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11 février 2015 3 11 /02 /février /2015 08:20
Army Asks for More Money to Upgrade Abrams Tanks

 

, February 9th, 2015 By Michael Hoffman - dodbuzz.com

 

Army leaders have thus far taken up a losing battle against Congress to temporarily halt funding for its Abrams tanks. However, that changed in its latest budget proposal as the service has reversed course and asked for 50 percent more funding for the M1 Abrams tank over last year.

 

Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno told Congress in 2o12 that the Army wanted to spend money on other modernization priorities. Congress pushed back saying it was a mistake to shut down the production line of the M1 tank, which is located in Lima, Ohio, even if it’s a temporary shut down. The Army would risk losing the skilled workers at the plants and spend more on training when they needed to reopen the production line for the Abrams upgrades the Army had said it needed in 2017.

The Army apparently listened to the critique, as service officials requested $368 million for upgrades to the M1 tank. Last year, the Army asked for $237 million.

 

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8 février 2015 7 08 /02 /février /2015 08:20
US army seeks upgrades for Hellfire missile guidance system

 

6 Feb 2015 By: Dan Parsons  - FG

 

Washington DC - The US Army has launched the bidding phase of a decade-old programme to replace the Lockheed Martin AGM-114 Hellfire missile with a new weapon featuring a dual-mode guidance system. A request for proposals released on 2 February for the joint air-to-ground missile (JAGM) contract gives potential competitors Lockheed and Raytheon up to 60 days to submit bids to the army. The navy also plans to integrate JAGM onto the Marine Corps' Bell AH-1Z attack helicopters. The programme seeks an upgrade to the guidance section of the Lockheed Martin AGM-114 Hellfire missile’s backend, which is comprised of the motor, warhead and associated electronics. Lockheed has committed to offering a dual-mode seeker, while Raytheon has not yet committed to competing for the contract.

 

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5 février 2015 4 05 /02 /février /2015 17:20
i-FMS 200 logiciel – photo Thales

i-FMS 200 logiciel – photo Thales

 

4 février Aerobuzz.fr

 

Thales a été choisi par Northrop Grumman Corporation pour lui fournir son logiciel de système de gestion du vol (FMS), l’i-FMS 200. Ce logiciel sera intégré à l’avionique de mission fournie par Northrop Grumman pour moderniser les hélicoptères UH-60L Black Hawk. La version modernisée des hélicoptères Black Hawk portera le nom de UH-60V.

 

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2 février 2015 1 02 /02 /février /2015 17:20
Patriot Warrior 2014


29 janv. 2015 US Air Force

 

Patriot Warrior is an Air Force Reserve Command exercise performed in a joint environment with U.S. Army and Navy Reserves, active duty and Air National Guard partners designed to evaluate the capability to deploy, establish and operate in support of joint operations. Nearly 6,000 U.S. Army Reserve, Navy Reserve and AFRC personnel took part in the exercise.

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28 janvier 2015 3 28 /01 /janvier /2015 08:20
Special Ops Commander Discusses Challenges, Priorities

 

WASHINGTON, Jan. 27, 2015 – By Jim Garamone -- DoD News, Defense Media Activity

 

Skill, precision, cultural acuity, cutting-edge capability, flexibility, professionalism and teamwork still are the hallmarks of America’s special operations community, Army Gen. Joseph L. Votel said here today.

The commander of U.S. Special Operations Command left his Tampa, Florida, headquarters to journey to a snowy nation’s capital to speak at the National Defense Industrial Association’s Special Operations and Low-intensity Conflict Symposium.

“Our nation demands we have the people and capabilities to achieve success in the most pressing national challenges we face,” Votel said. The command is prepared to offer options to U.S. leaders across the range of special operations missions, he added.

The command naturally has a global focus, the general said, but works with regional combatant commands to fill in the seams. He used the foreign fighter problem as an example, saying the number of foreign fighters going to Syria and Iraq to fight with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant is “staggering.”

“More than 19,000 foreign fighters from 90 different countries have travelled to Syria and Iraq,” he said. “Their ideology is overpowering.”

 

ISIL Attracts Followers From Around the Globe

The terror group is attracting followers from around the globe, and the ISIL leaders are seeking legitimacy as a new caliphate, a form of Islamic rule. “Socom is playing a critical, leading role in pulling together our military efforts, both within the U.S. and with international partners -- for this global fight,” Votel said.

The nexus of terrorism and transnational criminal networks concern the general, as does the rise of Boko Haram in Nigeria. The world’s nations still are attempting to deal with the changes that arose from the Arab Spring, Votel said. “[And] a resurgent Russia is now employing coercive techniques against its neighbor using [special operations] forces, other clandestine capabilities, information operations, other cyber operations and groupings of ethnic proxies and surrogates to drive wedges into our key allies in East Europe,” he added.

