RIEDEL, SECKINGER ASSUME TOP TWO POSITIONS AT MEADS
INTERNATIONAL AS COMPANY MOVES TOWARD PROTOTYPE INTEGRATION
22 July 2002
ORLANDO/MUNICH/ROME (July 22, 2002) -- The MEADS (Medium
Extended Air Defense System) International Board of Directors
today announced that Klaus Riedel has become the next president
of MEADS International (MI), an international company developing
the next generation of ground-mobile air and missile defense
systems. David Seckinger of Lockheed Martin has also joined
MEADS International as Executive Vice President.
For the past year, Riedel served MI as Executive Vice
President with primary responsibility for technology risk
reduction for MEADS. He was previously Vice President for Air
Defence Systems at LFK-Lenkflugkörpersysteme GmbH, a subsidiary
of EADS European Aeronautic Defence and Space (EADS) Company in
Munich , Germany . Riedel’s extensive military and business
experience has been focused on air and missile defense systems,
antitank systems, and electronic warfare. He brings a background
in management of complex industrial programs as well as in the
armament office of the German Air Force, where he conducted the
NATO AWACS Ground Environment Integration Segment program during
his military career. Later at EADS, he was Program Manager for a
number of successful antitank programs, Vice President Antitank
Systems and member of the board of LFK, and Vice President Air
Defence Systems. This experience will be of significant value as
MI integrates prototype MEADS hardware and software in the year
ahead and proposes the program’s Design and Development Phase.
Riedel succeeds Joel Strickland, who assumed the presidency
in 2001. He will retire but retain close ties to the company.
During a distinguished 34-year career, including 8 years with
the MEADS program, Strickland served as MEADS International’s
president, Executive Vice President, and Director of Systems
Engineering & Integration. Previously, at Lockheed Martin
Missiles and Fire Control, his extensive experience in
land-based air and missile defense contributed to numerous
defense programs involving advanced interceptor missiles,
including Ground Based Interceptor and several earlier strategic
defense systems. He received the Lockheed Martin Corporation
NOVA Award in 2001 for his leadership in securing the MEADS Risk
Reduction Effort contract.
David Seckinger of Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control
joins MI as Executive Vice President effective July 1, 2002 .
Seckinger has been Program Director for the U.S. Air Force Wind
Corrected Munitions Dispenser (WCMD) program, where his
leadership was instrumental in moving the program to full-rate
production. The WCMD program has been cited by U.S. Defense
officials for outstanding performance in Afghanistan and won the
prestigious General Bernard A. Schriever Award for outstanding
program management in 2001. Seckinger joined Lockheed Martin in
1993 and has held various program management positions including
Deputy Director for JASSM and Program Manager for UK Tomahawk,
which was cited as the top program by the United Kingdom MOD
in
1999.
Speaking of the transition, Riedel noted, “Our cooperation
continues to work at the highest level, and by developing
missile defense technology together, we are making MEADS
especially cost-effective for each country that participates.”
MEADS is a mobile air defense system designed to replace
Patriot systems in the United States and Nike systems in Italy,
and meets the requirements of the “capabilities oriented” air
defense concept in Germany. MEADS incorporates the proven
hit-to-kill PAC-3 missile in a system that includes surveillance
and fire control sensors, battle management/communication
centers, and high firepower launchers. The system will combine
superior battlefield protection with unprecedented flexibility,
allowing it to protect maneuver forces and to provide homeland
defense against tactical ballistic missiles, cruise missiles,
unmanned aerial vehicles, and aircraft.
MEADS will provide capabilities unlike any other fielded or
planned air and missile defense system. It is easily deployed to
a theater of operations and, once there, can keep pace with
fast-moving maneuver forces. When completed, MEADS will be an
air defense system able to roll off transports with the troops
and immediately begin operations with high tactical performance.
More importantly, its open architecture will establish the
pattern for subsequent 21st century air defense systems and
enable air defense asset allocation to be mission-tailored for
homeland defense or defense of maneuver forces. MEADS also
provides greater firepower with less manpower than current
systems, producing dramatic savings in operation and support
costs.
In 1999, MEADS International, Inc., was selected by NAMEADSMA,
a chartered organization of NATO, to develop MEADS. A
multinational joint venture headquartered in Orlando , Fla. ,
MEADS International’s participating companies are MBDA Italia,
EADS European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company and
LFK-Lenkflugkörpersysteme (LFK, a subsidiary of EADS and MBDA)
in Germany , and Lockheed Martin in the United States .
Together, these companies have focused an international
engineering team in Orlando to develop systems and technologies
for the MEADS program, which continues as a model for
collaborative transatlantic development.
MEADS is currently in the Risk Reduction Effort phase. The
U.S. , Germany , and Italy are financing the program in shares
of 55, 28 and 17 percent |