The Department of War has reached new framework
agreements with a slate of disruptive new entrants and commercial
innovators to aggressively expand the United States military's strike
capabilities. Agreements with Anduril, CoAspire, Leidos, and Zone 5 will
launch the Low-Cost Containerized Missles (LCCM) program, while a
parallel agreement with Castelion advances an initiative to scale
low-cost hypersonic solutions. These agreements will rapidly field
effective and affordable kinetic mass for the Joint Force at scale,
acting directly on the mandate from President Trump and Secretary
Hegseth to strengthen America's military with an unequivocally lethal
Arsenal of Freedom.
The new frameworks for LCCM will drive a fast-paced experimentation and
assessment campaign that will culminate in a Military Utility Assessment
by the sponsoring Service Components. Designed to move at the speed of
commercial industry, the agreements establish the terms for future
firm-fixed-price production contracts. This effort positions the
Department to procure over 10,000 low-cost cruise missiles across these
portfolios in just three years, starting in 2027. The Department is
creating a pathway for rapid and repeatable production of high-volume,
lethal strike capabilities. The agreements include firm fixed
material-unit costs for production lots in 2027 through 2029.
Concurrently, once Castelion achieves testing and validation, the
Department will award a two-year multi-year procurement contract for a
minimum of 500 Blackbeard missiles annually, with options to extend for
up to five years. To further encourage Castelion's self-funded facility
expansion, the Department is actively seeking the necessary
authorizations and appropriations to purchase over 12,000 Blackbeard
missiles over five years.
Across these framework agreements, several of these new vendors will
reach production scale without direct Department investment, reflecting a
new model of commercial partnership that rewards speed, innovation, and
private sector capital investment.
The experimentation and assessment campaign for LCCM will be led by the
Office of the Under Secretary of War for Research and Engineering, with
the Army Program Acquisition Executive Fires serving as the transition
partner and acquisition lead for procurement. To kickstart this
initiative, the Department will procure test missiles from all four LCCM
companies starting in June 2026, laying the groundwork for the
assessment phase of the program. These agreements were developed in
close coordination with the United States Air Force Program Acquisition
Executive Weapons, the Test Resource Management Center and multiple
components across the War Department, including the Office of the Under
Secretary of War for Acquisition and Sustainment.
"We will deliver affordable mass for our warfighters at unprecedented
speed," said Under Secretary of War for Research and Engineering Emil
Michael. "In concert with establishing a clear demand signal, these
Framework Agreements commit American industry to on-time, on-cost
delivery and investment in R&D and facilities. This commercial style
of partnership is fully aligned with Secretary Hegseth's Acquisition
Transformation Strategy."
This approach reflects a deliberate effort to expand the munitions
industrial base, working with industry partners capable of delivering
lethal capability at the speed required by the Joint Force. It
reinforces the Department's staunch commitment to scalable production
pathways that can surge when needed.
"Today's announcement is the latest sign that our Acquisition
Transformation Strategy is delivering on its promise to rebuild the
Arsenal of Freedom," said Michael Duffey, Under Secretary of War for
Acquisition and Sustainment. "We are moving beyond the traditional prime
contractors to expand our industrial base, accelerating testing
timelines, and sending a clear, long-term demand signal to innovative
new entrants."
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Department of War Enhances Lethal Strike Capacity Through Partnership With New Entrants
May 13, 2026
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