Category: Military

House Passes FY2013 CJS Bill, Replaces Sequester for DOD with Other Cuts

House Passes FY2013 CJS Bill, Replaces Sequester for DOD with Other Cuts

The House of Representatives passed the FY2013 Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) appropriations bill that funds NASA and NOAA this afternoon as expected.   Separately, the House also passed legislation to replace deep budget cuts for the Department of Defense that will take effect on January 1, 2013 under the sequester provisions of last year’s Budget Control Act (BCA) with deep cuts elsewhere in the federal budget.

The House has been debating the CJS bill, H.R. 5326, since Tuesday.   In the end, only one amendment was adopted that affects NASA — a $126 million cut to NASA’s Cross Agency Support budget.  The money instead was allocated to a Department of Justice community policing program.  The bill passed on a vote of 247-163.  President Obama earlier threatened to veto the bill.

The other bill passed today would cut $243 billion from food stamps and other mandatory spending programs over the next five years instead of making cuts to the defense budget as required by the BCA.   The Sequester Replacement Reconciliation Act, H.R. 5652, passed 218-199 on a mostly party-line vote.  Only 16 Republicans opposed it, and no Democrats supported it according to The Hill newspaper.

The bill is not expected to pass the Senate. 

At a press conference today, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey defended the Obama Administration’s FY2013 budget request for DOD.  That request was crafted after they conducted a strategic assessment of DOD’s future needs.  Responding to the House Armed Services Committee’s (HASC’s) action on the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act yesterday, Panetta said that “[m]y concern is that if Congress now tries to reverse many of the tough decisions we reached by adding several billion dollars to the president’s budget request, then they risk not only potential gridlock [but]…they could force the kind of trade-offs that could jeopardize our national defense.”   He also insisted that “defense should not be exempt from doing its share to reduce the deficit.”

HASC completed full committee markup of the FY2013 authorization act yesterday, approving $554 billion for national defense plus $88.5 billion for Overseas Contingency Operations.   The funding is $4 billion more than requested by the President.  HASC Chairman Howard “Buck” McKeon said that it nonetheless is less than FY2012 and it “begins to restore sanity to the defense budget.”   He stated that military spending represents “only 20% of the federal budget” but “has absorbed 50% of deficit reductions to date.”   He hailed today’s passage of the Sequester Replacement Reconciliation Act, criticizing Democrats for seeing the sequester as a balanced approach to deficit reduction and saying the bill “reforms the real drivers of our debt and honors the defenders of our freedom.”

Regarding space programs, HASC restored funding for two programs DOD wanted to cancel — Operationally Responsive Space and the Space Test Program — and sharply cut a Missile Defense Agency program called Precision Tracking Space Sensor.

DigitalGlobe Rejects GeoEye's Offer

DigitalGlobe Rejects GeoEye's Offer

Commercial satellite imagery company DigitalGlobe rejected the purchase bid from its rival, GeoEye, today.

In a press release, DigitalGlobe stated that GeoEye’s offer “substantially undervalues” the company and “does not adequately recognize DigitalGlobe’s superior track record … as well as its [satellite] constellation’s greater capabilities.”

GeoEye sent a letter to DigitalGlobe President Jeffrey Tarr on Friday offering to buy the company for $17 per share.

Tarr’s response today provided a glimpse of the give and take between the two companies over the past year.   Noting that DigitalGlobe rejected previous entreaties from GeoEye beginning in February 2012, the press release says that DigitalGlobe had countered with a proposal for it to acquire GeoEye.  It said that it repeated the offer after GeoEye’s “public hostile offer” on Friday as long as the two could reach agreement over the weekend.  “Given GeoEye’s rejection of that proposal, DigitalGlobe terminated discussions and will await the government reaching its budget decision regarding EnhancedView. When the government reaches its decision, DigitalGlobe will consider whether to make a proposal to acquire GeoEye,” the press release states.

Tarr went further, saying that the “abruptness” of GeoEye’s offer on Friday suggests it was made “in desperation due to highly publicized concerns about potential government decisions that may jeopardize their portion of the EnhancedView program.”

EnhancedView is the contract from the government’s National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) through which the government purchases satellite imagery from the two companies for military and intelligence purposes.   Rumors are rampant that the government will reduce its purchases.

 

Events of Interest: Week of May 6-11, 2012 – UPDATE 2

Events of Interest: Week of May 6-11, 2012 – UPDATE 2

UPDATES:  The Planetary Society’s luncheon on Capitol Hill on Tuesday has been added, along with NASA’s press conference on results from the Dawn spacecraft’s mission to the asteroid Vesta on Thursday.

