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Oshkosh Defense wins potential $942.9M contract for Stryker armaments by Ed Adamczyk Washington DC (UPI) Jun 4, 2021 Oshkosh Defense won a $942.9 million contract to integrate 30mm medium caliber weapons systems onto U.S. Army Stryker vehicles, the company said on Friday. The upgrade to the Stryker Double V Hull Infantry Carrier Vehicle will provide "precision lethality capability to the Army's Stryker Brigade Combat Team," the company said Friday in a press release. The contract calls for integration of the weapons system with three combat teams, as well as technical and logistical support. The first delivery order, valued at about $130 million, includes 91 vehicles. The Army could obtain up to six Stryker Brigades with the weapons system version, making the potential contract value about $942 million over six years, according to Oshkosh. The weapon system, devised by Oshkosh Defense, Pratt & Miller Engineering and Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, consists of a 30mm gun and a SAMSON turret, each currently in use by numerous NATO countries. The system is mounted on a 16-ton, eight-wheeled armored vehicle, nearly 23 feet long and capable of carrying nine soldiers, grenade launchers and other armaments. The vehicle is designed for quick deployment, and is meant to fill a gap between lightly-armored Humvees and sturdier but hard-to-deploy M2 Bradley tanks. The army's choice came after tests and evaluations conducted at the Aberdeen Test Center, Md. General Dynamics Land Systems, Kollsman Inc., Leonardo DRS, Raytheon and Pratt & Miller Engineering, EOS Defense Systems USA, Inc. and Oshkosh Defense were awarded study contracts in 2020.
Marine Corps ends involvement in tank warfare Washington DC (UPI) May 26, 2021 The U.S. Marine Corps' deactivation of its celebrated 1st Tank Battalion officially ended its involvement with active-duty tanks. A ceremony at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Calif., last week marked the end. As part of Force Design 2030, a position paper released in 2020, the Marine Corps will divest its tanks to accelerate modernization and to realign capabilities, units and personnel to higher priority areas. The U.S. Army will retain armor combat ca ... read more
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