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To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2690)1/27/1999 12:12:00 AM
From: Jim Parkinson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
Wow, is it nice to get over the TSA hurdle! Now maybe we can get over the launch hurdle but what about the testing hurdle. It took I* longer than planned. Will it take G* longer than planned too or will the simpler bent pipe system facilitate quicker ramp up? It is my understanding that much more code must yet be written and tested before commercial svc can be launched. I am naively hopeful that simpler is better, cheaper, and quicker. Anybody have any insight on this?



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2690)1/27/1999 3:20:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
WSJ. Albright and Russians Agree to Resume Launches of U.S. Satellites in Kazakstan

January 27, 1999

By HELENE COOPER
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

MOSCOW -- U.S. and Russian officials agreed to resume U.S.
commercial-satellite launches by Russian rockets in Kazakstan, in
exchange for promises from Russia and Kazakstan to give U.S. defense
officials greater oversight.

U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and her Russian counterpart,
Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov, announced the agreement after two days of
meetings.

The pact will reduce red tape and is aimed at improving U.S. companies'
competitiveness. The companies still need U.S. approval to launch
satellites from Russian rockets. But U.S., Russian and Kazak authorities
will no longer face the lengthy process of negotiating separate government
agreements prior to each launch.

U.S. Officials at Launch Sites

Russia and Kazakstan promised to protect sensitive U.S. technology. "We
in Russia are taking all measures to toughen our regime of export control,"
Mr. Ivanov said. U.S. defense officials will accompany each satellite to the
launch site to monitor the operation through liftoff. The agreement also
includes procedures for the retrieval of technology and equipment after a
launch failure or crash.

U.S. satellite launches on Russian rockets were suspended in September,
pending negotiation of the pact. The White House came under pressure
last year following earlier U.S. satellite launches in China, where, it was
alleged, Beijing acquired sensitive U.S. technology. A six-month
congressional investigation found the actions of several U.S. commercial
satellite companies had harmed U.S. national security.

The U.S., angered by Russia's missiletechnology proliferation, last month
capped the number of launches by Russian rockets at 16 until the year
2000-much to the dismay of U.S. companies such as Lockheed Martin
Corp. Nine launches occurred before the September suspension;
yesterday's agreement covers the remaining seven. An earlier pact had
allowed for an additional four launches.

Pressure to Halt Transfers to Iran

But U.S. officials said the cap won't be raised unless Russia halts all
transfers of nuclear and missile technology to Iran. "They're well aware that
we won't expand the space-launch quota until there's progress on Iran,"
one senior U.S. official said.

With a shortage of launch capacity in the U.S., Lockheed has been relying
on Russian launches to help it boost its share of a booming world-wide
market.

Russian fees from the seven launches are expected to total between $400
million and $500 million. U.S. officials are hoping the promise of so much
cash will help persuade Moscow to drop weapons-technology sales to
Iran and other suspect customers. Earlier this month, the U.S. imposed
sanctions on three Russian scientific research institutes believed to be
aiding the Iranians' nuclear and missile programs.

Beginning March 15, U.S. licenses to export satellites will come under
increased scrutiny, as the State Department assumes jurisdiction over them
from the Commerce Department. U.S. firms are unhappy about the
change, which is expected to lengthen the license-review period. U.S.
companies preferred being reviewed by the Commerce Department, which
is more oriented toward promoting business.

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Copyright © 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.




To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2690)1/27/1999 8:03:00 AM
From: Valueman  Respond to of 29987
 
Maurice:

Fret not. These will be high margin phones--probably the HIGHEST margin for all three manufacturers. If demand rears its beautiful head, they can ramp up in the blink of an eye, and they will. There is no cap on the output.