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Defense industry is filling the Golden Dome vacuum
Defense industry is filling the Golden Dome vacuum

Axios

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Axios

Defense industry is filling the Golden Dome vacuum

Golden Dome is the most publicly discussed U.S. defense project in years — except by the people commissioning it. The big picture: The Trump administration is mum about its $175 billion hemispheric missile shield, but U.S. defense contractors are maneuvering and messaging as they seek a piece of the action. Driving the news: Golden Dome was verboten for certain speakers on stage at the Space and Missile Defense Symposium in Huntsville, Alabama, last week. It was a different scene, though, in the hallways and at the happy hours. Check this split-screen: From industry: Ads. Announcements. News hits. Sci-fi-style graphics with colorful grids, dramatic missile arcs and explosions. Promises. From the Pentagon: Very little, as headline after headline after headline made clear. As Breaking Defense put it: "The first rule of Golden Dome is don't talk about Golden Dome." The intrigue: There is engagement — it's just behind closed doors. And contractors are pushing forward while still deciphering what, exactly, the administration wants and the military needs. Here are some of the latest examples: Lockheed Martin launched a command-and-control incubator in Virginia to work on battle management, mission planning and AI integration. The company is also planning a test of space-based interceptors by 2028, according to Robert Lightfoot, who leads the company's space efforts. Peraton is eyeing a "system of systems integration approach" while leaning on its offensive and defensive cyber expertise, Milton Carroll, vice president of business development for space and intelligence, told Axios. "We don't build space assets," he said. "We don't build radars." AV and Sierra Nevada Corporation teamed up. Their announcement specifically mentioned sensors, directed energy and electronic warfare, as well as drone and missile defense. And L3Harris Technologies named Rob Mitrevski president of Golden Dome strategy and integration, a new role. The company is already involved with the Hypersonic and Ballistic Tracking Space Sensor program, namedropped in President Trump's original decree. Between the lines: Tom Karako, a missile-defense expert at CSIS, told Axios on the sidelines of the symposium that Pentagon silence is "probably temporary" and based on "internal machinations around public affairs." In the meantime? "We've got to create the consensus, and we've got to create the shared understanding of what is it that we're doing here and why," he said. "That's why my message is … Golden Dome: Start talking."

L3Harris pitches full-rate production for missile tracking sensor
L3Harris pitches full-rate production for missile tracking sensor

