Military Blimps Report for Duty
Renae Merle / Washington Post | August 8 2006

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/06/AR2006080600499_pf.html

In the era of $300 million fighter jets, satellite-guided rockets and 
complicated battlefield computer networks, Multimax Inc. is trying to 
revive an old-fashioned technology to thrust the information technology 
firm onto the front line. The Largo company has spent hundreds of 
thousands of dollars on this new project, the design looks like an 
elliptical UFO, but the result will be familiar: It's a blimp.

"It is somewhat uncharted waters" for the firm, said Ron Oholendt, a 
retired Air Force colonel and the program manager. The company has 
enlisted help from NASA and scientists at the Wright-Patterson Air Force 
Base in Ohio, which is analyzing the design, and last year began hunting 
for support from the Pentagon, Department of Homeland Security or the 
Director of National Intelligence. With $14 million, the company could 
finish building and test a prototype for its airship, which they call 
the Maxflyer, Oholendt said. The company plans to submit a proposal for 
the system with the Homeland Security Department on Friday, he said.

Multimax is one of several defense companies pouncing on the military's 
renewed interest in using high-flying, unmanned, helium-filled balloons 
-- sometimes tied to the ground with a long rope -- as possible weapons. 
Lockheed Martin Corp. is developing a blimp that it says will reach an 
altitude of 65,000 feet, while Raytheon Co. is developing one designed 
to reach 10,000 feet and be tethered to the ground. Blackwater USA, 
better known as one of the largest security contractors in Iraq, expects 
to finish its prototype, which aims to reach an altitude of 5,000 feet 
to 15,000 feet, in December.

The military's interest is driven by a search for cheap alternatives to 
satellites and unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones. Some low-flying 
versions are already in Iraq, Afghanistan and along the U.S.-Mexico 
border. The blimps are known as airships or aerostats, a type that is 
tethered to the ground, and can stay up longer than the unmanned aerial 
vehicles popularized by the Iraq war and are cheaper than military 
satellites that can take years to launch, supporters of the technology say.

"They can stay aloft very efficiently for long periods of times," said 
Col. Jeff Souder, product manager for an Army program. An airship is 
"somewhere around five to seven times less expensive than a manned 
aircraft per hour, and it would be greatly less expensive than satellites."

The market is still small, but analysts say it could develop into a 
multibillion-dollar industry if the technology can survive the pitfalls 
that led to its initial demise, including being shot down by enemy 
gunfire or falling prey to damage by bad weather. "They make a heck of a 
big target in the sky, but it's possible they could have communications, 
missile-detection and other applications," said Michel Merluzeau, 
director of military airborne systems at Frost & Sullivan Inc., a 
research firm. "They still make a very big blip on a radar screen, so 
you can't put them too close to the enemy."

The experiment harkens back to the military's use of blimps to hunt for 
submarines on the East and West coasts during World War II, historians 
say. "In the '20s or '30s, the Navy would send them out ahead of 
battleships to find the enemy and radio back," said Jack Green of the 
Naval Historical Center. "They would go out for days and possibly weeks."

But there were problems. Once, a Navy crew fired on a German submarine 
off the Florida coast with 50-caliber machine guns, and the blimp they 
were riding in was shot down.

By the early 1960s, the manned airships had fallen out of favor. Also, 
Green said, the Navy was turning to fast-moving fighter jets. "You just 
didn't need this slow, hovering thing anymore. A blimp can't chase a 
nuclear powered submarine," he said.

And that might have been the end of the military's use of airships if 
not for the Iraq war. In 2003, after being approached by the Army, 
Raytheon modified an aerostat it had been developing to fly at about 
1,000 feet while tethered. Fitted with sensors and cameras, more than 20 
of the company's systems are now in Iraq and Afghanistan. Lockheed 
delivered a similar system to Iraq in 2004.

The Pentagon has since invested millions of dollars more on advanced 
versions of the technology. Raytheon's system, for which the Pentagon 
has set aside more than $1 billion, will be three-fourths the size of a 
football field and is expected to have its first test flight in 2010.

Tethering has its advantages. There is little worry that a strong wind 
will blow the system away, said Souder, the program's project manager. 
But the Army will have to devise policies to ensure that air traffic 
doesn't run into the rope, he said. "It surely could accidentally" be 
cut, he said, but we "have a number of ways we're going to seek to 
protect the tether."

Bethesda-based Lockheed is developing another system for the Missile 
Defense Agency, known as the High Altitude Airship, which the company 
says will be 17 times the size of the Goodyear blimp. Stationed 
offshore, the system could provide surveillance of the United States, 
monitoring ground and air traffic, said Ron Browning, Lockheed's 
director of business development on the program.

The company developed a man-made fiber stronger than the polyester-type 
material often used on blimps to guard the system from drastic weather 
changes at 65,000 feet and UV rays, Browning said. And the company is 
confident its system could even survive enemy fire. "You could sustain 
some holes in the bag without any immediate concerns," he said, noting 
that its low air pressure means that gas escapes slowly. "It's a fairly 
survivable aircraft given that it's a large envelope filled with helium."

But the program has already run into some funding problems. Lockheed 
originally said it would finish a prototype this year, but that has been 
delayed until 2009 or 2010.

The burgeoning market has already had its first casualty. In 2005, the 
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency awarded contracts to Lockheed 
Martin and Aeros Aeronautical Systems Corp. to develop a blimp-like 
system to move troops and equipment to hot spots. The Congressional 
Budget Office estimated that such a program could potentially be worth 
about $11.3 billion. "Although not as prompt as conventional aircraft, 
hybrid airships could still begin arriving in the Persian Gulf region 
from the United States in about five days," the CBO said in a report.

But after investing $8 million, DARPA did not get the $20 million it 
wanted for the program this year. "That one had a slightly high giggle 
factor. It just looks too much like the Hindenburg," said John Pike, 
director of GlobalSecurity.org. "I think there was just conceptual push 
back on it."

And some firms are finding it difficult to crack the market.

The day after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, "we started marketing to the 
government market," said Curt Westergard, president of Falls 
Church-based Digital Design & Imaging Service Inc. "We have shown this 
to the Coast Guard, Army, Special Ops people, force protection units, 
many of the police people in Arlington, Washington, D.C., people from 
three-letter agencies."

But, so far, no contracts have emerged for the airship, which he leases 
to commercial clients for $2,000 to $3,000 a day and is about the size 
of a Volkswagen bus. "I am not complaining, it's just disappointing," he 
said.


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