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Archives by date > 2017 > September > 18th

Northrop Grumman buys Orbital, ups missile assets | Airbus denies wrongdoing in Austrian Eurofighter sale | AJAX begins live-firing trails

Sep 18, 2017 15:34 UTC

Americas

  • Northrop Grumman announced Monday that it is to buy rocket maker Orbital ATK for $7.8 billion in cash. The acquisition—Northrop’s first since 2002’s takeover of TRW Inc—would establish Orbital as a new, fourth business sector under Northrop, and comes ahead of a likely jump in demand from the planned upgrades of US ballistic systems and continued ballistic missile testing by North Korea. The US Air Force last summer called for proposals to replace its aging nuclear cruise missiles and intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) system as the military moves ahead with a costly modernization of older atomic weapons systems.

  • Triumph Aerospace Structures has been selected by Boeing to provide the wing, vertical tail and horizontal tail structures for the Boeing-Saab T-X trainer aircraft. The firm has already worked with Boeing as a supplier for the V-22 Osprey and C-17 Globemaster. Boeing partner Saab built the aft fuselage for its first two production ready T-X aircraft and the company will continue that work if awarded the USAF’s trainer replacement contract, estimated to be worth $16 billion. Boeing-Saab’s cleansheet desugn T-X will compete against Lockheed Martin and Korea Aerospace Industries’ T-50A, and Lenoardo DRS’s modified M-346 trainer, dubbed the T-100.

Middle East & Africa

  • Deliveries of F-35i Adir Joint Strike Fighter aircraft to Israel continue, with two additional fighters recently touching down in the country, bringing the number now in possession to seven. The fighter will now undergo an integration process and will conduct initial operational testing in December. Israel’s F-35i ‘Adir’ fighter is based on the standard F-35A variant modified with Israeli requirements. 50 will eventually be procured.

Europe

  • Airbus has refuted claims levelled at it by Austrian prosecutors that it carried out fraud and willful deception during a $2 billion Eurofighter Typhoon deal. The aerospace giant went on to threaten legal action at Austria’s Defence Minister Hans Peter Doskozil, accusing the minister of disregarding the presumption of innocence in the case and therefore violated the firm’s rights. A final report of a parliamentary inquiry into the 2003 jet purchase, how side deals were awarded and whether bribes were paid, is expected on Tuesday.

  • A new joint venture is to be formed to target business with the German armed forces. German defense giant Rheinmetall said Monday that a new entity will be formed with electronics group Rohde & Schwarz, and plans to bid to modernize the German army’s mobile communications—a program that will see thousands of vehicles retrofitted in the medium term. Rheinmetall will hold 74.9 percent and Rohde & Schwarz 25.1 percent of the venture.

  • General Dynamics Land Systems UK has commenced live firing trials for its AJAX armored vehicle program. The trials are being held in West Wales, Great Britain, and will last for approximately five months, starting with static firing positions against immobile point targets and gradually progressing to a moving vehicle engaging moving targets. It is armed with the CT 40 autocannon and a coaxial 7.62mm chain gun for lighter targets. Used by both the UK and French armed forces, the CT 40 ustilizes a type of telescoping 40mm ammunition designed to take up less space and reduce the necessary size of the gun. It can fire armor-piercing discarding sabot and high-explosive airburst ammunition out to an effective range of 2500 meters. It has a maximum rate of fire of up to 200 rounds per minute.

  • The British Royal Navy has rolled back on a decision to retire the Harpoon anti-ship missile in 2018 and will keep it in service until at least 2020. The Ministry of Defense had earlier announce the plan to retire the Boeing weapon from its Type 23 frigates in 2018 without a replacement. Speaking at last week’s Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI) 2017 defence exhibition in London, on service source added that “there is work ongoing to look at options for longer extension in service.”

Asia Pacific

  • Babcock International has been contracted by Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering (DSME) to supply weapons-handling and launch equipment for a South Korean submarine program. Delivery of the uncosted systems will be completed by 2024. The equipment ordered is for a third Jangbogo III submarine and follows a contract from DSME for the design, production and delivery of the weapon-handling and launch equipment for the first and second Jangbogo III submarines. Babcock’s weapon handling launch system features an air turbine pump and a programmable firing valve launch system. The compact system is quiet and needs less maintenance than other systems.

Today’s Video

  • 75 years of Skunk Works at Lockheed Martin:

KAI probe widened to include Iraqi T-50 sale | Qatar pursues interest in Eurofighters | India completes Astra missile trials

Sep 18, 2017 05:00 UTC

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Americas

  • The US Navy’s newest America-class amphibious assault ship has been christened the USS Tripoli (LHA7). During a ceremony in Pascagoula, Miss., on Saturday, acting Undersecretary of the Navy Thomas Dee said the vessel “will be a force multiplier, and her crew will proudly serve our country for decades to come. I am grateful to the men and women of Ingalls Shipbuilding for their dedication and to the citizens of Pascagoula for their unwavering support as we continue to make our Navy stronger.” The Tripoli is an enlarged version of the America-class of amphibious assault ships. It is 844 feet long, displaces 45,000 tons and has larger hangars and storage capacity for aircraft and helicopters. Once operational, the US Marine Corps is expected to to deploy their vertical take-off and landing version of the F-35 Lightning II on the ship.