Yahoo

time10-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

L3Harris pitches full-rate production for missile tracking sensor

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — An L3Harris executive said Wednesday the company's newest missile-tracking sensor is ready for full-rate production as the Pentagon weighs architecture options for a next-generation 'Golden Dome' missile defense capability. Developed for the Missile Defense Agency's Hypersonic and Ballistic Tracking Space Sensor program, HBTSS, the L3Harris satellite has been on orbit since February 2024. According to MDA, the spacecraft is providing important test data and imagery of hypersonic test events. Speaking with reporters April 9 at the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Ed Zoiss, president of space and airborne systems at L3Harris, said the company is ready to start producing the HBTSS sensor in high volumes. 'The sensor has proven itself out, and we need to start full-rate production,' he said. 'We're ready to do it now.' In an executive order signed just one week into his second term, President Donald Trump directed the Pentagon to start making plans for a Golden Dome missile defense capability made up of advanced sensors and interceptors designed to track and neutralize both traditional and high-end missile threats. In response, the Space Force, Missile Defense Agency, National Reconnaissance Office and other Defense Department agencies have been crafting options for achieving that vision. They've also reached out to the defense industry for ideas. Zoiss said L3Harris proposed increased HBTSS production as part of its response to DOD's call for input. 'We put in an architecture that we recommend for HBTSS and how we would see it to have global coverage,' he said. 'We're waiting to see what comes back.' Space Development Agency launches study on Trump's Iron Dome order An increase in HBTSS production would be a shift in how DOD officials have envisioned the sensor's role in space-based missile defense — at least publicly. MDA launched the capability in partnership with the Space Development Agency, which is building out a constellation of satellites in low Earth orbit that can detect and track hypersonic and ballistic missile threats. That constellation will include tracking satellites equipped with wide-field-view sensors — built by L3Harris, Northrop Grumman and Sierra Space — and a smaller number of medium-field-of-view sensors like HBTSS, designed to track dimmer targets and send data to interceptors. SDA is buying the tracking satellites in batches, or tranches, and has awarded contracts for Tranche 0, 1 and 2. Zoiss said the medium-field-of-view sensors SDA is buying for Tranche 1 and 2 are essentially copies of the HBTSS capability. In a speech Wednesday at the symposium, MDA Deputy Director Maj. Gen. Jason Cothern said the agency looks forward to the capability being 'operationalized' by the Space Force and integrated into SDA's architecture. Cothern said HBTSS has, to date, demonstrated 'remarkable capability essential for missile defense.' MDA has used the satellite to track two separate hypersonic test flights and the sensor has collected more than 650,000 images of tailored test events and 'interesting real-world events,' he added. Missile Defense Agency satellites track first hypersonic launch As DOD considers how HBTSS might fit into its Golden Dome strategy, MDA has begun work on a follow-on capability, a Discriminating Space Sensor, or DSS. Whereas HBTSS was designed to track dimmer targets than traditional missile-warning sensors, DSS will help the Defense Department distinguish missile targets from enemy countermeasures, which are meant to make their advanced weapons harder to identify. MDA plans to launch a prototype by the end of the decade, though Cothern said budget deliberations — which will be informed by the department's Golden Dome approach — could shorten that timeline. 'The whole intent is to, like HBTSS, do an on-orbit demonstration of these discriminating capabilities to inform the future space-based architectures and what we need for next-generation missile defense,' he said. MDA Director Heath Collins said last year DSS had completed ground concept testing and was ready to move into the on-orbit demonstration phase. The agency requested funds for DSS in its fiscal 2025 budget, but the documents don't specify how much it asked for. Like HBTSS, the agency will lead prototype development and then work with the Space Force to transition DSS for operational use.

Space Force will play ‘central role' in Iron Dome, service chief says
Space Force will play ‘central role' in Iron Dome, service chief says

Yahoo

time25-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Space Force will play ‘central role' in Iron Dome, service chief says

The Space Force will play a 'central role' in the Pentagon's efforts to develop a homeland missile defense shield, or Iron Dome for America, according to the service's top officer. President Donald Trump issued an executive order in late January calling on the Defense Department to develop an 'Iron Dome for America' — a more advanced version of Israel's Iron Dome, designed to counter a range of missile threats, including hypersonic weapons. The order highlights several space-based elements of this architecture that build on existing capabilities like the Missile Defense Agency's Hypersonic and Ballistic Tracking Space Sensor program and the Space Development Agency's Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture, which includes a constellation of missile warning and tracking satellites. Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman told reporters Monday that given the executive order's emphasis on space systems, it's natural the service would play a key role in its development, adding that the service has established an integrated planning team, or IPT, to explore options in response to the order. 'I think we have a central role to play,' Saltzman said. 'We are leaning forward establishing this technical IPT to start thinking about it from an overarching perspective.' The team is evaluating what systems the Space Force already has in development to support the president's order and what capabilities it would need to build. From there, it's exploring questions around technical feasibility and drafting cost estimates based on current programs, as well as its projections for what a more advanced architecture would require. The IPT will likely finalize that early analysis in the coming weeks — a truncated timeline that will require 'a lot of triage,' according to a senior Space Force official who spoke to reporters Monday on the condition of anonymity. Once complete, the Space Force's IPT work will be shared alongside similar analysis being conducted by U.S. Space Command, the National Reconnaissance Office and the Missile Defense Agency. Senior DOD leaders will then conduct a series of reviews to determine next steps, including what programs to start. The official noted that the Space Force's intent is to provide an honest assessment of where the technology stands today and what is feasible to deliver — particularly when it comes to fielding space-based interceptors. 'One of the worst things to do is bite off a technical challenge that you can't solve in a reasonable cost frame, a reasonable time frame,' the official said. 'We'll be very forthright with, 'Here's where we think the technology stands.''

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