Showing posts with label Lockheed Martin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lockheed Martin. Show all posts

Sunday, September 28, 2025

SKYKEEPER, the incumbent Air Defence “C2” solution

 

The current system, operated by 49 Bty Royal Artillery, could succeed itself

At DSEI, I had a chance to talk with Richard Turner, Business Development Manager for SKYKEEPER at Lockheed Martin UK Ampthill. A RAF veteran with a background in Air Control, Richard feels strongly for the capability he is overseeing and developing. As an Operation HERRICK veteran, he also noted his relationship with LEAPP / SKYKEEPER began earlier than he initially realized, as the Sense and Warn solution used in Afghanistan to warn personnel of incoming indirect fire used elements of LEAPP.

We discussed the latest developments and the Army trials and demonstrations SKYKEEPER has been involved in, with an eye to the possible future role of SK as C2 solution for ground based air defence.

Lockheed Martin is actively talking to other UK firms as it considers how to pursue the opportunity of becoming the Lead System Integrator for the Land GBAD programme. A pre-market notice has been published by the MOD recently alerting Industry of the need for such a figure.

 

 

 

The Land Ground Based Air Defence programme is a multi-project enterprise to be delivered across 3 “Capability Uplift Periods”, the first of which has essentially concluded, having seen the delivery of a number of new capabilities including GIRAFFE 1X radars for improved counter-drone capability within SHORAD batteries and the introduction of soldier-borne C-UAS sensors and kinetic and non-kinetic soldier-borne C-UAS effectors (SMASH computer sighs for assault rifles; electronic / jammer “guns”).

The (unfortunately slow) growth of SKY SABRE Medium Range Air Defence batteries is also underway, most notably with the recent order to MBDA for new launchers and the procurement of more trucks for reloads, for battery logistics support and also new engagement modules.

6 additional SKY SABRE 'systems' are being procured (22 August 2025 announcement), 'doubling' the number of deployable systems. A lot of confusion is caused by the MoD too liberally using "launcher" and 'system' interchangeably, as if they were one and the same. But as the MOD itself notes in its press release, a “system” is comprised of 3 main elements: radar, C2, and launcher.

More accurately still, a complete system, correctly called a Fire Group, has 3 launchers by design. Unfortunately, at this moment in time it’s impossible to say for sure how many launchers the British Army can truly count on. The 4 batteries of 16 Regiment Royal Artillery, each composed of 2 independent Fire Group, would need 24 launchers to express their full potential but it’s unclear if they actually have anywhere near that many.


The 3 elements of a SKY SABRE Fire Group seen in Poland at the start of operation STIFFTAIL, which saw a Fire Group (with at least 2 launchers) deployed there until December 2024. Closer to camera, the Rafael-supplied C4I shelter; then the GIRAFFE AMB radar and further away a launcher vehicle. The usual slogan that a CAMM "system" can control up to 24 missiles in flight at the same time is exactly the reason why a full Fire Group should have 3 (3x8=24 missiles) launchers


An earlier letter by Lord Coaker had evidenced that “growth” was underway to get to 9 “launchers”, with deliveries known to be underway in 2024 under an earlier, unannounced procurement by the previous Government. If we were to take the language literally, 9 + 6 launchers would lead (within 3 years, an unacceptably long time) to just 15 total launchers, which would mean that a “massed” deployment in the field would see Fire Groups having 1 to 2 launchers at most.

The latest procurement, also includes “12 fire unit support vehicles for ammunition, 8 vehicles for baggage, and 8 threat evaluation and weapon assignment systems”.

The “Fire Unit Support Vehicles” are 6-tonner HX-60 4x4 truck with flatbed that carry a complete "clip" of 8 missiles that the launcher truck can hook and drag into position, DROPS-style. The “baggage” vehicle should be, again, a 6-tonner HX-60 flatbed with tail crane. Vehicles of this type are commonly seen with SKY SABRE Fire Groups and the tail crane is also used to aid reloading of single canisters where needed.

The “threat evaluation and weapon assignment systems” should be the C4I heart of a Fire Group, in theory, but the inconsistent language used by the MOD introduces doubt about what exactly they are talking about.