The following events may be of interest in the week ahead.  The House and Senate both are in session.

During the Week

The FY2013 appropriations cycle continues its march forward this week.   The House is slated to debate the FY2013 Commerce-Justice-Science appropriations bill that funds NASA and NOAA and other agencies beginning Tuesday.   The House appropriations defense subcommittee will markup the FY2013 defense appropriations act in a closed meeting.

Meanwhile, the full House Armed Services Committee (HASC) will markup the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act on Wednesday at 10:00.  Its subcommittees completed markup two weeks ago.

Monday, May 7

Monday-Thursday, May 7-10

Tuesday, May 8

Tuesday-Wednesday, May 8-9

Wednesday, May 9

Thursday, May 10

Thursday-Friday, May 9-10

Friday, May 11

GeoEye Bids to Acquire DigitalGlobe; EnhancedView Funding OK for 2012-UPDATE

GeoEye Bids to Acquire DigitalGlobe; EnhancedView Funding OK for 2012-UPDATE

UPDATE:  A quote from and a link to DigitalGlobe’s response to GeoEye’s proposal replaces an earlier quote from the Wall Street Journal.

Chris Quilty, Senior Vice President for Equity Research at Raymond James & Associates, reports that GeoEye is making a bid to buy rival DigitalGlobe.  GeoEye also said that its deal with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) for imagery under the Enhanced View contract will be fully funded for 2012.   Rumors that NGA is going to cut funding substantially for Enhanced View have been rampant for months.

Quilty’s report reflects a GeoEye press release today announcing that the company is proposing to purchase DigitalGlobe for $17 per share, a 26 percent premium to DigitalGlobe’s closing share price yesterday.  Quilty notes that DigitalGlobe has rejected previous bids, but the fundamental issue is whether the government would approve a merger of the only two companies that provide commercial satellite imagery.  “The government has made great efforts to ensure a competitive market for weapon systems and services, often creating a ‘managed duopoly.’ … This desire … could prove to be a major hurdle to regulatory approval, even if the benefits … are tangible and significant,” he said.

The GeoEye press release included the text of its letter to DigitalGlobe President Jeffrey Tarr.  DigitalGlobe released a statement saying that its Board of Directors “will carefully review and consider the proposal and pursue the course of action that is in the best interests of DigitalGlobe and its stockholders.”

GeoEye separately said that NGA notified the company that it would get full funding of its Enhanced View contract for the 2012 contract term and that development of its GeoEye-2 satellite is “on time and on budget for a launch in the first half of 2013.”

DigitalGlobe similarly reported earlier this week that NGA said it would fully fund their Enhanced View contract as well for 2012.  DigitalGlobe will get $250 million while GeoEye will receive $111 million according to their respective press releases.

Rumors that NGA is planning to cut funding for Enhanced View have been widespread for several months and the companies’ announcements are for 2012 only.  An April 19 New York Times story portrays the underlying issue as a “clash” between the military and the intelligence community.  It quotes GeoEye official Bill Wilt as saying “[t]he debate is really between the military, which needs a lot of imagery but doesn’t need the highly classified imagery, and the intelligence community, which wants to keep the capability to produce its own imagery.”

The National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) builds and operates the government satellites that provide the highly classified imagery.  Its director, Bruce Carlson, announced his resignation on April 18.   He and National Intelligence Director James Clapper reportedly advocated less reliance on commercial imagery.   Betty Sapp, currently NRO’s principal deputy director, already has been named to replace Carlson.

HASC Subcommittee Rescues ORS, Denies Advanced Appropriations for SBIRS

HASC Subcommittee Rescues ORS, Denies Advanced Appropriations for SBIRS

In less than 5 minutes today, the Strategic Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) approved the subcommittee’s recommendations for its portion of the FY2013 defense authorization act.  One of those recommendations is to preserve the Operationally Responsive Space (ORS) program, which the Department of Defense (DOD) wants to dissolve.  The draft bill also denies DOD’s request for advance appropriations as part of its Efficient Space Procurement (ESP) strategy, and restricts spending for launch vehicles until the Air Force submits an associated acquisition plan.

The various HASC subcommittees are marking up their portions of the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA, H.R. 4310 ) today and tomorrow.  The Strategic Forces subcommittee has jurisdiction over most DOD space activities.

HASC has a special section of its website with the bill and report language recommended by each of the subcommittees and video of the markups.