  • General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems has been awarded a $20.6 million US Army contract modification for foreign military sales of Mk82 and Mk84 bomb bodies. The order will provide 10,933 Mk82-6, 866 Mk84-4 and 1,365 Mk84-10 bomb bodies for Australia, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain in support of Air Force, Navy and foreign military sales requirements. Work will be performed in Garland, Texas, and completion is scheduled for 31, 2018.

Middle East & Africa

  • An investigation by South Korean prosecutors into corruption at Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) has been widened to include a $2.65 billion sale of T-50IQ light attack aircraft to Iraq. According to prosecutors, officials at KAI inflated the value of the proceeds of the 2013 sale, which saw 24 of the advanced trainer aircraft sold as part of Baghdad’s air force modernisation. They have also uncovered circumstantial evidence of corruption in the KF-X indigenous fighter contract. The fraud allegations at KAI were first raised in 2015 when the state auditor’s inspection found that KAI pocketed some 24 billion won in illicit profits by manipulating development costs in the Surion helicopter project.

  • Qatar has signed a Statement of Intent with the British government for the purchase of 24 Eurofighter Typhoons from BAE Systems. Speaking on the deal, British Defence Secretary Sir Michael Fallon, who is on a visit to the Gulf State, said this will be the first major defence contract between both countries, and will run into the billions of dollars. Human rights and anti-war organisations are likely to protest the sale, which comes as the UK’s $16 billion defence industry is facing intense scrutiny over exports to Saudi Arabia and other states accused of major human rights violations.The UK has exported more than $6 billion in arms to authoritarian states since the summer’s general election, with a huge increase in arms exports to Saudi Arabia and exports worth $160 million to Qatar, where political opposition is banned.

Europe

  • A ship-building alliance between Leonardo and Thales has been floated as part of efforts to end a rift between the French and Italian governments. The dispute involving the STX shipyard in Western France, that was nationalized by a Paris concerned over job loses if sold to Italian Fincantieri, in turn infuriating Rome. The two governments hope to resolve the STX shipyard dispute in time for a Sept. 27 summit in Lyon where French President Emmanuel Macron and Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni hope to smooth tensions created by growing French influence over Italian businesses. As to the alliance, the deal proposed would see Thales and Leonardo brought in as partners for Fincantieri and Naval Group, another French shipbuilder and a small shareholder in STX. Thales owns 35 percent of Naval Group. Both firms have not commented on the offer.

Asia Pacific

  • Issues among the Japanese consortium involved in F-35 Joint Strike Fighter production for Tokyo has led to aircraft assembly falling behind schedule. The industry team chosen—Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. was picked for final assembly and checkups, IHI Corp. for engine parts production and Mitsubishi Electric Corp. for radar parts production—was expected to have joined production of F-35s to be delivered to Japan in fiscal 2017 under the fiscal 2013 contract. However, both IHI Corp. and Mitsubishi Electric Corp. have yet to sign parts production subcontracts with the original equipment manufacturer, Pratt & Whitney and Northrop Grumman respectively. The board added that checks by the Defense Ministry’s Acquisition, Technology and Logistics Agency found the local companies’ manufacturing processes to be lacking.

  • Development test-firing of India’s Astra Beyond Visual Range Air to Air Missile (BVRAAM) has been successfully completed. A total of seven tests were conducted against Pilotless Target Aircraft (PTA) over the Bay of Bengal between September 11 and 14, which the Ministry of Defense said “included engagement of target at very long range, engagement of high manoeuvring target at medium range and multiple launches of missiles in salvo to engage multiple targets.” The missile has been integrated on Indian Air Force SU-30 MKI aircraft by Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) and is expected to be inducted into service later this year.

  • Taiwan’s planned modernization of its ageing F-16A/B aircraft to the V standard is likely to cost $4.31 billion, $651 million more than the original estimate. Features on the F-16V include an AN/APG-83 active electronically scanned array radar, an upgraded mission computer system and cockpit improvements. However, Taipei has hand to dish out additional funds to shoulder the development cost and new weapons that the United States recently agreed to export to Taiwan, and it is likely that further orders of the Joint Standoff Weapon (JSTOW) system and other enhancements and weapons will need to be procured in piecemeal fashion.

Today’s Video

  • Turkish F-16s land in Azerbaijan for the joint TurAz Qartal?-2017 air exercise:

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