The U.S. Army has awarded the Javelin Joint Venture (JJV) a follow-on production contract valued at £1.3 billion for Javelin missiles and associated equipment and services.

This award marks the largest single-year production contract for the Javelin system to date and follows the initial indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) contract that was granted in May 2023.

According to the announcement, this contract will facilitate the procurement of Javelin weapon systems and provide production support for the U.S. Army. The JJV commenced production ramp-up activities last year with the goal of increasing the output of Javelin All Up Round (AUR) missiles to 3,960 units annually by late 2026.

“Now more than ever, Javelin is recognised as the most effective, combat-proven anti-armour weapon system in the world,” said Andy Amaro, president of JJV and Javelin programme director at Raytheon, a business within RTX.

The contract will also address the rising global demand for the Javelin missile, which has over 25 international customers, including the newly added customer Kosovo. Notably, it includes the provision of more than 4,000 Javelins to replenish stocks sent to Ukraine amidst ongoing conflict.

“With the increased demand for Javelin worldwide, our ability to ramp production to support our Army customer and global users is more important now than ever,” remarked Dave Pantano, JJV vice president and Lockheed Martin Javelin programme director.

The Javelin system is developed and produced by the partnership between Raytheon, based in Tucson, Arizona, and Lockheed Martin, located in Orlando, Florida. To date, the JJV has successfully manufactured over 50,000 Javelin missiles along with more than 12,000 reusable Command Launch Units.

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George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison
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Dirk Shelter
Dirk Shelter (@guest_850284)
1 day ago

Good contract, Javs will still be needed, even in the Indo-Pac region.

Chris
Chris (@guest_850292)
1 day ago

JAV’s and NLAW were probably the single most important weapon in the critical opening days of the Ukraine war. They stopped the Russian armor columns.

Last edited 1 day ago by Chris
Graham Moore
Graham Moore (@guest_850669)
21 hours ago
Reply to  Chris

Yes, and we supplied many of those NLAWs before the Russians crossed the Ukrainian border.

Brian Foster
Brian Foster (@guest_851017)
5 seconds ago

Time to give Ukraine permission to use our missiles to strike Russian military airfields and any military logistic targets supporting the war in Ukraine we are asking them to battle with one hand tied behind their backs. Putin is a modern day Adolf Hitler so time to give Ukraine permission whether the U.S. likes it or not.