TESTING: Boeing has begun flight testing the AC-130U Gunship with new Bushmaster 30-mm cannons at Hurlburt Field, Fla., the company announced April 27. The 30-mm cannon eventually will replace both the 40-mm cannon and 25-mm gun on U-model gunships. Boeing is modifying four gunships for U.S. Air Force Special Operations Command and is due to deliver them later this year.

8) E-2D Will Pack Next-Generation Sensors Into Old Shape

New E-2D surveillance aircraft will pack next-generation sensors into a familiar shape

Aviation Week & Space Technology 04/30/2007

Author: David A. Fulghum

The world's navies have a new reality: They are facing rapidly changing threats and taking on more missions with fewer aircraft and ships. The following three articles focus on some of the ways the U.S. Navy is adapting to prolonged, low-intensity warfare. Its venerable P-3s are being deployed for overland reconnaissance and monitoring of the sea lanes used for weapons smuggling and the movement of insurgent leadership. Iran, it is known, is providing arms to Hamas in the Palestinian territories, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Shiite militias in Iraq and the Taliban in Afghanistan. At the other end of the spectrum, there's the rapid development and proliferation of advanced cruise and anti-ship missiles. The Navy will soon fly a new production version of the Hawkeye. The redesigned E-2D will feature a hybrid radar that's mechanically scanned for 360-deg. coverage and also electronically scanned for long-range and cruise missile/small-target detection. It will also carry sophisticated networking capabilities to help detect even supersonic missiles in time to target them with high-speed, air defense missiles.

The U.S. Navy is focusing on the steady proliferation of sophisticated fighters and cruise missiles in the world's arsenals. That means planners must try to find ways to defend far-away fleets against attack by waves of small, perhaps even stealthy weapons launched from outside the range of shipboard radars.

The latest element of a U.S. fleet's defenses will look familiar, but it's not. The E-2D Advanced Hawkeye is a new aircraft, built with advanced production tooling and carrying a next-generation radar that can detect fighter-size targets at longer ranges as well as smaller targets. Yet the familiar exterior shape allows continued use of many E-2C parts like the outboard wing panels and empennage.

Until March, Navy aviators would not admit to cruise missile defense as one of their primary missions. Now, with introduction of the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet's new active electronically scanned array (AESA), service officials have revealed that the aircraft can find very small targets, such as the head-on aspect of a cruise missile. Navy officials are still not allowed to comment on the Advanced Hawkeye's cruise missile detection capability. But as the aviation component of cruise missile defense edges out of the classified arena, what becomes apparent is that the Advanced Hawkeye will become the "quarterback"-- firing target location data like long-distance passes to fighters or Aegis missile ships patrolling the perimeters of the fleet.

Some countries with small defense budgets see acquiring cruise missiles as a cheap and relatively clandestine alternative to training aircrews and buying squadrons of expensive fighters and bombers. But to effectively defend against them, these small missiles must be detected at over-the-horizon ranges, well beyond the reach of ship-based radars.

Part of the over-the-horizon solution will be provided by carrier-based, E-2D Advanced Hawkeye surveillance aircraft. It will make its first flight this summer, says Navy Capt. Randy Mahr, E-2 program manager. Providing the pulse of the new-production surveillance aircraft is a hybrid, long-range, APY-9 radar from the team of Lockheed Martin (prime), Northrop Grumman (transmitters) and Raytheon (receivers). It was especially designed to operate in the UHF band, which provides the best frequencies for picking small targets out of the reflected electronic clutter produced by ocean turbulence and longer range.

The radar components are being tested at Lockheed Martin's Syracuse, N.Y., facility. The design is considered a two-generation leap in technology with the measurement for each jump providing a 10-dB. increase in sensitivity, which comes from improvements in computing and components. That equates to greater range--a 300% volume improvement--than the current E-2C. This sensitivity also means the range is nearing the limits of the curvature of the Earth. It also allows the radar with its improved processing to see different types of targets. "That equates to smaller targets," Mahr says. "My job is not targeting, but to provide information on where that target is."

The Pentagon considers networking as one of its toughest problems. The central question is how to fuse all the information in a way that is sensor-independent. The data need to come in, be validated, pushed into the network and then be used on anyone's display.

"The radar is the heart of the E-2D," Mahr says. But, "once I get the radar up there [at 25,000 ft.], the task is to get the information into the net. It's not about knowing, inside the E-2D, where a blip is. It's about getting the knowledge of that particular target is to the person who needs that information--whether it's to track a friendly freighter or put bombs on target."