A SKY SABRE launcher (right, mostly out of frame) hooks a reload clip of 8 CAMM missiles from a HX60 ammunition truck. 


The HX60 flatbed wth tail crane truck seen here (left) is (probably) what DE&S called "baggage" truck in their news release. Unfortunately we are always bound to interpret what the MoD says. 


The next big event, at the sharp end, should be the formal selection of the new vehicle base (expected to be the Patria 6x6) and the new turret for the new Manoeuvre SHORAD Fire Unit destined to replace STORMER.

Getting back to SKYKEEPER proper, the relevant project to look for is the new C2 system which, towards 2030, is meant to ensure maximum interconnection of the various systems and batteries across the battlefield.

The new C2 is a key capability upgrade, part of the wider CUP2 and 3 “eras” which are meant to field capability between 2026 and 2030.

During 2024, the MOD communicated, with an ex-ante voluntary transparency notice, its intention to award Northrop Grumman 2 small 6-months contracts, active from 1st October 2024, to assess the feasibility of adopting their Integrated Battle Command System (IBCS) and Forward Area Air Defence (FAAD) C2 systems to meet British needs.

Until 2029, however, the task of building and distributing a Recognized Air Picture to UK land formations will fall on SKYKEEPER, and that could continue well into the 2030s. It remains more than possible, after all, that SKYKEEPER is actually selected, in the end, to succeed itself.

The SKYKEEPER in service with the Army and the SKYKEEPER full potential are, after all, currently two very different things.

 

From LEAPP to SKYKEEPER

We need to take a look back in time to understand how we got to the current situation.

In Afghanistan, the British Armed Forces initially fielded “Automated Sense and Warn”, a capability acquired under Urgent Operational Requirement (UOR) which integrated Saab GIRAFFE AMB radars, MAMBA (Saab ARTHUR C) counter-battery radars and other sensors, networking through an early Land Environment Air Picture Provision (LEAPP) C2 system and feeding into WAVES towers to sound alarms and warn personnel on base of incoming attacks.

The “true” LEAPP came into service while Operation HERRICK came to a close. Deliveries of the core LEAPP equipment concluded in October 2014 and it was only in 2015 that 49 (Inkerman) Battery Royal Artillery became operational with the system.

LEAPP as originally delivered comprised of 5 Saab Giraffe Agile Multi Beam (AMB) radars; 4 “Control nodes” (shelters carried on MAN SV HX60 4x4 trucks); 3 Air picture trailers and a single Link 11 (receive-only) access node for use primarily by 3rd Commando Brigade, manned by 29 Commando RA. Link 11 was then very necessary to access data coming from warships; now Link 16 is more universal, even at sea, and indeed Link 22 is coming in.

A JAPPLE Tactical Data Link provided a Receive-only data link 16 capability and capability to forward the Recognized Air Picture (RAP) to remote terminals.

LEAPP relays on external communication bearers in the field, primarily the Army’s FALCON battlefield Wide Area Network. Relevant information for air defence needs is circulated on the GBAD BISA (Ground Based Air Defence Battlefield Information System Application), a dedicate BOWMAN mode for transmission of air defence information.


LEAPP elements from 49 Bty in the Field. The 8x8 trucks are GIRAFFE AMB radars (folded), while two Tactical Nodes follow. 


In the simplest possible terms, LEAPP uses “its own” assigned radars and data coming in via data link through other sources, including from Air and Sea, to build a Recognized Air Picture that it then supplies to Land HQs (Divisions, Brigades, etc).

LEAPP has been used extensively since, but the field of radios, data links and electronics has evolved very quickly. By 2020, LEAPP in its original form, very bespoke, very “bulky”, very closed architecture, was already showing its age and the Army started to plan out upgrades.

The requirement as published was ambitious, but intelligent: LEAPP needed to evolve “to have a small form factor, which is essential to allow its continued deployment into LAND HQ’s.
The new small factor system must integrate GIRAFFE-AMB radars using an ASTERIX standard, a Link 16 Multifunctional Information Distribution System-Joint Tactical Radio System (MIDS-JTRS) tactical data link terminal and external systems using a Joint Range Extension Applications Protocol-C (JREAP-C) interface. The means to connect the Command and Control (C2) to multiple G-AMB’s via both wireless and wired links is required. The LEAPP requirement is for the provision of 5 sets, each comprising C2, Human Machine Interface (HMI), TDL and communication equipment. Each set should be provided in ruggedised cases allowing the system to be man-portable
”.

