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Northrop Grumman Consolidates UAV Products Into One Organization

Northrop Grumman dominates the newly emerging UAV market that will drive unmanned combat development in the decades ahead
 Washington - Oct 09, 2003
In a move that aligns a successful acquisition strategy with increasing customer demand for mission-ready unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) systems, Northrop Grumman Corporation announced Wednesday that its Advanced Tactical C4I (ATC4I) organization, which produces the U.S. Army's RQ-5 Hunter UAV, will become a part of the company's Unmanned Systems unit in San Diego.

ATC4I is currently part of Northrop Grumman's Mission Systems sector. Unmanned Systems is part of the Integrated Systems sector.

The realignment leverages UAV technologies acquired from the heritage TRW organization (ATC4I) in 2002 and Ryan Aeronautical (Unmanned Systems) in 1999, while sharing robust UAV development processes and systems know-how more cost effectively among all programs. It also creates a standalone organization dedicated to developing affordable, optimized UAV solutions for each customer. The consolidation takes effect Jan. 1, 2004.

"The formal consolidation of ATC4I and Unmanned Systems reinforces the technical synergism that has existed for years between these highly skilled UAV engineering organizations," said Scott J. Seymour, president of Integrated Systems.

"The recent selection of the RQ-8B Fire Scout UAV as the basis for the Army's Future Combat System Class IV Unmanned Aerial System (FCS UAS) requirement, for example, stemmed largely from this successful collaboration. By joining our collective UAV engineering skills and systems know-how under one organizational roof, we will continue to develop and deliver the UAV systems that war fighters need to meet and defeat an ever-evolving enemy."

ATC4I employees supporting Hunter, MAV/OAV and FCS UAS programs and facilities in Sierra Vista, Ariz., and San Diego will transfer to Integrated Systems.

Unmanned Systems produces the U.S. Air Force's RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned aerial reconnaissance system, the U.S. Navy's RQ-8 Fire Scout vertical takeoff and landing tactical UAV and aerial targets programs for the Air Force, Navy and international customers.

It also leads the company's development efforts for the U.S. Navy Broad Area Maritime Surveillance program, the European Euro Hawk in development with EADS, DARPA's Joint Unmanned Combat Air System, DARPA's Unmanned Combat Armed Rotorcraft and the United Kingdom Ministry of Defence's Watchkeeper program. In addition, the company is developing the Class IV unmanned aerial system solution for the Army's Future Combat System based on Fire Scout.

Northrop Grumman Mission Systems
Northrop Grumman Integrated Systems
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Titan Awarded $36M SPAWAR Contract For UAV Support
San Diego - Oct 07, 2003
The Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center (SPAWAR), Charleston has awarded Titan Corp a four-year (one base year plus three option years), indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity (ID/IQ) contract having a potential value, with options, of $36 million to provide engineering and technical services to support Joint Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) Operations.



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