The Strategic Forces subcommittee denied DOD’s request to dissolve the ORS program office and integrate the ORS concept into other parts of the Air Force space program.   ORS was created in the FY2007 John Warner National Defense Authorization Act to demonstrate the ability to build and launch small specialized satellites quickly to respond to the needs of joint commanders.  The committee rejected DOD’s request to repeal that section of the law, denied the $10 million DOD requested over five different budget accounts to integrate ORS into its other activities, and added $25 million to continue the ORS program.

Separately, the subcommittee disapproved DOD’s request for advanced appropriations for the Space-Based InfraRed System (SBIRS) as part of its latest attempt at reforming satellite procurement.  The committee agrees with the effort to reduce costs through acquisition reform, but not with providing the money in advance.  This year’s effort, ESP, replaces last year’s Evolutionary Acquisition for Space Efficiency (EASE).  Congress did not agree with advanced appropriations last year either.   DOD believes that block-buys of multi-satellite systems, like SBIRS, could reduce costs if it had the money in advance.  Congress, however, appropriates money incrementally, one year at a time. The language in the draft bill adopted today says that the committee “does not support the request for advanced appropriations authority and notes … [it] would limit the oversight ability of future Congresses.”  The committee does, however, support other aspects of ESP, saying that it anticipates DOD will “realize substantial savings from the ESP block buy approach, enabled by a fixed-price contract and fixed requirements.”   It directs DOD to reinvest any money it saves into a “spacecraft modernization initiative, where research and development activities are competitively awarded and new technologies are matured for insertion in future blocks of SBIRS satellites or other space-based infrared sensors.”

Regarding launch vehicles, the committee noted that DOD has not submitted its acquisition strategy for Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles (EELVs) and prohibits spending 10 percent of the funds allocated to EELVs until it does.  It lists a number of topics that must be addressed in the report, including “an assessment of when new entrants will be certified to compete” for EELV-class launches.  The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is then required to review the acquisition plan.  SpaceX, a “new entrant,” announced plans to build a “Falcon-Heavy” version of its Falcon rocket and does not want to be shut out of competing for DOD space launches, but DOD is reluctant to risk its vital, expensive satellites on unproven rockets.

Among other things, the draft bill also —

  • requires DOD to report to Congress by December 1, 2012 on a lower cost solution for providing GPS capability following the procurement of GPS III;
  • encourages DOD to use existing or easily modified government and commercial applications for the Joint Space Operations Center Mission System in order to reduce costs, with a report due to Congress 270 days after enactment certifying that the Air Force has conducted thorough market research and technical evaluation of non-developmental items; and
  • requires DOD to submit annual reports on the “synchronization of satellite, ground and user terminal segments of space major defense acquisition programs” in response to concerns that the ground segments for space-based systems sometimes are not ready at the time the satellites are launched, wasting that capability.

 

Satellite Industry Applauds DOD's Sec. 1248 Report on Satellite Export Controls

Satellite Industry Applauds DOD's Sec. 1248 Report on Satellite Export Controls

The Satellite Industry Association (SIA) applauded the Department of Defense’s (DOD’s) final report on the national security implications of relaxing export control regulations on satellites.  The “sec. 1248” report was released today.

The report was prepared by DOD and the State Department in response to sec. 1248 of the FY2010 defense authorization act wherein Congress directed DOD to assess whether national security would be negatively impacted by moving satellites from the U.S. Munitions List (USML) controlled by the State Department to the dual-use Commerce Control List (CCL) administered by the Commerce Department. 

The White House issued a fact sheet summarizing the report.

The report concludes that communications satellites that do not contain classified components and remote sensing satellites with performance parameters below certain thresholds do not contain technologies unique to the United States and are not critical to national security.  Thus, they would be more appropriately designated as dual-use on the CCL list instead of on the USML.  That also applies to systems, subsystems, parts and components associated with the satellites.  At a press conference today, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space Policy Gregory Schulte said it would move “hundreds of thousands” of components from the USML to the CCL.

U.S. satellite manufacturers have been seeking relief from the comparatively onerous export control system dictated by the USML and its associated International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) for more than a decade.  The George H.W. Bush and Clinton Administrations had moved commercial communications satellites from the USML to the CCL in the early 1990s.   Congress reversed that decision in the FY1999 defense authorization act (P.L. 105-261) after a special congressional committee determined that U.S. satellite manufacturers violated export control laws and assisted China in developing its missile technology by aiding in analysis of launch failures of Chinese rockets that were carrying U.S.-built satellites.   No U.S.-built satellites or satellites containing U.S. components have been exported to China for launch since that time. 

