Northrop Grumman has abandoned plans to offer the BAE Systems Hawk for the Air Force’s upcoming T-X contest, in favor of an all-new jet being prototyped with the company’s Scaled Composites division. The aircraft “has been purpose-designed for the Air Force,” a company spokesman told Air Force Magazine. “We are in discussions with BAE Systems to include their training system in our aircraft solution. L-3 Communications is responsible for the ground-based training system,” the spokesman said. The Hawk, he added, “Is a tremendous airplane; however, we decided as a team to offer a new design as the US Air Force continued to mature their requirements.” The Hawk, a venerable design dating back to the 1970s, was seen by some as unsuited to USAF’s wish for a tight-turning airplane able to maneuver at high angles of attack, the better to prepare pilots for the F-35 and F-22. Air Force Magazine queried Northrop Grumman in 2013 about whether the company was planning to adapt its privately-funded F-20 Tigershark—itself a derivative of Northrop’s own F-5/T-38 series—for T-X. The company said at the time it had no plans to do so. However, in a cover image supplied to Aviation Week and Space Technology, Northrop Grumman portrayed an aircraft not unlike the F-20. The spokesman said the image was “an artist’s concept,” without saying whether it truly represented the airplane that will be offered.
Air Force Gen. Jacqueline D. Van Ovost—a trailblazer and one of the first 10 women to reach a four-star rank across the U.S. military—retired and passed control of U.S. Transportation Command to Air Force Gen. Randall Reed on Oct. 4, finishing an eventful tenure at TRANSCOM.