These threats and others have to be dealt with at a time when Defense Department funding is constrained, Votel noted, adding that any cuts to service budgets will adversely affect Special Operations Command and the capabilities needed to combat these threats.

 

Ensuring Readiness

One command priority is ensuring readiness, the general said. “This is about getting the right people with the right skills and capabilities now and in the future,” he explained.

Communications remain a readiness priority, and Votel said he foresees a totally interconnected and networked force by 2020. “Like the threat networks we face, our unity of effort is directly correlated to our connectedness -- to information, to our partners and to the chain of command,” he said.

Aerial intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems remain a priority to the command as well.

Another command priority is focused months before the “tip of the spear” begins an operation, Votel said, as special operations forces are key to preventing conflicts. “It is about understanding the environment. It is about developing relationships. It’s about informing our broader military activities. It’s about building partner capacity and advising and assisting others so they can meet their own national objectives,” the general said.

This is happening in Afghanistan, in Iraq, the Middle East and Africa, he said, and he cited the Philippines as a case in point. Special operators have been in the country since 2002, working with Philippine military and law enforcement personnel to counter the terrorist threat. This patient, small-footprint approach has paid dividends to the Philippines and to the United States, Votel said.

Continuing to Build Relationships

Continuing to build relationships is yet another priority for the command, the general said. “We must eliminate the institutional friction that exists between us and our conventional force, international, interagency and intelligence community partners,” he said.

Socom has relationships with 60 countries around the globe, Votel said, adding that he would like to see that expanded and strengthened.

Special Operations Command must plan for the future, looking at all data to determine what is happening and what will be needed, the general said, noting that demographic changes, technological advances and even climate change must be thought through. This calls for critical and innovative thinking and communicating that thinking to the force as a whole, he said.

But most important, he said, is taking care of the command’s people so they can take care of their mission.

“In the end, people are our credentials,” the general said. “We must put their short- and long-term well-being, and that of their families, first.”

The command will leverage every service program to ensure that special operators and their families are mentally, physically, socially and spiritually prepared for the challenges ahead of them, Votel said.

“They have kept faith with us, and we will keep faith with them,” he added.

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26 janvier 2015 1 26 /01 /janvier /2015 12:35
The Combined Arms: Artillery Exercise in New Zealand

23 janv. 2015 NZ Defence Forces

Watch how the artillery, infantry, radar and UAV work together in this multinational military exercise. The units from the New Zealand Army, United States Marine Corps and United States Army came together in Exercise Kiwi Koru to test the Combined Arms aspect of war fighting.

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22 janvier 2015 4 22 /01 /janvier /2015 08:20
Air Force Warrior Games Team 2015


21 janv. 2015 US Air Force

 

The Warrior Games are an adaptive sports competition featuring more than 200 wounded, ill and injured service members and veterans competing in seven sports (archery, cycling, shooting, sitting volleyball, swimming, track and field and wheelchair basketball). Athletes represent the Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force and Special Operations.

 

Air Force Warrior Games Team 2015 : Facebook Page

 

2014 Warrior Games : Facebook Page

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21 janvier 2015 3 21 /01 /janvier /2015 08:30
BAE touts APKWS for IS battle

 

15 Jan 2015 By: Beth Stevenson - FG

 

BAE Systems is touting the incorporation of its precision rocket guided system into the US Air Force’s fixed-wing inventory, where it could be utilised in the fight against Islamic State militants.

The Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) is currently used on some of the US Marine Corps’ rotary platforms – the Bell UH-1Y Venoms and AH-1W Cobras – but BAE says it could be optimised for fixed-wing aircraft for the air force.

“We continue to talk to the United States Air Force, the Air National Guard and the Marine Corps, to figure out what it might take to bring just a slightly modified rotary wing variant to those fixed wing platforms – and get it fielded urgently because there are [suitable] platforms that are in the fight today,” Dave Harrold, product line director for APKWS at BAE Systems, tells Flightglobal.

 

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20 janvier 2015 2 20 /01 /janvier /2015 13:35
photo 2nd Infantry Division - US Army

photo 2nd Infantry Division - US Army

 

Jan. 19 By Richard Tomkins (UPI)

 

A U.S. Army Division and a Korean Army brigade are combining personnel and command staff to form a new joint army division beginning this week.

 

UIJEONGB, South Korea -- The U.S. Army and Republic of Korea Army are joining forces and establishing a combined division for improved readiness and defensive capabilities.

The U.S. Army said the new division will be comprised of the U.S. 2nd Infantry Division and a brigade from the South Korean Army. Its commander will be American, while his deputy will be Korean.

