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Boeing nets $2.6B for next 15 KC-46 Pegasus tankers
ByEd Adamczyk
SEPT. 30, 2019

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A KC-46 Pegasus refueling plane was delivered to Pease Air National Guard Base, N.H., in August. Photo by Senior Airman Taylor Queen/157th Air Refueling Wing/U.S. Air National Guard



Sept. 30 (UPI) -- The U.S. Air Force awarded Boeing Co. a $2.6 billion contract to build 15 KC-46 tanker aircraft, as well as spares and support documents.

The deal, announced Friday by the Department of Defense, calls for exercise of a contract option to build the additional aircraft, as well as supply two spare engines, five wing refueling pod kits, spare parts and support equipment.

Work on the contract will be performed in Seattle, Wash., and is expected to be completed by March 2023.
The Air Force plans to purchase 179 such aircraft, known as the Pegasus, by 2027, and Japan's air defense force has purchased four.

The plane is a military aerial refueling and strategic military transport aircraft with origins in the Boeing 767 passenger plane, capable of midflight refueling of fighter planes and other aircraft.

Designed to replace the Boeing KC-135 Stratotankers, the Air Force acquired its first KC-46 in January 2019.

The plane's development has a troubled history. Boeing received a $55.5 million contract in August to redesign the plane's boom telescope actuator, which controls the device that swings out from beneath the plane to refuel other planes.

The tankers were grounded in March for one week after the Air Force said it found loose tools and other foreign object debris inside the completed airplanes. The issues came just weeks after the company delivered the first two aircraft to the Air Force, and Boeing called the problem "a big deal" in an internal memo in February.

These and other issues caused the plane's development program, and delivery of the first 18 planes, to be three years behind schedule. Pease Air National Guard Base, N.H., became the first guard base to receive a KC-46 plane in August.
 

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Gen. Mark Milley sworn in as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
SEPT. 30, 2019
By Nicholas Sakelaris

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U.S. Army Gen. Mark A. Milley testifies during a July 11 confirmation hearing before the Senate armed services committee. He was sworn in as chairman of the Joint Chiefs on Monday. File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI | License Photo

Sept. 30 (UPI) -- U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley was sworn in Monday as the new chairman of the joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest ranking military officer in the United States.

President Donald Trump spoke, in the rain, at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Virginia to welcome Milley to his new post. He noted the unfortunate weather could bode well for Milley.


"All my life I have heard that if it rains on a big occasion, it brings luck," Trump said. "You're my friend, you're my adviser, and you deserve this position. I never had a doubt."

Milley promised Trump "informed, candid, impartial military advice."

"We stand ready to keep the peace or, if necessary, win the war," he added. "We are the best equipped, best trained, best led military in human history, and our adversaries should know never to underestimate our skill, our capability and our combat power."

Milley was nominated by Trump last December to succeed the retiring Joe Dunford.

Milley is a graduate of Princeton and Columbia universities and served as a Green Beret in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"I have absolute confidence that he will fulfill his duty with the same brilliance and fortitude he has shown throughout his long and very distinguished career," Trump added.
 

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Car bombs target U.S. military base in Somalia
SEPT. 30, 2019
By Nicholas Sakelaris

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An aerial view of Barawe, Somalia, in the Lower Shabelle region -- a stronghold for the al-Shabab terrorist group. File Photo by AMISOM/Tobin Jones


Sept. 30 (UPI) -- Al-Shabab militants attacked a U.S. airbase in Somalia Monday with a combination of car bombs and small arms fire, authorities said.

The group claimed responsibility for the attack at the Ballidogle air base, located about 55 miles from the capital Mogadishu.

Two car bombs were detonated at the base, in Somalia's Lower Shabelle region.

"After breaching the perimeters of the heavily fortified base, the Mujahideen stormed the military complex, engaging the crusaders in an intense firefight," the group said in a statement.

The al-Qaida-linked militant group is also suspected in another car bomb attack in Mogadishu that targeted a European Union military convoy.
 

