Reportedly the Government Accountability Office is ready to perform a quick alternative dispute resolution to settle the new protest filed by Lockheed Martin on the combat search and rescue helicopter replacement program. On Monday, Lockheed protested to GAO that the Air Force’s amended request for proposals doesn’t comply with GAO’s recommended corrective action. Revised bids from the three offerors—Boeing, Lockheed, and Sikorsky—are due June 19. The original CSAR-X winner—Boeing’s HH-47—has been pilloried by defense analysts and veteran pilots, but the company has remained relatively quiet throughout the protest process and subsequent RFP revision. Earlier this year, Boeing’s HH-47 program manager, Rick LeMaster, did tell reporters that the version being offered to the Air Force is a marked improvement over earlier Chinook models. In a new interview with Reuters news service, LeMaster says, “It’s not a sports car, but it is sized right to go do this mission.”
The Space Force is playing midwife to a new ecosystem of commercial satellite constellations providing alternatives to the service’s own Global Positioning Service from much closer to the Earth, making their signals more accurate and harder to jam.