Officers, non-commissioned officers and units will be attached to the division, allowing interoperability and capitalization of the strengths of both armies

 

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9 janvier 2015 5 09 /01 /janvier /2015 12:20
GD-Built WIN-T Increment 2 SNE Supports US Army Field Artillery Operations

 

Jan 8, 2015 ASDNews Source : General Dynamics Corporation

 

During the recent Warfighter Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T) Increment 2 Development Test 2, a U.S. Army field artillery team found that the WIN-T Soldier Network Extension (SNE) significantly increased their communications reach and improved their call-for-fire response time. The SNE supported call-for-fire mission 'threads' during the Development Test 2 and Network Integration Evaluation 15.1 that took place in October and November at Fort Bliss, Texas, and White Sands Missile Range, N.M.

 

Prior to the SNE, forward observers and fire support officers relied on legacy line-of-site (LOS) radios to transmit calls for fire and counter fire at the far-edges of a mission area. During the tests, soldiers with the 4th Battalion, 27th Field Artillery Regiment (4/27), 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, used the SNE's satellite communications capability to accomplish their mission.

 

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9 janvier 2015 5 09 /01 /janvier /2015 08:20
ATacMS photo US Army

ATacMS photo US Army

 

08/01/2015 - by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International Reporter

 

Lockheed Martin has been tasked with upgrading the United States Army's Tactical Missile System to ensure elements of it can't explode post-strike. The US aerospace/defence contractor will work on eliminating the chance of unexploded ordnance being left over once a target has been hit: a potential danger to allied forces in the area and, similarly, localised civilian populations.

 

Lockheed Martin will both develop and test new hardware for the missile - this set to go into production from 2016 onwards.

 

The Army Tactical Missile System (ATacMS) surface-to-surface weapon has been produced in several variants. The initial MGM-140A-Block 1 has since given way to the MGM-140B-Block 1A and latest MGM-168 ATacMS-Block IVA model. This latest version began flight testing in spring 2001, went into production the following year and, equipped with a 230 kg warhead, has a 300+ kilometre range.

 

Tactical Missile System

 

According to Lockheed Martin, as a tactical long-range surface-to-surface precision strike platform, ATacMS is comparable to nothing else in current US Army service. Since having made its operational debut, the Tactical Missile System has subsequently been launched close to 600 times - the system having shown ‘extremely high rates of accuracy and reliability' on every occasion.

 

Besides the United States, other current or future ATacMS operators comprise Bahrain, Greece, the Republic of China, South Korea, Turkey and the UAE.

 

ATacMS Upgrades

 

Fully compatible with the MLRS (Multiple Launch Rocket System) launchers range, each ATacMS consists of hundreds of sub-munitions. To date, some 3,700 have left Lockheed Martin's facilities - with the firm's Texas and Arkansas plants set to carry out the Tactical Missile System upgrade work now required.

 

"ATacMS is extremely reliable and effective, and has proven itself over and over again in combat", explains Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control's Tactical Missiles vice president, Ken Musculus. "These upgrades ensure ATacMS is ready to meet our customers' needs now and in the future."

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8 janvier 2015 4 08 /01 /janvier /2015 18:50
Europe: le Pentagone réduit le nombre de ses bases à des fins d'économie

 

WASHINGTON, 8 janvier – RIA Novosti

 

Le Pentagone entend réorganiser ses forces en Europe, ce qui lui permettra une économie annuelle d'un demi-milliard d'euros, rapporte jeudi le département américain de la Défense.

 

Confronté à des contraintes budgétaires, le Pentagone se propose notamment de retirer ses militaires stationnées dans une base aérienne en Grande-Bretagne et restituer 14 autres sites à leurs pays respectifs en Europe.

 

Il s'agit avant tout d'une réduction des effectifs militaires et civils au Royaume-Uni et au Portugal. La perte nette en termes d'effectifs américains sur le sol britannique sera ainsi de 2.000 hommes et affectera le plus l'armée de terre et les forces aériennes.

 

Selon les spécialistes, ce processus de restructuration s'étendrait sur plusieurs années.

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7 janvier 2015 3 07 /01 /janvier /2015 17:20
M72 Light Assault Weapons Ordered

M72 LAW photo US Army

 

07/01/2015 - by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International Reporter

 

The US Department of Defence (DoD) is to take delivery of a new batch of M72 LAW (light assault weapon) rocket launchers. Signed with Nammo Talley, the IDIQ (indefinite-delivery / indefinite-quantity) contract will last into 2019 and have a maximum value of around $63 million, dependant on options taken.

The M72 LAW's service history dates back some five decades. Introduced in 1963, the design has been operationally used in Vietnam, the more recent Iraqi and Afghan wars and numerous other settings.

In US Army service, the M72 LAW took over from two preceding designs: the M31 HEAT and M20A1 ‘Super Bazooka'. The initial M72 variant has since been superseded by a host of upgrades culminating in the most recent M72E10 - this and other modern versions still equipping a number of ground forces.