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Northrop Grumman awarded $1.39B for new Air Force navigation system
The Embedded GPS Inertial Navigation System Modernization is meant to offer new capabilities, as well as make the system more adaptable to new technology.
SEPT. 30, 2019
By Ed Adamczyk

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Northrop Grumman Corp. received a $1.39 billion contract with the U.S. Air Force for production of its GPS Inertial Navigational System, the Defense Department announced on Friday. Photo courtesy of U.S. Navy

Sept. 30 (UPI) -- Northrop Grumman Corp. received a $1.39 billion contract from the U.S. Air Force for its embedded GPS system.

The indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract, announced Friday by the Department of Defense, includes production, sustainment and engineering technical services in support of its Embedded GPS Inertial Navigation System Modernization, EGI/EGI-M, system.

The open-systems architecture of EGI/EGI-M incorporates a military code GPS receiver to add clarity to GPS signals, with the primary lead platforms for the new technology expected to be the F-22 and E-2D, according to Northrop Grumman.

The EGI-M system can support the rapid insertion of new capabilities and adaptability based on unique platform requirements, Northrop Grumman said in a statement. Additionally, the modernized navigation system will incorporate new generation GPS receivers, which will be capable to securely and accurately transmit the new military signals for use in space.

The system is expected to be integrated into a variety of platforms across the branches of the U.S. military, and developed for foreign military sales customers as well.

Work under the contract is expected to be completed by February 2032, and will be performed at the company's facilities in Woodland Hills, Calif., and Salt Lake City, Utah.
 

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MIT scientists build bomb test to ensure nuclear disarmament compliance
SEPT. 30, 2019
By Brooks Hays

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Airmen from the 90th Missile Maintenance Squadron prepare a reentry system for removal from a launch facility in February 2018 in the F. E. Warren Air Force Base missile complex. The 90th MMXS is the only squadron on F. E. Warren allowed to transport warheads from the missile complex back to base. Photo by Airman 1st Class Braydon Williams/U.S. Air Force


Sept. 30 (UPI) -- Engineers at MIT have developed a new nuclear warhead verification test using neutron beams. The new technology could help weapons inspectors do their job.

Currently, parties to nuclear disarmament treaties don't actually destroy warheads. Nations don't want regulators to be privy to nuclear engineering secrets.

Instead of destroying warheads, Russia and the United States disarm nuclear missile and bomb deliver systems. To demonstrate their compliance with the START Treaty, for example, the U.S. military sawed the wings off B-52 bombers and piled them in the desert for Russia to see.

As a result, stockpiles of idle nuclear weapons remain vulnerable to attack, theft or accidental detonation.

"There's a real need to preempt these kinds of dangerous scenarios and go after these stockpiles," Areg Danagoulian, an MIT nuclear scientist, told MIT News. "And that really means a verified dismantlement of the weapons themselves."

Danagoulian and his colleagues, building off of earlier computer simulations, developed and tested a new method for establishing basic facts about warheads slated for dismantlement.

The method utilizes a neutron beam. For their test, researchers sent the beam horizontally through a warhead proxy. After passing through the target, the beam passes through a lithium filter, which works to scramble the information embedded in the altered beam. Finally, the beam is sent to a glass detector, which captures the data recorded by the beam.

The data can be analyzed to confirm the beam passed through an actual warhead. For the test, scientists used molybdenum and tungsten for their warhead proxy. The two metals are similar to plutonium.

The test can identify the specific isotope of the target element, which could allow inspectors to confirm the identity of a warhead before it's disassembled.

"At the low energy range, the neutrons' interactions are extremely isotope-specific," Danagoulian said. "So you do a measurement where you have an isotopic tag, a signal which itself embeds information about the isotopes and the geometry. But you do an additional step which physically encrypts it."

At the same time, the physical data scrambling built into the test method allows specific details about the makeup of the weapon -- engineering secrets -- to remain undetected.

"You could, in principle, do it with computers, but computers are unreliable," Danagoulian said. "They can be hacked, while the laws of physics are immutable."

The test could also help inspectors compare the makeup of one nuclear warhead to others, allowing them to confirm that a stockpile of warheads for disarmament are all authentic weapons -- not one real weapon and a bunch of counterfeits.

Scientists previously demonstrated the method's potential using computer models, but performing a physical test could help pave the way for the adoption of the test method by world governments.

"Simulations capture the physics, but they don't capture system instabilities," Danagoulian said. "Experiments capture the whole world."

Moving forward, the researchers said they will work to develop a portable version of their technology -- described Monday in the journal Nature Communications -- to be tested at actual weapons sites.
 

