Venetian
blind-like screens flutter down the huge picture
window at the conference hall, quickly concealing
the commanding view of the wide James River. It's
as if television secret agent Maxwell Smart had
ordered the "cone of silence" because
that's exactly what the screen does.Top-secret
conferences about the future design of Navy ships
are held at the newly completed Virginia Advanced
Shipbuilding and Carrier Integration Center in downtown
Newport News. "The blinds vibrate to thwart
any electronic eavesdropping," says Bob Klosterman,
VASCIC director.
The
$58 million center shows just how deeply Virginia
is wedded to the defense industry. VASCIC is designed
to develop the next generation of submarines and
aircraft carriers that will defend the U.S. well
into the 21st century. Northrop Grumman Newport
News, which owns the giant shipyard next door and
is a part owner of VASCIC, is the nation's sole
builder of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers.
These giant vessels launched the first U.S. airstrikes
avenging last year's terrorist attacks in New York
and Arlington that killed more than 3,000 Americans.
Future aircraft carriers, however, may have unusual
twists, such as new reactors that can power Buck
Rogers-style laser weapons. Tomorrow's submarines
dreamed up at VASCIC could have bullet-like pods
around their hulls to house missiles, unmanned underwater
drones or mini-subs for Navy SEALS.
VASCIC's
projects may be for the future, but there's plenty
going on right now. Blessed by its proximity to
Washington and with a great sea port, the Old Dominion
is once again gearing up for its portion of a major
boost in military spending - more than $40 billion
extra in this year's $369 billion defense budget
- to help root out terrorism worldwide. With a defense
industry already worth $30 billion, Virginia has
long been a major military state, trailing only
California in defense-related payrolls and contracts.
"Virginia has for generations played a very
major role and has been a home for a large number
of men and women in uniform ranging from the Pentagon
in the extreme north of the state to Hampton Roads
and in between," says U.S. Sen. John W. Warner,
who for 30 years has wielded enormous clout on defense
affairs in Washington.
The
new war on terrorism has defense industries humming
in about every corner of the state. Although the
impact has yet to be felt in the rest of Virginia's
economy, there's plenty of activity. In Richmond,
DuPont makes Kevlar for flak jackets and Nomex for
fire-resistant combat flight suits. Researchers
in Blacksburg help design software for the engineering
of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) that have been
used to great effect in Afghanistan locating elusive
al-Qaida and Taliban terrorists. After the UAVs
find such enemies, they are hunted down by U.S.
Special Operations troops wearing night vision goggles
made in Roanoke by ITT Industries (see illustration,
page 8). The company has just snagged a $450 million
contract to make more.
In
Northern Virginia, the dramatic need for high-tech
cyberweapons, such as combat communications and
coordination systems, has sparked the biggest bout
of initial public offerings (IPOs) for defense contractors
in years (see story, page 10). Now there's an urgent
demand for the software programs that can make sense
of the tons of disparate information to prevent
more terrorist attacks. "There's a growing
awareness after 9-11 that we need to develop real-time
intelligence from voluminous data," says Ken
Dahlberg, executive vice president at Falls Church-based
General Dynamics Corp. and head of its information
systems and technology. Combat hardware is also
getting a boost in Northern Virginia. At a site
near Quantico, General Dynamics is testing the Advanced
Amphibious Assault Vehicle, or AAAV, for the Marine
Corps. Woodbridge could be the location of a new
manufacturing plant to make 1,000 of the fast and
maneuverable vehicles that, at about $2 million
each, will help the Marines seize foreign beaches.
The
densest concentration of the state's massive defense
sector is in Hampton Roads. The dramatic, ship-like
VASCIC building is a good vantage point to review
it. Lying dockside near VASCIC, the new Nimitz-class
aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan is being fitted
out before commissioning next March at the Northrop
Grumman Newport News shipyard. Farther down amid
a clutter of cranes, the nuclear reactors of the
carrier USS Enterprise are being refueled in a contract
worth $1.5 billion. The shipyard's parent firm is
now the largest private employer in the state with
more than 30,000 employees, including more than
17,000 at the shipyard which it bought last year.