Lockheed Martin UK agreed that all these demands were eminently sensible and worked on exactly these lines to develop LEAPP into SKYKEEPER. Unfortunately, when the MOD finally awarded the contract for the Life Extension of LEAPP, in January 2022, the funding was insufficient to go with the full ambition and the form factor reduction was left out of the project entirely.

LM upgraded all of the LEAPP systems, replacing the old software with new, open-architecture, ITAR-free, UK-sovereign SKYKEEPER software but the system is still bound to trailers and shelters carried on trucks, when it no longer needs to be that conspicuous (and thus vulnerable).

SKYKEEPER now and in the future

SKYKEEPER now is fully capable of working with Link 16 MIDS/JTRS with the potential for JREAP-C and also offers a wider array of options to connect with lower tactical echelons via radio and Wide Area Networks. It also enables Mode V IFF data receipt from the G-AMB radars. The new system is more user-friendly, the Human Machine Interface having been completely revised, making it easier to exploit information and streamlining decision-making.

Lockheed Martin has developed SK FLEX, a “boxed” solution that delivers exactly the man-portable solution the British Army wanted, allowing the set up and movement of nodes within buildings, battlefield fortifications or other expedient locations.


SKYKEEPER FLEX in the field (photo Lockheed Martin) 

The British Army has its eye on these new solutions. In January 2024, the Army deployed a GIRAFFE AMB radar to the US for Project CONVERGENCE Capstone 4 but it did not deploy a tactical node. Instead of taking one of its truck-carried shelters, the Army packed 2 SK FLEX sets supplied by Lockheed Martin UK instead.

Once in the US, a decision was made to further experiment by connecting the GIRAFFE AMB to SK FLEX not by cable, as would usually be done with LEAPP (where the radars were used specifically to build a Local air picture) but with a wireless link. Lockheed Martin UK personnel on the ground sent the request back to Ampthill and in the space of one night, time zone difference assisting, the UK laboratories were able to send back a workable software solution.

Again in 2024, but in November, at the Army Warfighter Experiment (AWE), SK FLEX was again central. A new sensor was used to help build the RAP, the small and portable GIRAFFE 1X that the Army (and RAF Regiment) have procured specifically to enhance short range and C-UAS air defence.

More importantly still, the RAP from SK FLEX was distributed all the way down the tactical echelons to an AJAX vehicle fitted with SK MANOEUVRE, a specific SKYKEEPER solution meant to bring air picture data directly to combat vehicles. For the demonstration, AJAX was temporarily fitted with a dedicate, extra antenna in the camouflage bin, but a proper SK MANOEUVRE software load would enable the crew to visualize the RAP directly on their existing screens, thanks to AJAX being a digital vehicle with GVA architecture.


SKYKEEPER MANOEUVRE inside an FV432 (photo Lockheed Martin)


Again, at AWE SKYKEEPER was also able to take in the feed from a number of infrared anti-drone cameras and integrated, for the first time, the Sensing for Asset Protection with Integrated Electronic Networked Technology (SAPIENT) protocol.

SAPIENT was developed by the UK's Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) as an open standard that allows the fusion and integration of autonomous sensory information into a single integrated picture. The MOD, and then NATO as a whole, adopted it as standard.

At AWE, SKYKEEPER software was also loaded into the ground control station for TIQUILA, the new pair of drones for the British Army, aka the Edge Autonomy Stalker (renamed EAGLE) and the Lockheed Martin INDAGO 4 (renamed KESTREL). This allowed an INDAGO 4 at the exercise to distribute its live video feed to AJAX and beyond, all the way to dismounted soldiers who had SK software loaded into their ATAK terminals.

Lockheed Martin also offers another solution to bring the SKYKEEPER RAP to single, non-digitized vehicles and/or dismounts or, say, STARSTREAK / LMM vSHORAD teams. Called EDGE, this solution uses a tablet to receive and visualize a local RAP.