European companies began building satellites without U.S. components that are “ITAR-free” — not subject to the U.S. ITAR rules — and selling them to customers who do not want to deal with the U.S. export control system.  Today’s report states that the current U.S. export control regime “places the U.S. industrial base at a distinct competitive disadvantage when bidding against companies from other advanced satellite-exporting countries that have less stringent export control policies and practices.”

This report does not recommend changing how China is treated, however.  Appendix 4 of the report points out that an earlier law, P.L.  101-246, that was enacted after the 1989 Tiananmen Square uprising would remain in effect.  It prohibits launching U.S. satellites on Chinese rockets without a presidential waiver.   Such waivers were granted in the first half of the 1990s, which allowed U.S.-built satellites to be launched by China and led to the problems addressed by the 1999 law.  The so-called Tiananmen Square restrictions also prohibit export of items on the USML to China.   If this report’s recommendations are followed and hundreds of thousands of items are transferred from the USML to the CCL, that restriction might no longer apply.  However, the report calls for changes to the CCL, too.   It recommends prohibiting items on the CCL from being transferred to any “embargoed country,” a category that includes China, Syria, North Korea and others.

Some influential members of Congress remain adamantly opposed to allowing transfer of any satellite technology to China, so that recommendation may assuage those concerns.  The anti-China sentiment is quite strong with some Members, however, as illustrated by Rep. Frank Wolf’s (R-VA) long standing opposition to any U.S.-Chinese space cooperation.

SIA, a U.S.-based trade association for the commercial satellite industry, hailed the report.   SIA President Patricia Cooper said it represents “a more contemporary picture of the national security, space and satellite environments.”   She added that SIA and its members hope Congress will pass H.R. 3288, an export control reform bill sponsored by Rep. Howard Berman (D-CA) that contains provisions similar to what is recommended in the report.

Congressional action is needed because the FY1999 defense authorization act removed presidential authority to decide how to regulate satellite exports.  It requires that satellites, their components, associated technical data and related ground equipment be treated as munitions.    The report and the SIA both point out that the satellite industry is the only sector where Congress has mandated export policy by law.   “Space-related items, even if they have civilian applications, are the only dual-use items that are required by law to be controlled as defense articles,” the report states, while the President has the authority to determine which set of export regulations govern any other sector. 

Schulte said today he believes the approach recommended in the report will strengthen U.S. national security “by energizing the industrial base” and allowing U.S. companies to better compete globally.  He is hopeful that Congress will agree.   He and Lou Ann McFadden, Chief of the Strategic Issues Division at the Defense Technology Security Administration (DTSA), stressed that by removing these items from the USML, the government can focus on preventing the transfer of technologies that really could affect national security.

McFadden expressed frustration that DTSA is required by law to sit in on meetings with companies that over the past 15 years have demonstrated a “culture of compliance” with the current export control laws.  “We are frustrated that we have to be present at low risk activities when there are high risk activities we want to monitor,” she said.  “We’re forced to monitor the same people over and over on the same activities.”  Instead, she believes they should be focusing on helping new companies, for example, “get off on the right foot” in understanding and complying with export controls.

DOD Satellite Export Report Expected to be Released Tomorrow

DOD Satellite Export Report Expected to be Released Tomorrow

Expectations are high that a scheduled press conference tomorrow at the National Space Symposium (NSS) in Colorado Springs, CO presages the release of a long-awaited report from the Department of Defense (DOD) on whether the rules governing export of commercial communications satellites should change. 

The so-called “sec. 1248 report” is in response to congressional direction in section 1248 of the FY2010 defense authorization act for DOD to prepare a report on the national security implications of removing satellites and related components from the U.S. Munitions List.  An interim report released last year was widely criticized.  The final report is eagerly anticipated by Congress and the satellite industry.

According to the Space Foundation’s NSS website, from 12:00-12:30 pm MT (2:00-2:30 pm ET), two DOD officials will provide an update on export control reform.  The officials are Amb. Greg Schulte, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space Policy, and Lou Ann McFadden, Chief, Strategic Issues Division, Defense Technology Security Administration.   The NSS website lists the following information for those who want to call in to listen to the press conference:  Call in: +1.866.330.1200 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting            +1.866.330.1200      end_of_the_skype_highlighting, passcode 5768000#

Export control reform in general is a priority of the Obama Administration to order to make U.S. companies more competitive in global markets.   Exports of commercial communications satellites are a special case, however.  During the early 1990s, they were moved from the strict regime of the Munitions List, overseen by the State Department, that guards exports of technology that could harm national security to the dual-use Commerce Control List administered by the Department of Commerce for technologies that have both military and civilian uses.  Items on the Munitions List are governed by the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR).