Just
a few miles down the James River is the gigantic
Norfolk Naval Station, home of the Atlantic Fleet,
whose ships, including six aircraft carriers, are
providing firepower and logistics for Operation
Enduring Freedom in South Asia. Nearby at Little
Creek Amphibious Base, Navy SEALS train for Afghan
operations. In Virginia Beach, Oceana Naval Air
Station is the base for many of the carrier aircraft
striking al-Qaida. The Norfolk Naval Shipyard in
Portsmouth will be refitting city-busting Trident
submarines so they can attack terrorist camps with
highly accurate conventional missiles rather than
nuclear-tipped ones.
At
Hampton, Langley Air Force Base is the staging area
for conflict-bound F-15 bombers and soon to be home
to a new generation of F-22 Raptor jet fighters.
In the other direction, just beyond the tourist
attractions of Williamsburg, is super-secret Camp
Peary. Hidden by pine trees and chain-link fences,
Central Intelligence Agency operatives may be training
Kurdish guerrillas for the next phase of the war
against terrorists - possible U.S.-led strikes against
the regime of Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein if
the war expands.
The
boom in Virginia's defense industry comes after
a decade of uncertainty. Military spending got a
boost under President Reagan during the 1980s but
declined under Bill Clinton as the Soviet Union
disintegrated. A new buildup is underway. But critics
say that it is limited - President George W. Bush
may reduce the number of U.S. troops next year.
And Pentagon planners and Congressional experts
are seriously rethinking what kinds of weapons they
need. What they choose to do will have a major impact
on Virginia's defense industries.
The
discussion continues on so-called "transformational"
weapons that would meet different threats than those
of the Cold War. Thanks to easing tensions with
Russia, the U.S. doesn't need to spend so much on
nuclear missiles and bombers. Nor does it need as
many artillery, tanks and tactical aircraft designed
to turn back a Soviet invasion of Western Europe.
What's needed instead are smaller, more mobile forces
supported by highly sophisticated intelligence.
Combat data will be assessed by computerized battlefield
management software systems that can direct forces
to counter terrorist threats. Homeland
defense products range from new security systems
at airport gates and in harbors along with biodefense
weapons to counter biological terror weapons. Virginia
has at least five private companies that specialize
in biodefense, including Hadron Advanced BioSystems
in Manassas and Public Safety Group Inc. in Woodbridge.
The
new generation of highly sophisticated weapons,
many with Virginia connections, is proving its worth.
U.S. forces fighting in Afghanistan are using everything
from night goggles to laser illuminators and special
encryption radios to root out al-Qaida terrorist
cells and Taliban fighters believed to support terrorists.
In a stunning performance, U.S. troops have managed
to secure most of the country in just a few months,
thus achieving in a few months what Soviet army
forces could not do in 10 years of fighting.
Even
so, the conundrum over "transformational"
forces among defense contractors has taken its toll
in Virginia. Earlier this year, United Defense Industries,
Inc. based in Arlington had expected to proceed
with a $265 million contract to build the advanced
Crusader artillery system that can fire highly accurate
shells much farther than existing artillery tubes.
Problem was, the Crusader was designed to fight
more sophisticated forces than Afghan terrorists,
such as Soviet tanks invading Germany. The Crusader
was likewise large and cumbersome, so the Pentagon
killed the project. Absorbing the hit, United Defense
got into another deal. It is acquiring United States
Marine Repair, a major ship overhaul company in
Norfolk for $316 million. The point? As the U.S.
responds to distant threats, it needs ships to ferry
troops and gear and the vessels must be in good
repair.
Besides
large-ticket aircraft carriers, Virginia's greatest
contribution against terrorism is likely to be in
information technology. Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld and the Bush administration have put a
large premium on information to detect and destroy
threats. Since Sept. 11, Virginia IT companies serving
the U.S. military and related agencies have racked
up a boatload of contracts that combined are worth
several billion dollars. Spending by a proposed
homeland security agency alone will run as much
as $2 billion in 2003, according to Input, an IT
sales and marketing research firm in Chantilly.