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USS Dwight D. Eisenhower returns home after pre-deployment tests
The aircraft carrier completed Tailored Ship's Training Availability/Final Evaluation Problem tests over the weekend, assessing its ability to integrate with other military assets.
By Ed Adamczyk
SEPT. 30, 2019

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The aircraft carrier USS Dwight D.Eisenhower returned to Norfolk, Va., on Monday after successfully completing at-sea preparation exercises. Photo by MCS1 Tony D. Curtis/U.S. Navy


Sept. 30 (UPI) -- The aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower concluded its latest training and evaluation assessment, the U.S. Navy announced on Monday.

The vessel returned to Norfolk, Va., its home port, after completing the Tailored Ship's Training Availability/Final Evaluation Problem on Sept. 29. TSTA/FEP is a training assessment testing a ship's ability to integrate with other assets within its carrier strike group.

Numerous drills and exercises were also performed to test the crew and its own level of readiness, including mass casualty tests, shipboard firefighting, simulated man overboard, and various flight operations scenarios. The exercises involved over 15 separate training teams aboard the ship.

The aircraft carrier, known as Ike, is the flagship of the Navy's Carrier Strike Group 10, which includes ships assigned to Destroyer Squadron 26 and aircraft attached to Carrier Air Wing 3.

"Ike sailors have done it," Capt. Kyle Higgins, commanding officer of the aircraft carrier, said in a statement. "Through a mixture of patience, determination and perseverance, the sailors of our mighty ship and the rest of the Ike Carrier Strike Group completed our first Basic Phase work-up. We hold ourselves to the highest standard and push for perfection."

The USS Dwight D. Eisenhower was commissioned in 1977 and has participated in deployments including Operation Eagle Claw, during the Iran hostage crisis in 1980, and the Gulf War in the 1990s. It most recently served in support of U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
 

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U.S. Army conducts massive air assault operations in Germany
September 30, 2019
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U.S. Army Paratroopers assigned to the 173rd Airborne Brigade conducted large-scale air assault training operations in Hohenfels Training Area, Germany during Saber Junction 19.

An air assault operation is a complex synchronization of moving elements. Extensive planning is required to organize the aircraft movement, the artillery fires and the logistical challenges of supplying and sustaining a large number of Soldiers and their equipment in a multiple-day, sustained engagement.

U.S. Pilots used their CH-47 heavy-lift helicopters to transport critical equipment and combat vehicles while conduct air assault training operation. CH-47 Chinook helicopters belonging to the 1st Combat Aviation Brigade transport vehicles performed an air assault en route to urban combat operations in Hohenfels Training Area as part of Saber Junction exercise, according to a recent service news release.

Saber Junction 19 is an exercise involving nearly 5,400 participants from 16 ally and partner nations at the U.S. Army’s Grafenwoehr and Hohenfels Training Areas, Sept. 3 to Sept. 30, 2019. SJ19 is designed to assess the readiness of the U.S. Army’s 173rd Airborne Brigade to execute land operations in a joint, combined environment and to promote interoperability with participating allies and partner nations.

Also, the U.S. Army Paratroopers conducted field testing of its newest Army Ground Mobility Vehicles or GMV. The U.S. Army’s GMV program provides Infantry Brigade Combat Teams (IBCT) a lightweight vehicle to move Soldiers and their equipment quickly over complex and difficult cross-country terrain.

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U.S. missile shield site in Poland is nearing final phases of construction
September 30, 2019

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U.S. Navy Vice Adm. Jon Hill (center), director of the Missile Defense Agency (MDA), during visit at the Aegis Ashore Missile Defense System (AAMDS) site in Poland Sept. 26, 2019.
Photo by Lt. Amy Forsythe


U.S. Navy Vice Adm. Jon Hill, director of the Missile Defense Agency (MDA), visited the Aegis Ashore Missile Defense System (AAMDS) site in Poland and has reviewed the construction status.

Capt. Jon Grant, commanding officer of Naval Support Facility (NSF) Redzikowo, hosted Hill and his team from MDA to show progress being made at the new U.S. anti-missile station outside the town of Redzikowo. Hill and his team visited the multipurpose and housing facility, the galley and the inside of the Aegis Ashore “deckhouse.”