 

DoD M72 LAW Contract

According to Nammo Talley's Chad Parkhill, the new DoD M72 LAW contract represents "another important milestone" for this "battle-proven" weapon. "It also sustains the vital ammunition industrial supply base in a period of decreasing volume", he says. "We're ready and proud to provide US and allied forces with what we believe are the lightest, most capable and cost-effective shoulder-fired weapons in the world."

 

M72 Light Assault Weapon

The M72 light assault weapon weighs in at 5.5 pounds and is just shy of 35 inches in length when loaded. A one-shot design, it launches 66mm rockets across a range of approximately 660 feet. Nammo Talley is a division of Norwegian/Finnish aerospace/defence group Nammo (the Nordic Ammunition Company). The company has its headquarters in Mesa, Arizona, and it's here that the new M72 rockets will be produced. The launchers themselves will be assembled at Nammo Talley's Pennsylvania facility.

Nammo Talley claims that it is the sole US-based man-portable, unguided SLM (shoulder-launched munitions) manufacturer. It has to date supplied the US and other militaries with some 350,000 LAWs.

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25 décembre 2014 4 25 /12 /décembre /2014 12:20
BAE Systems remporte un contrat d'environ 1 milliard d'euros aux Etats-Unis

BAE Systems va fournir un nouveau type de véhicule blindé pour l'armée américaine

 

24/12/2014 latribune.fr 

 

Le groupe britannique de défense a remporté un contrat allant jusqu'à 1,2 milliard de dollars (986 millions d'euros) portant sur la construction d'un nouveau type de véhicule blindé pour l'armée américaine.

 

L'année finit bien pour BAE Systems. Le groupe britannique de défense a annoncé mercredi avoir remporté un contrat allant jusqu'à 1,2 milliard de dollars (986 millions d'euros) portant sur la construction d'un nouveau type de véhicule blindé pour l'armée américaine. Le contrat initial porte sur la fabrication de 29 véhicules avec cinq variantes pour 383 millions de dollars. Une option prévoit ensuite la fabrication de 289 unités supplémentaires pour un total de 1,2 milliard de dollars.

Il s'agit de remplacer les antiques M113 datant de la guerre du Vietnam avec de nouveaux véhicules blindés polyvalents (AMPV), a expliqué BAE Systems dans un communiqué. Le groupe britannique, très implanté aux États-Unis, a précisé que la fabrication va commencer immédiatement dans ses usines de Pennsylvanie et du Michigan.

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24 décembre 2014 3 24 /12 /décembre /2014 12:20
AMPV Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle

AMPV Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle

 

 

23 December 2014 BAE Systems  Ref 259/2014

 

BAE Systems was awarded a contract worth up to $1.2 billion from the U.S. Army for the Engineering, Manufacturing, and Development (EMD) and Low-Rate Initial Production (LRIP) of the Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle (AMPV).

 

 

The program aims to provide the U.S. Army with a highly survivable and mobile fleet of vehicles that addresses a critical need to replace the Vietnam-era M113s.

 

“This award represents a significant milestone for the U.S. Army and BAE Systems,” said Mark Signorelli, vice president and general manager of Combat Vehicles at BAE Systems. “The AMPV will provide a substantial upgrade over the Army’s current personnel carrier fleet, increasing the service’s survivability, force protection, and mobility while providing for future growth potential. It also confirms BAE Systems’ role as a leading provider of combat vehicles.”

 

The initial award is for a 52-month base term, valued at approximately $383 million, during which BAE Systems will produce 29 vehicles across each of the variants. The award also provides an option to begin the LRIP phase immediately following the current EMD phase, at which time the company would produce an additional 289 vehicles for a total contract value of $1.2 billion.

 

The AMPV capitalizes on proven Bradley and M109A7 designs, meeting the Army’s force protection and all-terrain mobility requirements while enabling the AMPV to maneuver with the rest of the Armored Brigade Combat Team (ABCT). The maximized commonality within the AMPV family of vehicles and the ABCT will reduce risk and provide significant cost savings to the Army.

 

The BAE Systems AMPV team includes DRS Technologies, Northrop Grumman Corporation, Air Methods Corporation, and Red River Army Depot. Work on the contract is expected to begin immediately and will take place primarily at the company’s York, Pennsylvania, and Sterling Heights, Michigan, facilities.

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11 décembre 2014 4 11 /12 /décembre /2014 17:20
photo US Army

photo US Army

 

01.12.2014 par Frédéric Lert (FOB)
 

A l’été 2009, la 5ème Stryker Brigade Combat Team (SBCT) de la 2ème division d’infanterie (5/2 Stryker) débarquait dans la région de Kandahar, dans le sud de l’Afghanistan avec ses véhicules de combat d’infanterie à roues M1126 Stryker. L’heure était alors au « surge » décidé par le président Obama, et la 5/2 faisait alors partie des 17.000 soldats américains transférés d’Irak en Afghanistan pour aider à stabiliser le pays en vue des élections générales qui devaient suivre. La 5/2 était alors composée de quatre bataillons qui furent tous installés dans le sud du pays, dans la région de Kandahar.