The
Bush administration also wants to create a new federal
agency to coordinate homeland security, focusing
the spotlight on domestic concerns related to, but
separate from, military issues. "Homeland security
is going to be budgeted to a fare-thee-well,"
says Paul Lombardi, chief executive officer of Reston-based
DynCorp. "The supplemental budget this year
is just the start. In Virginia, and especially Northern
Virginia, companies that are successfully (helping)
federal agencies can't help but benefit because
there's more work than there are companies."
Privately
owned DynCorp posted $2.2 billion in revenue last
year. The 54-year-old company has provided logistical
support for the U.S. military from the Korean War
to Desert Storm, assessing weapons, making sure
computer systems can talk to each other and managing
computer networks. At one time, the company made
about 98 percent of its money on Pentagon contracts,
Lombardi says, although the company began diversifying
its federal IT customer base to compensate for decreased
military spending during the Clinton administration.
The war on terrorism surely will bring more defense
contracts. "Two years ago our company was probably
getting 48 percent of its revenue from defense contracts.
This year, I'd say about 60 percent of our new business
awards are for defense work," says Lombardi.
DynCorp,
for instance, is putting together a new communications
network for the Government Emergency Telephone System
(GETS) that will add a wireless component so federal
officials can talk if the landlines are cut. The
firm is managing the program for a contract valued
at $15 million a year. DynCorp subcontracts with
wireless carriers, such as Verizon and VoiceStream,
to provide wireless spectrum to power the system.
Since Sept. 11, the wireless GETS systems have been
deployed in Washington, D.C., and New York City,
and DynCorp engineers are working to roll out the
system to link major metropolitan regions across
the country. "The wireless piece never existed
prior to Sept. 11," says Lombardi.
DynCorp
is also helping the FBI, which found on Sept. 11
that its agents in New York City couldn't communicate
with their colleagues across the Hudson River because
landline service had been severed during the attacks.
The FBI has appointed DynCorp to be prime contractor
for its so-called Trilogy Project, which will retool
28,000 computer workstations and hundreds of servers
around the country. The firm is providing the FBI
with the computer architecture and helping with
system installations under a contract valued at
up to $180 million. So urgent is the work that it
must now be finished in 10 months rather than three
years as originally planned.
Another
player on the Northern Virginia defense scene is
Jack London, who runs CACI International Inc. in
Arlington. During the Cuban missile crisis, London
helped chase Soviet submarines aboard a Navy "hunter-killer"
aircraft. More than 40 years later, London is still
helping with defense, albeit in a different, more
high-tech way. As head of CACI, London has built
a backlog of nearly $1 billion in federal IT contracts
with U.S. military agencies. CACI specializes in
taking off-the-shelf products and integrating them
into customized computer systems so upgrades will
be faster and cheaper. About two-thirds of the company's
revenue, which is expected to be around $671 million
in 2002, stems from defense-related work. The publicly
traded company recently told Wall Street analysts
that revenue for 2003 could jump as high as $831
million. "Our compound annual growth rate has
been about 20 percent over the last five years,
and my goal is to exceed that," says London.
Even
prior to Sept. 11, London says U.S. military planners
were trying to prepare for warfare based around
networks that use distributed computing, wireless
communications systems, sophisticated sensors and
other intelligence-gathering tools to track clandestine
foes. "There has been infrastructure modernization
going on in the federal sector, especially defense,
for a number of years. The events of Sept. 11 just
accelerated it," says London.
Predicting
and pre-empting what terrorists might do is the
mission of ManTech International Corp. of Fairfax.
ManTech, for instance, helps with laser-guided bombs
that are used to destroy terrorist sites in Afghanistan.
Securing
U.S. outposts overseas is another specialty. After
a car bomb exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in
Karachi, Pakistan, in June, ManTech was hired by
the U.S. State Department to assess ways to improve
security in and around the building, part of a contract
to develop "technical countermeasures"
and deploy them at more than 250 U.S. foreign-service
posts. At Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, ManTech is installing
secure communications to help military personnel
keep better tabs on the hundreds of detainees from
Afghanistan being kept for questioning. The company
went public in February, selling 8 million shares
of stock in an initial public offering that raised
$110 million.
