Ultra-Secure AEHF Satellites Connect United
Kingdom Users For First Time
June 10, 2014
All partner nations
are now using the Advanced Extremely High
Frequency (AEHF) protected communications
satellite system after the
United Kingdom
connected earlier this year. Four nations will
use the Lockheed Martin-produced [NYSE: LMT]
satellites for their most important
transmissions, from commanders-in-chief to
troops in the field.
The U.K. connection
follows Canada's
first successful call in May, 2013, and
The Netherlands'
initial connection came two months later. Over
the past year AEHF facilitated many connections
between international users, and U.S.-led tests
in April included all four partners.
"AEHF is a keystone in
global security. It is the only system that can
provide highly-protected communications,
circumventing our adversaries' jammers in most
wartime operations," said
Mark Calassa,
vice president of Protected Communication
Systems at Lockheed Martin. "We are committed to
driving this capability forward. All four
partners are connected, and we are marching
steadily toward Multi-Service Operational Test
and Evaluation."
U.K. armed forces
started to connect over the course of several
weeks beginning Feb. 25.
They used two terminal variants to communicate
with AEHF-2: One made for connections on land
and another designed for users at sea. Service
members contacted the satellite at Colerne
Airfield, Wiltshire,
with the shore variant of the Navy Multiband
Terminal (NMT). In separate tests, U.K. users
connected via the NMT ship variant from
Telemetry & Command Station Oakhanger,
Hampshire.
"AEHF not only
delivers higher-bandwidth communications for the
U.K., it makes communications with allies faster
and easier," Calassa said. "AEHF is showing it
can handle the demands of protected coalition
communications at high speeds, connecting
nations with their own users and allied users
across the globe."
The four-nation AEHF
program is led by the
U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center
at Los Angeles
Air Force Base,
California. Lockheed Martin is under
contract to deliver the Mission Control Segment
and six AEHF satellites, which are assembled at
the company's
Sunnyvale, California, facility.