 

L’US Army publie aujourd’hui un compte-rendu décoiffant de l’action de l’un de ces bataillons, le 1er bataillon du 17ème régiment d’infanterie, au cours des opérations Buffalo Stamped et Opportunity Hold conduites dans la vallée d’Arghnadab. Cinq avant le déploiement afghan, les 8×8 Stryker avaient séduit en Irak par leur rapidité de déplacement et leur force de frappe face à un mouvement de guérilla. L’ambition américaine était bien entendu de renouveler la bonne opération en Afghanistan. Mais face à un terrain très difficile et à un adversaire intelligent et réactif, solidement retranché sur son terrain de chasse, les choses furent nettement moins faciles. Le 1-17 comptera finalement 22 tués sur un effectif total de 750 hommes.

 

Le récit (en anglais) très détaillé et signé de Kevin Hymel, est publié par l’US Army Combined Arms Center de Fort Leavenworth et il est disponible sous forme de PDF en libre accès ICI. En une centaine de pages, il détaille tous les aspects de l’engagement des Stryker et se lit d’une traite.

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10 décembre 2014 3 10 /12 /décembre /2014 12:20
Les forces spéciales de l'US Army réorganisées: création du 1st Special Forces Command

 

06.12.2014 par Philippe Chapleau - Lignes de Défense

 

Le site War is boring a publié un post (lire ici) sur le tout nouveau US Army 1st Special Forces Command (SFC). Un commandement qui a été mis en place le 30 septembre.

Quelques précisions. Ce 1st SFC dépendra de l'US Army Special Operations Command qui dépend lui même de l'US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM). Voici l'organigramme tiré d'un document officiel:

 

 

Les forces spéciales de l'US Army réorganisées: création du 1st Special Forces Command

Le nouveau commandement va amalgamer 7 bataillons issus des Special Forces Groupe (5 d'active et 2 de la garde nationale), la 95e Civil Affairs Brigade, la 528e Sustainment Brigade, et le Military Information Support Operations Command (spécialisé dans les psyops et créé en août 2011, il comprend les 4e et 8e Military Information Support Operations Groups et le 3e Military Information Support Operation Battalion). Soit quelque 16 700 hommes et femmes spécialisés dans la "guerre hybride".

 

Les forces spéciales de l'US Army réorganisées: création du 1st Special Forces Command

La montée en puissance a donc débuté et le nouveau commandement sera totalement opérationnel en juillet 2015.

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17 novembre 2014 1 17 /11 /novembre /2014 17:20
BAE Systems Submits Proposal for Next-Generation Countermeasures Systems to Protect U.S. Troops

 

17 November 2014 BAE Systems  Ref. No: 243/2014

 

U.S. Army’s Common Infrared Countermeasure (CIRCM) program to protect U.S. rotary and fixed-wing aircraft from infrared guided missiles.

 

BAE Systems today announced that it has submitted its proposal for the U.S. Army’s Common Infrared Countermeasure (CIRCM) program. CIRCM is a lightweight, low-cost, and modular laser-based aircraft protection system, designed to protect U.S. rotary- and fixed-wing aircraft from infrared guided missiles.

 

“The submission of our CIRCM proposal is the latest offering in our more than 40 years of experience with infrared countermeasures, delivering critical aviation survivability equipment to our armed forces,” said Bill Staib, director of Threat Management Solutions at BAE Systems. “We are leveraging the company’s extensive expertise to submit a proposal for a next-generation aircraft survivability solution, which would protect U.S. military aircraft and troops from existing and evolving infrared-guided threats.”

 

CIRCM is designed to be part of a suite of infrared countermeasures that also includes a missile warning system and a dispenser for flares. The Army’s current missile warning system is BAE Systems’ Common Missile Warning System (CMWS), which is responsible for detecting and declaring an infrared threat. Both CIRCM and the dispenser receive the handoff from CMWS and provide appropriate countermeasures to defeat the threat.

 

BAE Systems’ CIRCM offering has been tested and evaluated in the company’s Worrell/Weeks Aircrew Protection Center. This unique state-of-the-art facility enables rigorous analysis and integration of aircraft survivability equipment in an operationally representative environment.

 

Since BAE Systems was awarded an initial contract in 2012 to compete in the CIRCM technology demonstration phase, the company has met or surpassed every program milestone, including the early delivery of initial units, successful lab testing, design reviews, and flight testing. Early next year, the Army plans to award a 26-month contract for the engineering, manufacturing, development, and delivery of 21 CIRCM systems.

 

Additional information regarding the company’s threat management solutions can be found at www.baesystems.com/threat-management.

