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U.S. Littoral Combat Ship tests Norwegian-made missile
by Richard Tomkins
Kongsberg, Norway (UPI) Sep 26, 2014


Northrop performs logistics support services for Navy
Charlottesville, Va. (UPI) Sep 26, 2014 - The U.S. Navy has given Northrop Grumman a performance-based fleet logistics supply support contract with a value of $61 million.

The award, from the U.S. Naval Supply Systems Command's NAVSUP Weapon Systems Support facility in Mechanicsburg, Pa., is for five years.

The contract provides for Northrop's logistics management of various Northrop Grumman-supplied products and systems, including the WSN Ring Laser Gyro Navigation system, AN/BPS-15/16 Radar Set Weapon system, Steering/Scalable Integrated Bridge System and SPQ-9B radar set items.

The contract also covers the manufacture of spare parts, inventory control, product serial number tracking and customer database entries for company products and systems employed on Navy vessels.

"Timely fleet support to help ensure the highest level of operational readiness has been a top priority for the last decade and we are honored to support this mission," said Todd Leavitt, vice president of Maritime Systems, Northrop Grumman. "By supporting unforeseen needs and faster turnaround deployment schedules, the PBL program dramatically increases the availability of critically required parts to satisfy our Navy warfighters quickly and cost effectively."

The work will be performed by the company's operation in Charlottesville, Va.

Northrop says the award continues its logistics support work in Charlottesville for the Naval Supply Systems Command, which has been performed for the past decade.

The Naval Strike Missile from Norway's Kongsberg Defense Systems has been launched from a U.S. Navy warship in a demonstration of the missile's capability.

The firing was from the USS Coronado, an Independence-class Littoral Combat Ship, and the first time an LCS has fired a long-range anti-ship missile, the company said.

"We are very pleased that the U.S. Navy evaluates the NSM missile," said Pal Bratlie, executive vice president, Kongsberg Defense Systems. "This contract does not, however, include any commitment for the U.S. Navy beyond the test.

"The missile is in series production for Norway and Poland, and this test has enabled the U.S. Navy to study it closer in a realistic scenario."

Kongsberg's Naval Strike Missile is a new precision strike weapon. It employs an inertial navigation system bolstered with a military GPS receiver and laser altimeter. It is a multi-mission weapon suitable for use against maritime and land targets and has a range of more than 100 nautical miles.

In the firing from the USS Coronado, the missile followed a preplanned trajectory for 100 nautical miles, located its target and struck the target at the pre-selected hit point.

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