This agreement marks one of the first full-scale implementations of the Department of War’s Acquisition Transformation Strategy. By moving away from short-term cycles, the government expects to accelerate the delivery of missile defense systems capable of neutralizing short, medium, and intermediate-range ballistic threats both inside and outside the atmosphere. The contract formalizes a framework agreement signed in January, intended to provide the stability necessary for the company to scale its manufacturing operations.
Lockheed Martin Secures $35 Billion THAAD Multiyear Production Contract
The U.S. government has awarded Lockheed Martin a seven-year contract valued at up to $35 billion, marking a major shift toward long-term procurement strategies. The deal aims to quadruple the production of THAAD interceptors, providing a consistent demand signal intended to bolster the domestic defense industrial base.

Tim Cahill, president of Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, described the move as a transformational shift that enables the company to deliver capabilities to the warfighter at unprecedented speed. To support this objective, the company recently broke ground on a new Munitions Production Center in Troy, Alabama, as part of a $9 billion investment plan running through 2030. These efforts include the modernization of more than 20 facilities across the country, alongside the establishment of the Next Generation Interceptor facility in Courtland, Alabama, and a Munitions Acceleration Center in Camden, Arkansas. The initiative is part of a broader push to ensure supply chain resilience and expand domestic manufacturing capacity for key platforms like the PAC-3 MSE and the Precision Strike Missile.




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