Currently, the U.S. missile shield site in Poland is nearing the final phases of construction at Naval Support Facility (NSF) Redzikowo, the Navy’s newest installation. Once construction is completed, the Aegis Ashore site in Poland will expand a defensive capability that protects NATO European territories, populations and forces against ballistic missiles launched from outside the Euro-Atlantic region.

The first Aegis Ashore site was established at Deveselu, Romania in 2016 as part of the European Phased Adaptive Approach announced by the Obama administration in 2009. Aegis Ashore uses a defensive system almost identical to that used on U.S. Navy Aegis-capable guided-missile destroyers and cruisers at sea.

The system is designed to detect, track, engage and destroy ballistic missiles in flight. The complex at Redzikowo will consist of a fire-control radar “deckhouse” with an associated Aegis command, control and communications

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U.S. Army plans to increase lethality and accuracy of grenade launchers
September 30, 2019


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Photo by Sgt. Devon Bistarkey



The U.S. Army plans to significantly step up modernization and upgrading of grenade launcher systems through the enhanced lethality and accuracy technologies for legacy and future 40mm grenade ammunition.

Earlier this week, the Pentagon released its new draft request for proposal to provide for requirements related to the fabrication, testing, evaluation, and producibility assessments for various 40mm Grenade Medium Caliber programs.

The long-awaited request for proposal simply outlines what companies will have to deliver in order to get a lucrative deal.

According to request, released by the U.S. Army Contracting Command- New Jersey, the objectives of this program are to assess enhanced lethality and accuracy technologies for legacy and future 40mm grenade ammunition, improved production and manufacturing capabilities, and better munitions life cycle management. The Army’s 40mm grenade ammunition project will help to modernize of current U.S. infantry grenade launcher systems and developed the next-generation weapons.

Also added that the Government intends to award multiple five years, Firm Fixed Price (FFP) type, Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contracts.

For nearly 30 years, 40 mm grenades have been a mainstay on the battlefield, undergoing little more than safety and reliability improvements.
To date, the U.S. Army’s 40 mm grenade family contains both high-velocity (HV) grenades, which are fired from Mk19 grenade machine guns (GMGs) mounted on vehicles as well as dismounted, and low-velocity (LV) grenades, which are fired from handheld weapons. The primary 40 mm HV tactical round is the M430A1 High-Explosive Dual Purpose (HEDP) cartridge. It is fired to a maximum range of 2,200 meters and is capable of penetrating three inches of steel and inflicting personnel casualties. The primary 40 mm HV training round is the M918/M385A1 Mixed Belt Target Practice (TP) configuration. It provides a realistic signature, defined as a distinguishable visual characteristic or mark, that can be seen as far out as 1,200 meters

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40mm grenades come off the load, assemble and pack line during production at the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant. Photo by Sal (Tony) Lopez
 

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US Navy awards Pratt & Whitney $2.1Bn for F-35 propulsion systems
01 Oct 2019
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Jet engine maker Pratt and Whitney, a United Technologies subsidiary, has been awarded a $2.1 billion U.S. Navy contract modification for F135 propulsion systems.

This modification definitizes the production and delivery of 112 F135-PW-100 propulsion systems for the Air Force, 46 F135-PW-600 propulsion systems for the Marine Corps, and 25 F135-PW-100 propulsion systems for the Navy. In addition, this modification definitizes award of long lead components, parts and materials associated with 129 F135-PW-100 and 19 F135-PW-600 propulsion systems for non-U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) participants and Foreign Military Sales (FMS) customers.

The Pratt & Whitney’s F135 is an afterburning turbofan developed for the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II, a single-engine strike fighter. Pratt & Whitney’s F135 propulsion system powers all three variants of the F-35 Lightning II fighter aircraft – the F-35A CTOL (Conventional Takeoff and Landing), F-35B STOVL (Short Takeoff and Vertical Landing) and F-35C CV (Carrier Variant).
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The F135-PW-100 used in the F-35A Conventional Take-Off and Landing variant.

