Defense Technology International - June 2008 - (Page 16) DISPATCHES GLOBAL ULTRA STEALTH Northrop Grumman has a secret: USAF’s Next-Generation Bomber BILL SWEETMAN•MINNEAPOLIS NGB demonstrator may be a twin-engine aircraft resembling an X-47B. Initial version will be piloted, but an unmanned endurance version is a probable follow-on. JOZEF GALTIAL CONCEPT I s Northrop Grumman building a secret bomber prototype? In late April, the company revealed first-quarter financial results. Data indicated $2 billion in new “restricted programs” contract awards at Integrated Systems, the aircraft division. This almost certainly confirms what DTI first reported earlier this year: Northrop Grumman has a classified, sole-source contract to build a demonstrator for the U.S. Air Force’s Next-Generation Bomber (DTI March, p. 30). USAF budgets show no funding for the Next-Generation Bomber (NGB) itself in 2008, although documents show money for technology work in Fiscal 2008-10. Northrop Grumman CEO Ron Sugar said last year that Integrated Systems had made strides in black programs and identified restricted projects as the top new-business opportunity. Taken together, the evidence points to a single, very large contract win. Northrop Grumman also acquired Scaled Composites in 2007, a company that can develop large prototype aircraft quickly. The $2-billion contract casts new light on the decision in January by Boeing and Lockheed Martin to reveal their year-old collaboration on NGB. (Boeing, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman declined interview requests.) Hailed as an NGB “dream team” combining Boeing’s bomber experience with Lockheed Martin’s stealth technology, the teaming now looks like an e ort to catch up with a rival that has a lead in the next major U.S. combat aircraft program. It is likely that the prototype will build on technology under development for the Navy’s X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System Demonstrator (UCAS-D), putting within reach USAF’s goal of a 2018 initial operational capability date for the bomber. Industry and USAF sources have talked about a competition in 2010, leading to the start of systems development and demonstration in 2011. But it would be Northrop Grumman’s to lose. Events since 2000 placed Northrop Grumman in pole position. USAF interest in a replacement bomber was rekindled after 9/11, but USAF Secretary Jim Roche and Chief of Sta Gen. John Jumper focused on the Lockheed Martin FB-22, seeing it as a low-risk solution that bolstered the case for the embattled F-22. The departures of Roche and Jumper in 2005 coincided with a change in think- ing. In October, USAF defined a threestage Next-Generation Long-Range Strike program. Phase I would keep the force e ective until 2018, with upgrades to aircraft. Phase II would be a new “2018 bomber,” while Phase III encompassed hypersonic concepts. This was the end of the road for the FB-22, since nobody envisioned the F-22 remaining in production long enough to dovetail with Phase II. Late in 2005, at a conference on unmanned combat air vehicles in London, there were signs of convergence between the bomber requirement and the Joint UCAS project. J-UCAS had been kicked o as a major e ort three years earlier, but USAF was interested in a platform larger than the Navy could accommodate. Northrop Grumman J-UCAS Program Manager Scott Winship said at the time that the company had proposed completing a third prototype as an X-47C with a 172-ft. wingspan and 10,000-lb. payload. J-UCAS leader Mike Francis stressed an advantage of the unmanned vehicle: an inherently lower radar crosssection (RCS) than conventional tailed aircraft. Despite the tension in J-UCAS, it was AviationWeek.com/dti 16 DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY INTERNATIONAL JUNE 2008 http://AviationWeek.com/dti
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Defense Technology International - June 2008 Defense Technology International - June 2008 Contents Around the World Science Watch Tech Watch Basic Black Self-Defense Fire-Resistant Perfezione Hyperspeed Trial Big Sky Cashing In Digital Links Hang Ten Sea Change Programs Update Two Steps Back Direct Hit Staying Power Potent Stinger Do No Harm Guard Duty The Net Cutting Edge First Person In Review Insight Defense Technology International - June 2008 Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Defense Technology International - June 2008 (Page Cover1) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Defense Technology International - June 2008 (Page Cover2) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Defense Technology International - June 2008 (Page 3) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Defense Technology International - June 2008 (Page 4) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Defense Technology International - June 2008 (Page 5) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Around the World (Page 8) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Around the World (Page 9) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Around the World (Page 10) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Around the World (Page 11) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Science Watch (Page 12) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Science Watch (Page 13) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Tech Watch (Page 14) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Tech Watch (Page 15) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Basic Black (Page 16) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Basic Black (Page 17) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Basic Black (Page 18) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Self-Defense (Page 19) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Self-Defense (Page 20) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Self-Defense (Page 21) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Fire-Resistant (Page 22) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Fire-Resistant (Page 23) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Perfezione (Page 24) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Perfezione (Page 25) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Hyperspeed Trial (Page 26) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Big Sky (Page 27) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Cashing In (Page 28) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Digital Links (Page 29) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Digital Links (Page 30) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Hang Ten (Page 31) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Sea Change (Page 32) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Sea Change (Page 33) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Programs Update (Page 34) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Programs Update (Page 35) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Programs Update (Page 36) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Programs Update (Page 37) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Two Steps Back (Page 38) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Two Steps Back (Page 39) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Direct Hit (Page 40) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Direct Hit (Page 41) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Direct Hit (Page 42) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Direct Hit (Page 43) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Staying Power (Page 44) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Staying Power (Page 45) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Staying Power (Page 46) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Staying Power (Page 47) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Potent Stinger (Page 48) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Potent Stinger (Page 49) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Potent Stinger (Page 50) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Potent Stinger (Page 51) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Do No Harm (Page 52) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Do No Harm (Page 53) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Do No Harm (Page 54) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Do No Harm (Page 55) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Guard Duty (Page 56) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Guard Duty (Page 57) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - The Net (Page 58) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - The Net (Page 59) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Cutting Edge (Page 60) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Cutting Edge (Page 61) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - First Person (Page 62) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - First Person (Page 63) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - In Review (Page 64) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - In Review (Page 65) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Insight (Page 66) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Insight (Page Cover3) Defense Technology International - June 2008 - Insight (Page Cover4)
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