Another
Fairfax defense firm that recently went public is
Anteon Corp. It collected $250 million after selling
15 million shares in its offering. The company boosted
its share price twice before trading began and shares
are selling about 40 percent above the IPO price.
As with others, Anteon is using advanced IT systems
to bring information closer to the battlefield.
When Bush sent troops to Afghanistan, Anteon sent
personnel to help provide network administration
for two of the key computer systems designed for
sharing information among NATO allies and coalition
forces.
Coordination
can be much harder than simply getting troops and
supplies to a war zone. "During the Gulf War,
troops, ammunition, supplies and food were dumped
in the desert," says Joe Kampf, chief executive
officer of Anteon. "But no one knew where anything
was." So, when the Air Force needed a way to
coordinate supplies and troops, it called on Anteon
to manage and integrate the Cargo Movement Operations
System - known as the Federal Express of the Air
Force.
Larger,
marquee-name defense companies are developing computer
systems too. One is Lockheed Martin, which was the
largest defense contractor in Virginia with $14
billion in defense work until Northrop Grumman bought
Newport News Shipbuilding last year. General Dynamics,
which ranked No. 6 in contracts last year, has various
systems to coordinate intelligence, guide aircraft
and artillery to targets and assess the result.
All
of the big defense companies have been jousting
as the trend toward consolidation in the defense
industry continues. Last year, Virginia became a
battleground for both General Dynamics and Northrop
Grumman. Attracted by its efficient management and
big backlog of Navy orders, General Dynamics made
a bid for Newport News Shipbuilding, which had become
independent after being spun off by Texas conglomerate
Tenneco in the mid-1990s. Northrop Grumman quickly
countered and after tit-for-tat combat for stock
and cash, emerged victorious. Now, Northrop Grumman
has just won another battle, this time for Cleveland-based
TRW Inc. The final settlement was engineered by
TRW Chairman Phillip Odeen, well-known for his community
affairs work in Northern Virginia. Northrop Grumman
plans to spin off TRW's auto parts business and
keep its formidable defense units based in Northern
Virginia and California.
The
shipyard and TRW fights are just more in a series
of takeovers. In recent years, brand names such
as jet fighter-maker McDonnell Douglas have been
absorbed by bomber-maker Boeing. Los Angeles-based
Northrop Grumman was close to bankruptcy in the
mid-1990s when it began a a highly profitable acquisition
spree. Not to be outdone, General Dynamics, famed
for its submarine-making Electric-Boat Division
in Groton, Conn., picked up destroyer and frigate-maker
Bath Iron Works in Maine.
Both
Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics have been
winning applause on Wall Street. Their stocks had
been stagnating in the low $40 a share range more
than two years ago but are above $100 a share now.
In fact, defense stocks appear to be doing so well
that some ponder if they could be forming a bubble
of overvaluation of the type that plagued Internet
stocks in the late 1990s.
There
are big differences, however. The defense companies
tend to get involved in "legacy" contracts
that last for years whereas the business of dot-coms
tended to be short-term. Also, much of the big spending
on defense has yet to trickle into the rest of Virginia's
economy. "We won't see an impact on the Virginia
economy for at least a year," says Christine
Chmura, head of Chmura Econometrics & Analytics,
a Richmond forecasting firm. One problem, she says,
is that the recent recession was worse than earlier
predicted and it will take more time for a recovery.
Back
at VASCIC, however, Northrop Grumman Newport News
is gearing up to hire 1,500 engineers and others
over the next few years to help out with its seven-year-long
backlog in orders. The yard has gotten a boost since
aircraft carriers, often criticized as outdated,
have again shown their value because they can project
air power without the messy politics of getting
foreign governments to agree to airbases on land.
"The debate used to be, 'do we need aircraft
carriers?'" says Irwin F. Edenzon, vice president
of business technology development at Northrop Grumman
Newport News. "Now it will be: 'Do we need
more aircraft carriers?'"
A
fair question. As it has from the start of this
nation, Virginia is supplying the manpower and hardware
for the sad but necessary business of defense.
Reported
by Garry Kranz in Northern Virginia, Paula C. Squires
in Richmond and Alexander H. Haislip in Washington
Return
to Virginia Business - August 2002