SK EDGE, (photo Lockheed Martin) 


SKYKEEPER has demonstrated a lot of flexibility and capability in the field; the adoption of those capabilities now depends on Army choices (and budgets). One key upgrade that should be put under contract soon is the addition of Joint Range Extension Applications Protocol (JREAP) C, a crucial upgrade to enable SKYKEEPER to transmit information via data link over much greater distances.

The adoption of the “in-a-box” form factor is also a candidate enhancement the Army could order sometime soon.

 

The future

SKYKEEPER has demonstrated that it is agnostic to Sensors, Network and Effectors. It can integrate data from a multitude of different sources and systems and distribute information over different networks, in support of multiple different effectors.

Lockheed Martin UK is pushing the system both domestically and abroad as a full, integrated C2 solution for GBAD needs, but also as a gateway that enables information distribution for other roles and domains.

For example, LM UK intends to push SKYKEEPER also as solution for the C2 element for Project SERPENS for new artillery-locating sensors (both radar and passive acoustical & optical detection).

“Condensed” variants of SKYKEEPER can also be used, on Commercial Off the Shelf electronics, for civilian counter-drone applications as well.


SKYKEEPER as a C2 network not just for Air Defence, but for multiple applications, forwarding data from multiple sources and sensors, to multiple effectors. SERPENS is the next big C2 opportunity. 


Back in April, then Minister Maria Eagle said in a Written Answer that the next phase of LGBAD improvements would see the achievement of “an Initial Operating Capability of Medium Range Air Defence for warfighting by July 2026. This includes 2 Surface-to-Air Missile Operations Centres, and 2 enhanced Wireless Enabled Network sets”. No additional information was provided, but this suggests progress on C2 solutions is expected.

Obviously, while wireless is by nature more vulnerable to jamming, EW and disturbs, it enables the network to spread over far greater distances, taking in and redistributing data to more and different sensors and allowing the weapon launchers to spread out far more to be more survivable and to expand the protected bubble. Arguably, the “wireless” element of IBCS is its main selling point: the Integrated Fire Control Network Relay towers are its distinguishing component: deployed alongside launchers or sensors, linked to them directly by cable, the IFCN connects them wirelessly into the overall network.


The main rival to SKYKEEPER is almost certainly IBCS. Note the all important Integrated Fire Control Network wireless relay masts deployed alongside sensors and launchers to network all elements together. 



It’s clear the UK needs to get to that kind of air defence (and beyond) network, in a way or another. Northrop Grumman’s IBCS, Lockheed Martin’s SKYKEEPER and a proposal by Thales and L3 Harris are the “obvious” contenders for the British Army’s Air Defence C2 needs. The frontrunners, to me at least, seem to be SKYKEEPER and IBCS: the Thales-L3 team offers an integration of L3Harris’ Target Orientated Tracking System (TOTS) into Thales’ Agile C4I @ Edge (ACE) but their offer is not as well established and a known measure as the other two contenders. SKYKEEPER is UK-sovereign and established (to a degree) as the incumbent, already in service; while IBCS is used by the US Army, Poland (importantly including with CAMM/CAMM ER missiles in the PILICA+ and NAREW batteries) and is planned for adoption by other NATO PATRIOT users such as Germany.

As with pretty much everything else in UK Defence, we wait for actual decisions and contract awards to happen, hoping the Defence Investment Plan will provide more clarity on the way forward.



Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Merlin progress - UPDATE with AEW squadron plan


Merlin for the Royal Marines

846 NAS is training with the Merlin HC3 with the aim of going out to sea soon. According to ADS Advance, the plan is to have them having their first sortie at sea before Christmas, presumably on board of HMS Ocean, due to RFA Argus being deployed to Sierra Leone in support of Operation Gritrock, the british intervention against ebola.
There is not much time left, if the plan is still in place, so their debut at sea might be truly imminent.

846 NAS has re-formed in September in RAF Benson, with 10 helicopters and 14 crews, for a total of 28 pilots. Over 300 aircrew and engineers from the Royal Navy have been training in Benson from 2012 to reach this moment. 846 NAS will remain in Benson for a while still, working alongside the remaining RAF Merlin squadron, 28(AC) Sqn. The squadron is expected to relocate to Yeovilton by Easter 2015, and next year 845 NAS should also gradually take Merlin in, with 28(AC) disbanding. 845 NAS should reform in August 2015, operating at least for a few months with a mix of Merlin and Sea King.