The F135 has evolved from the proven F119 engine, which exclusively powers the U.S. Air Force’s F-22 Raptor, and features best-in-class single-engine reliability, fifth generation stealth capabilities as well as advanced prognostics and health management systems.
Since powering the F-35’s first flight in December 2006, the F135 has maintained high readiness levels that have enabled the program to meet flight test objectives and support operational requirements for all three aircraft variants. Supportability features are designed to offer ease of maintenance while achieving unprecedented engine reliability and maintainability.
 

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The B-1 Bomber: Now Armed with Hypersonic Missiles?
October 1, 2019
The Air Force arming its classic B-1B bomber with long-range, lethal hypersonic weapons able to move at 5-times the speed of sound, skip along the boundaries of the earth’s atmosphere and descend upon targets at lightning speed -- before an enemy might have a chance to respond, or even know what’s on the way? It might be coming soon that you think.
by Kris Osborn

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(Washington, D.C.) The Air Force arming its classic B-1B bomber with long-range, lethal hypersonic weapons able to move at 5-times the speed of sound, skip along the boundaries of the earth’s atmosphere and descend upon targets at lightning speed -- before an enemy might have a chance to respond, or even know what’s on the way.

During a recent “mock up” of a B-1B weapons bay, Air Force weapons developers showed that the platform can carry as many as four hypersonic weapons internally.

“In a demo I saw recently, the bulkhead moves as its designed...when you take a CRL(Conventional Rotary Launcher) as its designed. The mock up they had was one of the larger hypersonic weapons. It will be able to carry four or more hypersonic weapons internally. You can see the merit of that,” Gen. Timothy Ray, Commander, Air Force Global Strike Command, told reporters at the Air Force Association conference.

Speaking broadly about the services’ plans for a future bomber fleet, Ray said the service will need to sustain its current fleet of bombers, such as the B-1, B-52 and B-2, until the new B-21 Raider arrives in sufficient numbers. The timing of what constitutes “sufficient” numbers may still be a subject of evaluation among Air Force planners, however the service does say it plans for at least 100 B-21s. Given this evolving timetable, Ray explained his hope regarding some weapons specifics for the current fleet.

“My preference would be that all of them have external hard points open for some carriage and an extended bomb-bay. The external hard points can carry the smaller hypersonics along with JASSM (Joint Air to Surface Standoff Missile, JASSM ER(extended range) and LRASM(Long Range Anti-Ship Missile). You can see a greater versatility for that aircraft configuration,” Ray said.

The demo showed that the B1-Bs magazine capacity can be increased from 24 weapons internally, all the way up to 40, Lt. Col. Dominic Ross, B-1B program element monitor, AFGSC, (Air Force Global Strike Command) said in an Air Force Report.
“This gets the B-1 into the larger weapons, the 5,000 pounders. It gets it into the hypersonics game as well,” Ross said in the report.

Accommodating larger hypersonic weapons into a B1 bomb-bay brings a number of strategic implications; not only does it massively increase the target envelope and range but also allows for longer mission “dwell” time over targets to sustain attacks. The timing of the demos is significant as well, given that it serves two key Air Force aims -- accelerate hypersonic weapons to war and sustain and upgrade the B-1 to its maximum extent.

Integrating large hypersonics also integrates with the Air Force’s broader intent to more quickly merge innovations from the Science and Technology realm into operational use. A new S&T Air Force strategy, released earlier this year, emphasizes greater synergy between scientifically-oriented weapons breakthroughs and “bending” metal on prototypes and systems in preparation for operational combat use.

“The S&T strategy articulates five different areas of strategic capabilities to address as enduring military problems. One of those is speed and reach of disruption and lethality. One of the ways to address this is through hypersonics as a tool in the toolbox for operators,” Tim Sakulich, Executive Lead for Implementing the Air Force S&T Strategy, Air Force Research Lab, told Warrior in an interview.

Although hypersonic weapons are already being prototyped and test-fired, manufacturing hypersonics brings substantial technical challenges, many weapons developers explain. The require very precise engineering to manage propulsion, temperature and target guidance, among other things. A missile travelling at five-times the speed of sound brings never-before-seen dynamics to weapons production. Finding the right materials, Sakulich explained, is crucial.

“From a materials and manufacturing standpoint, we are contributing to the hypersonics capability base by looking at materials and processes that will enable designers to demonstrate these kind of future capabilities and make them affordable. This includes looking at composites and materials for thermal management,” Sakulich, who also serves as the Director of Materials and Manufacturing, Air Force Research Lab, told Warrior during the interview.