Moreover, the radar is integrated with a digital electronic surveillance system to precisely identify and locate emitters--including radars, data links and radios the missile may use--for rapid attack. A modification slated for funding in Fiscal 2010 is to add third-generation network-centric collaborative targeting and a newly fielded airborne capability for invading and exploiting enemy tactical radio networks.

The Navy wants to field about 75 of the new-production, Northrop Grumman aircraft--enough to increase the size of ship-based squadrons to five aircraft from four, Mahr says.

Analysts predict that once the Navy goes into a full theater air/missile defense in a high-threat environment (such as the Straits of Malacca or Hormuz where a fleet is within 100 mi. of the shore), the Navy would fly Hawkeyes around the clock to keep the fight away from the carrier strike group.

With an endurance of 4.5-5-hr. flight time from catapult to trap, five aircraft would allow sustained, round-the-clock operations. An upgrade program proposed by Northrop Grumman could add inflight refueling for the Navy or export customers, says Scott Gibbs, Northrop Grumman's Advanced Hawkeye product support lead.

The Navy has already been experimenting with "dry plugs" to simulate the aerodynamic environment when refueling from either the KC-130 or F/A-18 buddy-pack tankers. Testing has involved a straight probe coming off the top centerline of the cockpit. Another element of the upgrade is to put fuel in the outer wing beyond the fold. The combination could increase the lengths of missions to 8.5-9 hr., a limit imposed by aircrew endurance.

The program will cost about $2 billion for the first five aircraft. Funding of long-lead items for low-rate initial production is expected by year-end. Production rates are expected to be about four aircraft per year, but could be sustained at a higher pace. First flight of the E-2D occurs the same year as those for three other key Navy aircraft--the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and the EA-18G Growler electronic attack aircraft--both heavily dependent on digital data. The Advanced Hawkeye's operational evaluation is slated for 2011 with first deployment predicted for 2013-14.

What's less certain are which radios and data links the aircraft will carry to the fleet. The current debate over links involves the tradeoff between the speeds and volume of data that can be handled. Compounding the problem for Mahr and others is that new technologies are quickly adding more choices. Radio advances also are presenting new options. Candidates include the VRC-99, ARC-210 and Joint Tactical Radio System. The choice doubtlessly will be a software programmable radio that can link to legacy radios as well as the new, more flexible designs. All the communications and data-link efforts are aimed at helping to create the Global Information Grid (GIG), which is envisioned as a sprawling network with rapid conduits for gathering (or at least cataloging) and distributing information.

To keep the debate open, the aircraft will have an open electronics architecture that allows rapid changes of equipment and new technologies. That architecture is to fly in the aircraft this fall. Much software was retained from the E-2C, but an additional 2 million lines of new code was added, Mahr says.

The additional code and a new glass cockpit with three 17-in. displays will tie together the flight deck (pilot and copilot) and the three operators in the aft compartment into a single mission crew. That change will, in effect, create a fourth tactical operator out of whichever pilot is not actively flying and if IFR conditions don't demand two pilots. Primarily they will help maintain electronic situational awareness of the battlespace. The first pilot and copilot training began in February.

Additionally, Northrop Grumman is proposing to ensure that upgrades are installed every 18-24 months, Gibbs says. At those intervals, hardware and software will be refreshed with the insertion of advanced technologies. Upgrades will also reflect a number of changes, such as improved combat identification, multispectral fusion and automation involving more machine-to-machine communications. In addition, decision aids will increase speed and eliminate errors. In fact, when the data links get big enough, planners anticipate beefing up the crew with operators on the ground.

"You could have fifth, sixth and seventh virtual Hawkeye operators," Gibbs says.

Testing of the two prototypes will also help to determine exactly how many aircraft the Navy will need, Mahr says. Development vehicle AA-1 will flight test the aircraft. AA-2 will be used to evaluate the mission system. The aircraft's aerodynamic performance is roughly the same as the E-2C despite weighing more. The new aircraft loses about one-tenth of an hour flight time. But that could be traded off against the inflight refueling capability.

Milestone C is slated for 2009, which allows for low-rate initial production for the fleet and the official start of 1.5 years of developmental flight tests. Funding of the core open architecture is slated for the next President's budget. The program's second priority is to expand the data links and improve the radio suite. A larger Navy-wide goal is to have a GIG functioning by 2013 or soon after.