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16 novembre 2014 7 16 /11 /novembre /2014 08:20
US Army Works Toward Single Ground Robot

Unmanned and Ready: The US Army is refurbishing a portion of its robot fleet, including the Talon IV, by QinetiQ. (Maj. Penny Zamora/ / US Army)

 

Nov. 15, 2014 -By JOE GOULD – Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — The US Army is pruning 40 percent of its ground robotics fleet, removing obsolete or excess robots before it goes to a single ground machine, according to Program Executive Office Combat Support and Combat Service Support (PEO CS&CSS).

 

The Army plans to refurbish 1,477 of its ground robots, which is about 60 percent of the total fleet, said Michael Clow, PEO CS&CSS strategic communication lead.

 

“After reset, current robots will be fielded to units to use as bridge capabilities until final programs of record are fielded, at which time the reset robots will be replaced by the program of record equipment,” Clow said.

 

The robots due for reset:

■ 353 QinetiQ Talon IVs, of which 296 will go to Army engineers and 57 to the National Guard.

■ 224 iRobot 510 FasTac Packbots.

■ 219 Dragon Runner 10s by QinetiQ.

■ 436 iRobot FirstLooks.

■ 245 iRobot 310s.

 

The Army’s Robot Logistics Support Center at Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Michigan is conducting the reset. The center has performed field and sustainment-level maintenance on the Army’s robots for the past eight years. The robots will be reset to a baseline configuration unless obsolescence requires a revised configuration, Clow said.

 

Formal Program

 

Speaking at an Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International conference here, the Army’s force development chief, Maj. Gen. Robert Dyess, generally echoed Army leaders’ dire predictions for the service’s budget, but he said “there is light” for unmanned ground systems.

 

The president’s 2016 budget, he said, is expected to shift ground robots fielded on an ad hoc basis during the wars into formal programs, albeit at a slower pace and with less funding than manufacturers may prefer.

 

“Development for the Army is relatively limited right now,” Dyess told reporters after his remarks. “It’s more like, ‘fix what we have and make it better, and have fewer things in development because there’s this desert you have to cross before you’re fully funded.’ ”

 

The Army invested more than $730 million in unmanned ground vehicles, which were rapidly fielded to Afghanistan and Iraq. Few are interoperable, are optimized to share information or have payloads, sensors or software that aren’t outmoded. The result is a mixed fleet of systems with high sustainment costs

 

Through its Man Transportable Robotic System (MTRS) program, the Army is switching out proprietary for government-owned hardware and software in its 900 Talon robots and the 300 PackBots, using an engineering change proposal, Dyess said.

 

Under the current phase of MTRS, Increment 2, the Army will move to a single unmanned ground vehicle with one configu­ration, Clow said. The program anticipates a production decision next summer before a request for proposals in 2016.

 

Meanwhile, Congress’ inability to pass a budget could derail a separate Army robotics procurement program — the Common Robotic System Individual (CRS-I). It’s intended to yield a new backpack-carried ground robot for surveillance missions, or bombs and hazardous materials, for soldiers on foot.

 

According to Dyess, the CRS-I would likely be delayed if Congress passes a continuing resolution, which would fund the government at last year’s level. Congress has not passed a defense budget on time since 2005.

 

CRS-I is intended to replace the terminated small unmanned ground vehicle program — at half the weight and cost, Dyess said.

 

The CRS-I, announced in an Army market survey in June, would weigh 20 pounds or less and allow a soldier to set it up in five minutes and operate it from up to 300 meters away. It would feature a joint plug-and-play architecture for sensors, claw arms and other peripherals, which allows the government to procure and service these separately.

 

Army officials have briefed a plan to begin fielding the CRS-I in 2020 as a joint program with the Marine Corps, for a total of 5,266 systems. The CRS-I program is working toward a materiel development decision this summer, according to PEO CS&CSS.

 

“Rules regarding continuing resolutions and new program start activities certainly could impact many programs if passed — including CRS-I,” Clow said. “As with all programs, we will adjust to budgetary changes as needed while continuing to pursue the timely delivery of improved, affordable capabilities for America’s soldiers.”

 

QinetiQ is among the companies that responded to the CRS-I market survey and is awaiting the Army’s final requirements for MTRS, said Jason Montano, the company’s product manager for Talon robots. For the latter, QinetiQ is offering its Talon V, which is compliant with the Army’s plug-and-play interoperability architecture, he said.

 

The Talon V, Montano said, sports a host of electronics upgrades, including a more powerful processor, more communications throughput and, physically, it is better able to climb stairs and lift heavier objects.

 

“It’s a product we have been working hard on for the last three or four years,” Montano said. “It’s the next-generation robot to benefit soldiers and keep soldiers out of harm’s way.”

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14 novembre 2014 5 14 /11 /novembre /2014 12:20
Lockheed contracts Trust Automation for additional AN / TPQ-53 automation systems

The AN / TPQ-53 counterfire target acquisition radar of the US Army. Photo: US Army.