Interestly, in a manner consistent with Sakulich’s comments, a Raytheon essay on hypersonics cites “thermodynamics” or “heat”management as essential to the effort. Objects, such as weapons, traveling at hypersonic speeds naturally generate a massive amount of heat which must be properly managed for the weapon to function. Specific materials designed to withstand high temperatures need to be used as well, Raytheon data states.

One of the greatest challenges with hypersonics is what the Raytheon paper refers to as the “effects chain” -- the command and control, networking and sensor technology sufficient to achieve the requisite guidance, targeting and precision flight.

‘We are interested boundary layer phenomenology to better understand and examine heat flux on hypersonic weapons that allows us to do optimization of the thermal management to provide that lethality and reach we are looking for,” Sakulich said.
Although the B1-B is a bomber with a large airframe, carrying four larger hypersonic weapons internally with an extendable bulkhead brings a significant advantage, Air Force officials said.

“The purpose of the demonstration was to show that we’re still able to move the bulkhead from the forward intermediate bay to the forward location; increasing the intermediate bay capacity from 180 inches to 269 inches, Ross said “Additionally, we demonstrated that we can still carry weapons externally on six of the eight hard points, which increases our overall carriage capacity.”

The Air Force has several hypersonics weapons programs now underway. The service is amid rapid development with Lockheed on two major programs -- the Hypersonic Conventional Strike Weapon and the AGM-183A Air Launched Rapid Response Weapon.

Meanwhile, flight tests, demonstrations, ground testing and advanced air-vehicle configuration prototyping are all providing data for an Air Force, DARPA and Raytheon hypersonic weapons program called Hypersonic Air-Breathing Weapons Concept, or HAWC. DARPA statements on the program, citing program manager Andrew Knoedler, identify key areas of developmental emphasis to include “hydrocarbon scramjet-powered propulsion to enable sustained hypersonic cruise.” DARPA information, mirrored by Raytheon weapons developers, explains that “sustaining” speeds at 5-times the speed of sound is a technical characteristic of hypersonic weapons...and the HAWC in particular.

“We are flying a HAWC system…ground tests have already happened. The whole point is to simulate what you would experience in flight, so you can create the correct thermal environment. You can model and measure the heat in the vehicle and you can measure the material properties,” Dr. Thomas Bussing, Vice President, Raytheon Missile Systems, told Warrior in an interview earlier this year. “You can’t test range (with a ground test), but you can measure performance, lift of the vehicle and thrust, attributes from which you can infer range.”

Air-Breathing systems regularly use a scramjet engine to generate thrust -- and propel the air vehicle across long distances to a target. While engineered to reach previously unattainable levels of propulsion, scramjet engine technology aligns with the technical configuration of existing high-power engine systems. This includes taking in a high-speed air flow, compressing the air and then igniting it with gas or some kind of propellant to generate thrust.“

“Air breathing systems can be air or ground launched and have a rocket motor to accelerate to a cruise speed,” Bussing said.

Alongside air-breathing hypersonic weapons, the Pentagon is also developing “boost glide” weapons which achieve speed and range by “skipping off the upper atmosphere,” Bussing said. They can be a winged glider or take on a canonical shape, making them maneuverable and high-speed with a high “lift over drag ratio.”

Boost-glide hypersonic weapons, Bussing explained, “propel a glide vehicle to a point in space where it has a certain altitude and a certain forward speed.” The speed of descent then propels the weapon toward its target.

DARPA and the Air Force are working on a Tactical Boost Glide(TBG) program, described in a September 2019 Congressional Research Service report as “a wedge-shaped hypersonic glide vehicle capable of Mach 7+ flight that ‘aims to develop and demonstrate technologies to enable future air-launched, tactical-range hypersonic boost glide systems.’”

The TBG program will also be designed to integrate with the Navy’s ship-based Vertical Launch System, according to the report. DARPA also seeks to engineer a ground-launched hypersonic weapon able to “penetrate modern enemy air defenses,” the report - “Hypersonic Weapons: Background and Issues for Congress” -- states.