The Merlin is handed over from RAF to RN; september 2014


25 Merlin HC3 (the HC3 is the original RAF variant, known by Agusta Westland as AW101-411; 22 were originally purchased) and 3A (built for Denmark with an enhanced mission fit including a nose modified to take a LOAM low flying collision avoidance sensor; known as AW101-512, they have been purchased by the MOD for a UOR and used for training in the UK to increase the number of deployable HC3s available) are transfering from the RAF to the Fleet Air Arm, and they are all due to be life-extended, upgraded and navalized under a GBP455 million contract.
In order to maintain a core of operational capability constantly available, this process and the withdrawal of Sea King HC4 are organized in phases.

One of the first few Merlin HC3 in Royal Navy markings, by P_H_images

Phase 1 began in October 2014, and includes the partial navalization of 7 helicopters. These will receive a manual folding rotor head, lashing down points, upgraded undercarriage and fast rope harnesses, to be suitable, at least partially, for use on ships and in support of Royal Marines operations. All 7 helicopters, to be known as HC3i (Interim) should be operational by April 2016, when the last Sea King HC4 (no more than 11 remain in service, used by 845 NAS) will be withdrawn from service.

Phase 2 will involve the full navalization and upgrade of a first batch of 9 helicopters, to be uplifted to HC4/4A standard. The HC4 adds an electrically folding tail boom and a cockpit upgraded at HM2 standard as well as a new Tactical Mission System by General Dynamics UK, partially common with the one of the Wildcat. These 9 helicopters should be fully operational by February 2020, and there have been earlier indications of HC4 deliveries beginning in September 2017. Following trials, HC4 IOC with up to 7 helicopters could be achieved during 2018.

HM2's shiny new glass cockpit


Phase 3 will uplift all remaining helicopters to HC4/4A standard, including the 7 HC3i. Deliveries are to be completed by March 2022.
The Commando Helicopter Force will have a total of 37 crews for the 25 Merlin by the end of the transition from Sea King.

A number of Merlin HC3 deployed to Albania this year to work with the Royal Navy and Royal Marines during Albanian Lion 2014. Hopefully we'll see the HC3 on ships soon.

It will be quite a long transition period, which will keep the Royal Marines short of fully ship-compatible helicopters for a long period.



HM2

The HM2 Merlins have achieved operational capability early, and have been through months of very intense training, culminating in exercise Deep Blue, which saw, for the first time in many years, a full ASW squadron of 9 helicopters embarked on HMS Illustrious to fend off the attacks of british and french SSNs and of Dutch diesel submarines.


The Merlin HM2 squadron of exercise Deep Blue

Deep Blue was also a chance to test the Merlin HM2 night capabilities, with the NVG available (finally) to the crew. Here is HMS Richmond seen at night.

The Royal Navy now plans for a fleet of 30 HM2 which will try to sustain a forward available fleet of 25 at any one time, with the other 5 in maintenance.
Of these 30, up to 14 will be embarking at once on the aircraft carrier when deployed, so that the task group can line both a 9-strong ASW squadron and a 4 to 5 strong AEW component (see CROWSNEST further down in the article).
In addition, the Merlin fleet will also be required to sustain at least 5 Small Ship Flights for operations on frigates and destroyers.

HM2 have been carrying on Stingray drops in Falmouth bay as well
The Royal Navy is consequently still hoping to be able to fund the HM2 upgrade for a further 2 to 8 Merlin. The HM1 fleet numbers 38 operational machines and 4 airframes in storage / cannibalised for spares.
30 helicopters are being upgraded to HM2, but the option for 8 more was at one point dropped. However, the Royal Navy now hopes to be able to obtain 2 to 8 more HM2 machines, and a decision might be taken before the year ends.

A busy HMS Illustrious in ex Deep Blue
 
By February 2015, all squadrons (824, 820, 814 and 829) will have converted to the HM2. 



