Army asks BAE Systems to build new armored combat vehicles and vetronics for periodic technology upgrades

March 20, 2025
The AMPV is to replace the Army’s Vietnam-era M113 family of combat vehicles, and will back-up the BAE Systems M2A3 Bradley Fighting Vehicle.

WARREN, Mich. – Armored combat vehicles experts at BAE Systems will build networked armored combat vehicles that will take-on battlefield duties as armored ambulances, mortar carriers, engineer vehicles, and command vehicles.

Officials of the U.S. Army Contracting Command at Detroit Arsenal in Warren, Mich., announced a $536.7 million order to the BAE Systems Platforms & Services segment in York, Pa., for Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicles (AMPV).

Five vehicle variants

The Army's AMPV networked armored combat vehicle program consists of five vehicle variants: general purpose, mission command, mortar carrier, medical evaluation, and medical treatment vehicles. The contract is for early-order material in support of future AMPV purchase, and facility-capacity-expansion efforts to increase AMPV production.

The AMPV, which is to replace the Army’s Vietnam-era M113 family of combat vehicles, and also will back-up the BAE Systems M2A3 Bradley Fighting Vehicle on the battlefield.

Related: BAE Systems to provide Army with armored combat vehicles and vetronics based on open-systems standards

The AMPV program calls for vetronics and software that adhere to the U.S. military's Vehicle Integration for C4ISR/EW Interoperability (VICTORY) standards, which use an adopt-adapt-author approach independent of specific hardware or software.

The program aims to provide the Army with a survivable and mobile fleet of vehicles to replace the M113. The AMPV capitalizes on the Bradley Fighting Vehicle and M109A7 advanced Paladin self-propelled artillery designs to enable the AMPV to maneuver with other modern combat vehicles in the Army's armored brigade combat team (ABCT).

Technology upgrades

BAE Systems won a $400.9 million order in January 2020 to build 160 new AMPVs. That order was a modification to a potential $1.2 billion contract awarded to BAE Systems in late 2014 to develop and build the AMPV. BAE Systems engineers are designing the new vehicle to accommodate periodic technology upgrades.

On this order BAE Systems will do the work in York, Pa., and should be finished by May 2028. For more information contact BAE Systems Platforms & Services online at www.baesystems.com/en-us/our-company/inc-businesses/platforms-and-services, or the Army Contracting Command-Detroit Arsenal at https://acc.army.mil/contractingcenters/acc-dta/.

About the Author

John Keller | Editor-in-Chief

John Keller is the Editor-in-Chief, Military & Aerospace Electronics Magazine--provides extensive coverage and analysis of enabling electronics and optoelectronic technologies in military, space and commercial aviation applications. John has been a member of the Military & Aerospace Electronics staff since 1989 and chief editor since 1995.

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