 

13 November 2014 army-technology.com

 

Trust Automation has been awarded a contract to supply additional motion control systems for the AN / TPQ-53 (Q-53) counterfire target-acquisition radar system.

 

Awarded by Lockheed Martin, the contract represents the fourth low-rate initial production award for the rugged and advanced vehicle automation system.

 

The system is designed to automatically level out the vehicle that hosts the radar, and then raise and rotate the counterfire radar.

 

Trust Automation chief executive officer Ty Safreno said: "Trust Automation has been providing industry-leading power density, accuracy and reliability for the electro-mechanical control systems needed for the next generation of DoD heavy military equipment, including the AN / TPQ-53, since 2008.

 

"Due to the continued success of the AN / TPQ-53 delivered systems by Trust Automation, a fourth contract has been awarded."

 

Manufactured by Lockheed, the AN / TPQ-53 is a quick-reaction capability mobile radar system, designed to detect, classify and track in-flight projectiles fired from mortar, artillery and rocket systems, using a 90° or continuous 360° sector search.

 

With improved operational and physical functionality compared with existing AN / TPQ 36 radars systems, it provides target location of indirect fire systems with sufficient accuracy, enabling more effective detection and counter-battery actions in the battlefield.

 

Mounted on a 5t truck, the solid-state phased-array radar can be rapidly deployed, automatically levelled and remotely controlled with a laptop computer or from a fully equipped climate-controlled command vehicle.

 

Previously designated as the EQ-36, the Q-53 radars have been deployed by the US Army during combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

The contract's value and additional details, including the number of systems ordered and delivery schedule, remain undisclosed.

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12 novembre 2014 3 12 /11 /novembre /2014 08:35
A patriot ballistic missile exits a launcher during an exercise in Southwest Asia (Oct. 1, 2014)


23.10.2014 US Air Force
 

A patriot ballistic missile exits a launcher during an exercise held at an undisclosed location in Southwest Asia, Oct. 1, 2014. The exercise is a U.S. Army Central-led, bilateral combined patriot live fire exercise with host nation, and U.S. Air Force Central Command. It was held to exercise joint and combined air and missile defense operations. The event is intended to increase proficiency, expand levels of military-to-military cooperation, and promote long term regional stability and interoperability. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Henry Hoegen)

 

More pictures

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7 novembre 2014 5 07 /11 /novembre /2014 12:35
US Army to deactivate Iron Brigade in South Korea in 2015

 

7 November 2014 army-technology.com

 

The US Army is set to deactivate the 2nd Infantry Division's 1st Armoured Brigade Combat Team after nearly 50 years of service in South Korea, in June 2015.

 

Approved by the US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel, the disbandment forms part of the Army Force Generation rotational plan to increase theatre readiness and manoeuvre capabilities on the Korean peninsula and worldwide.

 

A new rotational brigade combat team comprising nearly 4,600 soldiers from 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, is scheduled to arrive in South Korea to replace the deactivating brigade.

 

The Eighth Army said in a statement: "These rotations will improve the army's ability to conduct bilateral military exercises and activities aimed at reinforcing our enduring relationship with our Korean ally, and they do not increase the overall US force strength.

 

"Bringing in off-pen units also exposes more US soldiers to the unique mission and threat in Korea and north-east Asia and enhances the partnership between the two armies."

 

Pentagon spokesperson army colonel Steve Warren was quoted by Reuters as saying that the deactivation was long-planned and did not represent a reduction in US commitment to the security of South Korea.

"These rotations will improve the army's ability to conduct bilateral military exercises."

 

"There's not loss in capability. Some would argue that the capability might even be slightly higher because it's a trained unit that arrives there in Korea," Warren said.

 

Also called Iron Brigade, the 1st Armoured Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division has had an integral role in the defence of the Korean peninsula since July 1965.

 

In particular, the unit trained and worked alongside its South Korean partners to deter aggression, and was awarded the ROK Presidential Unit Citation on three occasions for its substantial contribution to the national security and defence of the country.

 

 

The deactivation is expected to reduce the requirement for 4,500 military jobs, and the affected soldiers will be deployed to other units within the army, according to the news agency.

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14 octobre 2014 2 14 /10 /octobre /2014 16:20
JIEDDO hosts competition to identify future IED detection technologies

 

10/09/2014 Defence IQ Press

 

The Joint IED Defeat Organization (JIEDDO) has partnered with the Army Research Lab and the Maneuver Battle Lab at the Maneuver Center of Excellence at Fort Benning, Georgia, to host a "Culvert Denial Challenge," where 20 defence contractors are competing to provide the latest technologies to defeat IEDs.

 

There are two challenges with ten contractors focusing on one each – there’s a surveillance challenge and an inspection challenge.

The objective of the competition is to “find some technology that will either improve upon current systems or can be added or provide new capability to culvert IED problems," said Matthew Way, a JIEDDO programme integrator.