CROWSNEST  

The important AEW capability for the fleet will be a Merlin HM2 task as well, once Sea King is retired. IOC for CROWSNEST is expected in 2019, while the last Sea King ASaC Mk 7 will be withdrawn by September 30, 2018.
The Sea King ASaC force will be downsized quickly in the coming months, and probably it will soon be down to the sole 849 NAS. The number of operational helicopters will be further reduced from 11 to 7 in the forward fleet, and one in reserve. However, this beats by far the earlier plan of having the ASaC going out of service in 2016, with an AEW coverage gap for 3 to 4 years.

CROWSNEST is a programme lead by Lockheed Martin as Main Contractor due to its role in delivering the upgraded mission system used by the Merlin HM2.
Lockheed Martin is also a contender for the requirement: teaming with Elta, they are offering the VIGILANCE radar pods. The pod contains a Elta AESA radar complete with power and cooling system, IFF interrogator and ESM: The pod is carried in place of the torpedo pylons, and only needs a single point power and data connection to the helicopter: the mission system is already compatible with the HM2 software and consoles.

A Thales team is offering a new upgrade of the CERBERUS system used on the Sea King Mk 7, with the Searchwater radar carried inside the well known inflatable "bag" radome. Up to DSEI 2013, the Thales offer involved installing the radar, upgraded to deliver greater detection capabilities, on rails added on the starboard middle fuselage of the Merlin HM2s. After take off, when the undercarriage is folded away, the bag would slide down the rails so that the radar hangs below the helicopter, from where it has unobstructed 360° field of view.
In 2014 the design seems to have been tweaked doing away with the rails and adopting instead an hinge which swings the radar beneath the fuselage. The hinge assembly would go on the weapon pylon station, and from the CGI it appears a cleaner installation. The inflatable radome used on the Sea King MK7 might also be replaced with a solid radome.


Both systems are already being test flown from Boscombe Down, and the two rival bids are expected to be filed in by the end of January 2015. A selection of the winning bid is due in the first quarter of 2015. Operations should begin in 2018 and reach IOC during 2019. Thales has repeatedly said they believe they can deliver operational capability quicker than that, while LM has not been as talkative so far about the progress of the VIGILANCE trials.

The 2014 Thales offer as shown in a CGI by flightglobal.com.

A model showing the Thales solution and the rails on the fuselage, as shown at DSEI 2013

Merlin HM2 with Thales CROWSNEST payload seen in the sky over Wiltshire in november 2014

Rick Ingham shot this great photo of Merlin HM2 ZH831 fitted with two VIGILANCE pods for CROWSNEST trials. Photo from airplane-pictures.net; @ Rick Ingham

So far, the plan has been described as including the purchase of 10 AEW mission fits and the modification of all 30 Merlin HM2 to enable quick installation and removal of the system. Any helicopter in the fleet could thus move from ASW to AEW role in hours.

The new consoles of the HM2, with the large Barco displays, is suitable for displaying AEW data when CROWSNEST is in use

The concept seems brilliant, but i'm very much of the opinion that the Royal Navy, if it manages to fund the upgrade of 8 more helicopters, would better be served by removing the ASW kit from them and fitting them out to serve as AEW platforms full time, in a separate squadron.
My suspect is that the vast and precious range of capabilities and competencies of the very different arts of ASW and AEW cannot be mixed in the same crew. Perhaps the helicopters can be made capable to take the kit as quickly as promised, but the AEW and ASW specialists will, i believe, stay as two separate families.
Modifying a smaller number of helicopters for CROWSNEST transport and having them in their own squadron continues to look to me as the best solution.

UPDATE: there will indeed be an AEW squadron. The Royal Navy today announced that 849 NAS, as well as going ahead solo with the Sea King MK7 up to March 2018, will then continue as a Merlin HM2 squadron operating CROWSNEST.

854 NAS is being re-absorbed into 849 NAS as "Normandy Flight", and 857 NAS will revert to Flight identity, taking the name "Palembang Flight", with formal decommissioning in the new year.
849 NAS will carry on as a frontline squadron with 3 Flights, one presumably with training function and two operational flights. The third flight is expected to be called "Okinawa" after one of 849's battle honours.









A sensible organization, which reflects my expectations. Now, if it was possible to go ahead with the last 8 Merlin to upgrade them and use them in the AEW squadron, that would be a very good development.