In the late 1990s, a special congressional committee chaired by then-Rep. Christopher Cox found that U.S. satellite manufacturers violated export control laws and aided China in developing ballistic missile technology when they reviewed China’s failure analyses of why certain commercial communications satellite launches failed.  The report of the Cox Committee led Congress to pass a law that moved commercial communications satellites back to the Munitions List.  No U.S.-built satellites or satellites with U.S. components have been approved for export to China for launch since then.   European companies took advantage of this to build “ITAR-free” satellites that can be exported to China for launch.

U.S. satellite manufacturers argue that the technologies in commercial communications satellites are widely available and pose no risk to national security.  They want to be able to build satellites that their customers can launch on comparatively inexpensive Chinese rockets.  They hope that this DOD report with change the paradigm in which commercial communications satellites are considered.

Events of Interest: Week of April 16-20, 2012

Events of Interest: Week of April 16-20, 2012

The following events may be of interest in the week ahead.  The House and Senate both return to work after a two-week recess.

During the Week

Weather permitting, Tuesday is the day the space shuttle Discovery will make its last trip aboard the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft as it moves from Kennedy Space Center to the Smithsonian’s Udvar-Hazy Center near Dulles Airport, VA just outside of Washington for permanent exhibition.  NASA is anticipating spectacular views of Discovery’s arrival as it is flown over national landmarks in the Washington area.   Details on where to get the best view are on the Smithsonian’s website as well as NASA’s.

If all goes according to schedule, you can watch Discovery arrive and then hop up to Capitol Hill for the Senate Appropriations Commerce-Justice-Science subcommittee markup of the FY2013 budget requests under its jurisdiction, which include NASA and NOAA.  It is at 2:30 pm in 192 Dirksen.  This is the first markup of the FY2013 appropriations season that affects NASA and NOAA.  It is followed one hour later with the markup of the T-HUD bill that includes the FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation.

Of course it’s not clear how many of the space policy community will be in Washington on Tuesday since the National Space Symposium is being held this week (Monday-Thursday) in Colorado Springs, CO.  

Those are just a few of the space policy-related events coming up this week.   See below for a complete list.

Monday, April 16

Monday-Thursday, April 16-19

Tuesday, April 17

Wednesday, April 18

Friday, April 20

NORAD Confirms North Korean Launch Failed

NORAD Confirms North Korean Launch Failed

The U.S. North American Aerospace Defense Command, NORAD, confirmed in a statement that North Korea’s attempted launch of a satellite — or missile — failed on April 12, 2012 Eastern Daylight Time (April 13 local time in North Korea).

NORAD said that the launch took place at 6:39 pm EDT and was tracked over the Yellow Sea.   “Initial indications are that the first stage of the missile fell into the sea 165 km west of Seoul, South Korea.  The remaining stages were assessed to have failed and no debris fell on land. At no time were the missile or the resultant debris a threat.”

NBC news reported that the rocket broke apart 90 seconds after launch.

This was North Korea’s third attempt, and third failure, to launch a satellite into orbit.   On the first two occasions, North Korean media sources told its isolated populace that the launch succeeded.   In this case, North Korea invited in foreign journalists prior to the launch, but apparently they were not told that the launch had taken place.  Many reports from western news sources soon after the launch quoted U.S. officials as saying the launch failed. The launch was to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the birth of the country’s founder, Kim Il-sung, grandfather of the current leader, Kim Jong-un.

Western analysts had expressed skepticism about the chances of a successful launch in recent days.

North Korea proceeded with the launch despite strong objections from the United States and other countries.   The United States and North Korea signed an agreement on February 29, 2012 in which the United States would provide food aid as long as North Korea adhered to international obligations, including not using ballistic missile technology.   The launch today violated that agreement and two United Nations Security Council resolutions.  Several news sources cited a White House statement, which is not yet on the White House website, saying that even though the launch failed, the act “threatens regional security, violates international law and contravenes its own recent commitments.”

 

North Korean Launch Fails: Media Reports

North Korean Launch Fails: Media Reports

Several reports in the western news media state that North Korea conducted its launch today, but that it failed.

CNN and ABC News are among the media sources reporting the failure.   We will update this report as more information becomes available.