For the surveillance challenge, vendors make use of unmanned systems, micro-radar technologies, seismic sensors, and hyperspectral imaging. They are monitoring a culvert for an eight-hour period that encompasses day, evening and night hours.

"Once we've secured a culvert, we wanted technology that can maintain security over that area," Way said. "The competition really focuses on their ability to distinguish, per the solicitation, between nefarious activity and something that is benign -- just regular patterns of life."

Vendors in the inspection challenge are demonstrating potential solutions using quadcopters, ground robots, canines, and electromagnetic sensors. They are tasked with various scenarios such as difficult terrain, night inspection, and a long culvert that challenges communication links.

"We are really measuring how quickly they can get into a culvert area and tell me if it's clear or not clear," he said. "The second component that we are scoring them on is, once they've done that, how accurately can they identify particular items that may be threats in the region."

Companies competing include EFW (Elbit), L-3 Communications, Niitek, Primal Innovation, QinetiQ, iRobot, K2 Solutions, Lockheed Martin, and Pearson Engineering.

Bringing together senior international military, police forces and defence industry, from Europe, North America, the Middle East and Africa, EOD & CIED 2014 will offer high level discussion on the key challenges facing the CIED/EOD community and engage in debate on the strategies and new technologies available for future force development. Find out more by following the link below.

 

INTERESTED IN LEARNING MORE ABOUT THIS TOPIC?
  EOD & C-IED 2014
View the conference agenda here.

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11 octobre 2014 6 11 /10 /octobre /2014 11:20
Raytheon team saves U.S. Army $300 million on Warfighter FOCUS training program

 

DULLES, Va., Oct. 8, 2014 /PRNewswire

 

Raytheon Company (NYSE: RTN) and its partner team have realized savings of $300 million in the six years they have performed the $11.2B Warfighter Field Operations Customer Support (FOCUS) contract, the company announced today.

As leader of the Warrior Training Alliance (WTA), a group of more than 150 partner companies that was awarded the contract in 2008, Raytheon has served as single integrator, eliminating redundancies and creating efficiencies to effect the savings. The result: $300 million less spent by the customer on the core contract, which primarily covered maintaining training aids, devices, simulators, and simulations for the U.S. Army.

"During the two longest wars in American history, Raytheon has provided proven, responsive and extremely cost-effective training support while helping to ensure the highest levels of U.S. Army readiness globally," said Bob Williams, Raytheon Global Training Solutions vice president.

The Warfighter FOCUS contract consolidates the U.S. Army's live, virtual and constructive training domains to increase the effectiveness of training delivery and realize significant savings. 

In addition to reducing costs, Raytheon helped to make training support more predictable, collaborative and better coordinated through its proprietary Automated Tool for Lifecycle Analysis and Support (ATLAS) Management Information System, which provides the customer, end users and other stakeholders real-time, metric-driven information and accurate program situational awareness.

The Raytheon-led WTA has conducted more than 1.4 million training events, including Exercise Scarlet Response in July, which tested hundreds of first responders working with the nation's only Chemical Biological Incident Response force.  The contract team also successfully processed more than 5,700 task orders, averaging more than 2.5 task orders per day.

Raytheon and the WTA provide services that extend the core contract to include world-wide, comprehensive training support, from direct support to the U.S. Army's Combat Training Centers in the United States to specialty training in overseas locations like Germany, Korea and Afghanistan, to Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) operator and maintenance instruction for the U.S. Army.  Customer support is provided 24/7 through the Customer Support Operations Center located in Orlando, Fla., and the Warfighter Support Center, a central maintenance depot and shipping center in Louisville, Ky.

Through Warfighter FOCUS, Raytheon and the WTA help train U.S. Army soldiers, allied and coalition partners around the world, and maintain more than 240,000 training aids, devices and simulators. Click here to learn more about the Raytheon-led Warfighter FOCUS program.

 

About Raytheon
Raytheon Company, with 2013 sales of $24 billion and 63,000 employees worldwide, is a technology and innovation leader specializing in defense, security and civil markets throughout the world. With a history of innovation spanning 92 years, Raytheon provides state-of-the-art electronics, mission systems integration and other capabilities in the areas of sensing; effects; and command, control, communications and intelligence systems, as well as cyber security and a broad range of mission support services. Raytheon is headquartered in Waltham, Mass. For more about Raytheon, visit us at www.raytheon.com and follow us on Twitter @Raytheon.

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9 octobre 2014 4 09 /10 /octobre /2014 18:20
Digital Range Training System

 

9 oct. 2014 Lockheed Martin

 

Lockheed Martin’s DRTS ranges enable the U.S. Army to conduct more realistic live fire training and accelerate learning. The first-ever Digital Air-Ground Integration Range integrates air and ground assets across a digitally powered range, providing higher-fidelity performance data so that soldiers receive more comprehensive feedback during training.

 
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