13 mai 2022 | International, Autre défense

Loi de programmation militaire : bilan et mise en garde de la Cour des comptes

Dans un rapport présenté mercredi 11 mai, la Cour des comptes dresse un bilan de la loi de programmation militaire (LPM) adoptée en 2018. Les crédits alloués aux armées ont bien progressé de 35,9 Md€ en 2019 à 40,9 Md€ en 2022, comme prévu. La Cour alerte toutefois sur le «  risque d'éviction sur les investissements programmés par la LPM qui restent à réaliser  », pour les années à venir. « La réalisation de “l'ambition 2030” annoncée par la LPM est confrontée au double défi de la dégradation des finances publiques à l'issue de la crise sanitaire et de l'accélération de la montée des menaces décrite dans l'actualisation stratégique de 2021 », prévient la Cour. « Le ministère des Armées doit mieux identifier et exploiter les marges de manœuvre qui peuvent se présenter à lui, notamment dans le domaine de la coopération européenne et s'agissant de la définition du périmètre des missions des armées ».

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  • DoD Tries Again on Multi-Billion Missile Interceptor

    27 avril 2020 | International, Aérospatial

    DoD Tries Again on Multi-Billion Missile Interceptor

    After a failed attempt to replace the current missile killers, the Pentagon wants to hurry and get the new technology online. By PAUL MCLEARY WASHINGTON: The Missile Defense Agency issued a long-awaited request for proposal today for its next-generation missile interceptor, eight months after the surprise cancellation of its multi-billion dollar attempt to replace the current, aging system. The Next Generation Interceptor program will replace the Redesigned Kill Vehicle effort, the Boeing and Raytheon project that failed to get off the ground. The new competition calls for contractors to submit bids by July 31, though it will be years before anything can be built and tested. MDA chief Vice Adm. Jon Hill said last month that he wants to field the new system as soon as possible, and a timeline of 2030, is “unacceptable from a warfighter view” and “unacceptable to me as a program manager.” But it's unclear when a system will be ready for testing. “We want to deliver the first round as soon as possible,” Hill continued. “That also means we can't take shortcuts in the design or in the requirements or in the flight testing regime, because if you want to go save time that is what most programs will do, so we can't afford that, but I will tell you that timeline will be driven by who we award to.” The RKV program was part of an ambitious technology effort helmed by Boeing — though Raytheon was building the Kill Vehicles — to replace the current Exo-Atmospheric Kill Vehicle. Both are ground-based interceptors designed to defend the US against long-range ballistic missile attacks. The companies won't have to pay back any of the billion-plus dollars the government awarded them to do the work, as Pentagon officials have said some of the effort can be salvaged and used on the new program. Problems had been mounting in the program's development for years. The Missile Defense Agency said back in 2016 it expected the first RKV flight test by 2019, with fielding in 2020. The last estimate, released with the fiscal 2020 budget request, pushed the fielding date back to 2025. https://breakingdefense.com/2020/04/dod-tries-again-on-multi-billion-missile-interceptor/

  • Raytheon wins $1.2 bln contract for additional Patriot air, missile defense systems to Germany
  • SOCOM industry day solicits proposals to update Global Analytics Platform

    7 août 2020 | International, C4ISR

    SOCOM industry day solicits proposals to update Global Analytics Platform

    by Carlo Munoz The US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) is soliciting industry proposals to revamp its command-wide battlefield intelligence analytics programme, updating the legacy system with artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, and cloud computing architectures to support current and future operations. Potential industry participants in the Global Analytics Platform (GAP) update programme will lay out their tentative proposals to SOCOM acquisition officials, and members of the command's science and technology directorates, during the upcoming GAP virtual industry day at the end of August. Industry proposals will focus on technological applications in data management and dissemination that are designed to support “the search, discovery, and collaborative analysis of large volumes of data within a suite of secure web-based applications,” the 3 August solicitation states. “Companies with experience in information system environments that search, discover, and analyse large volumes of data within a suite of secure web-based applications across a multi security cloud architecture are highly desired,” the solicitation stated, regarding the upcoming industry day. “Additionally, companies with experience in data movement and transport, and data science are also encouraged to attend,” it added. SOFWERX, in conjunction with SOCOM's Acquisition, Technology and Logistics Center, will sponsor the three-day industry event, beginning on 25 August. The main thrust of the 3 August solicitation is to “add, upgrade, and replace individual [GAP] components, tools, and services, using defined interoperability and interface controls to maintain a leading-edge capability” to keep pace with SOCOM's evolving operational requirements, the solicitation stated. https://www.janes.com/defence-news/news-detail/socom-industry-day-solicits-proposals-to-update-global-analytics-platform

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