Many Hypersonic weapons are engineered as “kinetic energy” strike weapons, meaning they will not use explosives but rather rely upon sheer speed and the force of impact to destroy targets, developers explain. A super high-speed drone or ISR platform would better enable air vehicles to rapidly enter and exit enemy territory and send back relevant imagery without being detected by enemy radar or shot down.

Although potential defensive uses for hypersonic weapons, interceptors or vehicles are by no means beyond the realm of consideration, the principal effort at the moment is to engineer offensive weapons able to quickly destroy enemy targets at great distances. Air Force Scientists explain that speed of sound can vary, depending upon the altitude; at the ground level it is roughly 1,100 feet per second. Accordingly, if a weapon is engineered with 2,000 seconds worth of fuel – it can travel up to 2,000 miles to a target, former Air Force Chief Scientist Gregory Zacharias told Warrior, interestingly, in an interview several years ago.

Given the pace and urgency of hypersonic weapons development, Sakulich made a point to emphasize inter-service collaboration when it comes to research and development.

“All of the lab commanders meet on a regular basis to compare priorities and investments. D0D is sharing information across the laboratories. The Army is interested in hypersonics, the Navy…. all of us, so we are using these types of collaborative processes and mechanisms,” Sakulich said.

Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a Highly Qualified Expert with the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army - Acquisition, Logistics& Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel and The History Channel. He also has a Masters Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia University.
 

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Fluor nets $1.07B for work on advanced naval nuclear propulsion
Oct. 02, 2019
By Ed Adamczyk

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The nuclear-powered submarine USS South Dakota pulls into harbor in Groton, Conn., on January 31, 2019. Photo by MCS1 Steven Hoskins/U.S. Navy

Oct. 2 (UPI) -- Fluor Marine Propulsion LLC received a $1.07 billion contract to continue its work at the Naval Nuclear Laboratory, the Defense Department announced.

The contract covers work on naval nuclear propulsion technology, including the research, design, construction, testing, operation, maintenance and ultimate disposition to support safe and reliable operation of the country's submarine and aircraft carrier fleets.

The Laboratory is a joint U.S. Navy-U.S. Department of Energy program and is operated by Fluor, with four facilities in three states. The lab is dedicated solely to support the United States Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program.

The lab employs over 7,500 engineers, scientists, technicians and support personnel, all of whom will continue in their current roles and pay levels, with no reduction in force, the Pentagon said in the contract announcement.

The contract calls for management and operation of facilities in Pittsburgh; Schenectady, N.Y., and Idaho Falls, Idaho.
 

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NSA activates Cybersecurity Directorate to protect weapons, industrial base
Oct. 02, 2019
By Sommer Brokaw

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The National Security Agency on Tuesday activated its new Cybersecurity Directorate, which will have a focus on weapon security and protecting the nations defense industrial base. Pictured, NSA headquarters in Fort Meade, Md. Photo courtesy of National Security Agency

Oct. 2 (UPI) -- The National Security Agency on Tuesday launched a Cybersecurity Directorate to bring the agency's foreign intelligence and cyberdefense missions together.

The new directorate will focus initially on the defense industrial base and the weapon's security improvement, the agency said, calling it an effort to "unify as a nation against our threats."

"The Cybersecurity Directorate will reinvigorate NSA's white hat mission by sharing critical threat information and collaborating with partners and customers to better equip them to defend against malicious cyber activity," the agency said in a statement.

NSA Director General Paul Nakasone tapped Anne Neuberger, who has been leading the NSA's "Russia Small Group," a joint NSA-Cyber Command task force to combat Russian election interference, in July to head the new cybersecurity arm.

"Integrating all of our cyber mission so there's one focus," is the goal, Neuberger said regarding the new directorate. "Sharing all our unclassified information as early as possible, as quickly as possible, so we can target that sharing to the right entity and then partner with DHS [Department of Homeland Security] on critical infrastructure ... to build the security of that sector."

The NSA has had a cyberdefense organization, the Information Assurance Directorate, for decades to safeguard the government's classified and sensitive networks, and when asked, the private sector's networks as well.

NSA officials said what's new is putting together threat detection, cyberdefense and future technologies personnel under one roof to more closely align its offensive and defensive operations.

"If you build secure products, it is so much easier and less costly to defend," Neuberger said.

The President's National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee warned in a 56-page report to the White House last year that the United States will see more severe and destructive cyberattacks over the next decade than it has faced to date.

The committee had urged the Trump administration to make cybersecurity a top priority, adopting the term "Cybersecurity Moonshot Initiative," likening it to the mission to put a man on the moon in 1969.

In May 2018, the Trump administration had already began streamlining cybersecurity with the elimination of the cybersecurity coordinator position on the National Security council, which former National Security Advisor John Bolton said at the time was no longer necessary.

Abut a month later, Chinese hackers breached a U.S. Navy contractor's sensitive data, including secret plan to develop a a supersonic anti-missile to use on U.S. submarines by 2020, calling attention to cybersecurity needs.
 

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Pentagon official: Strong alliances, military investment key to China challenge
Oct 02, 2019
By Joe Snell

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Assistant Secretary of Defense Randall Schriver says in a Brookings Institution speech that China’s growing global influence must be taken seriously. Photo by Joe Snell/Medill News Service


WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 (UPI) -- The United States is responding to China's expansion of its global economic and military influence by keeping a clear focus on strengthening international relationships and prioritizing military and cybersecurity investments, a Pentagon official said Tuesday.

"The unfolding long-term strategic competition with China is the defining challenge of our generation," said Randall Schriver, assistant secretary of defense for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs.

To achieve President Donald Trump's goal of international security "burden sharing," the United States must strengthen traditional partnerships, such as integrating a national defense strategy with Japan, as well as focus on emerging relationships with India, Singapore, Indonesia and Vietnam, Schriver said.

Speaking at the Brookings Institution about the growing global role of China, Schriver warned that the cost to the United States of complacency toward China could be "extremely high."

"We need to remind allies that countries benefiting from tensions are China and Russia and this is not a good place to be," he said.

Schriver noted that China's interest in using technology for coercion, including facial recognition and 5G cellular networks, has led to deep conversations between U.S. leaders and allies on protecting their technology innovation base.

Along with strengthening global relationships, the United States must invest in a more lethal military force, Schriver said, by modernizing military capabilities across nuclear, space, cyber-security and missile defense.

"We're building the airplane as we're flying it," he said. "We're in a competitive environment now ... it's a dynamic environment that can change depending on the directions that China goes."

Cheng Li, director of the John L. Thornton China Center, warned that U.S. policymakers should not underestimate the popular support in China for President Xi Jinping's complex foreign policy.

That policy, Li said, includes building influence through the Belt and Road Initiative, a global development project in which China is investing billions every year to link as many as 70 countries through new infrastructure to increase trade, while also pressuring countries to resist challenging its national interests.

"Sometimes politicians and state leaders play two games of chess simultaneously, domestic chess and international chess," Li said. "It does not make sense if you look at one chessboard, but it makes perfect sense if you look at the two chessboards. That's the dynamic we're looking at" with Chinese leadership.

Americans increasingly see China as a threat, according to a study by the Pew Research Center earlier this year. Around a quarter of Americans (24 percent) name China as the country or group that poses the greatest threat to the future of the United States. That number is twice as high as reported in 2007.
 

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General Atomics to Develop US Military's Hypersonic Glide Body
October 02, 2019

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General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems (GA-EMS) announced today that it has been awarded a contract by the US Army’s Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office (RCCTO) to further the development of the Common Hypersonic Glide Body (CHGB) and Flight Test Vehicle in support of the Army Long Range Hypersonic Weapon (LRHW) and the Navy’s Intermediate Range Conventional Prompt Strike (IRCPS) Program. The contract award follows work performed by GA-EMS under a previous contract with the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command for the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon – Technology Demonstration program.

“As new threats continue to emerge, advancing the development and flight testing of hypersonic vehicle prototypes has become an urgent priority,” stated Scott Forney, president of GA-EMS. “Over the past 13 years, we have worked closely with the Army and Sandia National Laboratories to design, manufacture and test hypersonic glide body components and technologies. We look forward to leveraging that expertise as this critical capability transitions out of the lab and into a production-ready asset to support the warfighter.”

GA-EMS will provide manufacturing, production, engineering and technical support to integrate, test, and evaluate CH upGB and Flight Test Vehicles through system and subsystem-level ground and flight test activities. Deliverables include the manufacture of components, test and integration of vehicle flight components and assemblies, flight test planning and execution, and simulation, validation and verification support.
 
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