U.S. Navy awards BAE Systems with $2,6 billion contract for precision-guided rockets

The U.S. Navy has awarded BAE Systems with $2,6 billion in contracts for the procurement of modern precision-guided rocket.

The contract award from Naval Air Systems Command covers the procurement of Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) II full-rate production Lots 8-12, a U.S. Department of Defense news release states.

This award procures WGU-59/B units to upgrade the current 2.75-inch rocket system to a semi-active laser-guided precision weapon to support Navy, Army, Air Force, and foreign military sales requirements to include the governments of Iraq, Lebanon, Netherlands, Jordan, Afghanistan, United Kingdom, Tunisia, Philippines and Australia.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

Work will be performed in Hudson, New Hampshire (54%); and Austin, Texas (46%), and is expected to be completed in December 2025.

The APKWS rocket bridges the gap between unguided rockets and anti-armor munitions, consistently delivering pinpoint accuracy to soft targets at a low cost, that no other system can match.

APKWS II convert is an unguided rocket into a highly accurate Precision Guided Munition. The smaller warhead greatly reduces collateral damage while providing sufficient lethality to destroy point targets.

The rockets have three main sections; a Hydra 70 rocket motor, an M282 High Explosive Incendiary Multipurpose Penetrator Warhead and the guidance unit. The guidance unit allows for the change of the course of fire or hit moving targets.

The APKWS II adds a mid-body Semi-Active Laser WGU-59/B guidance unit to the current 2.75-inch rocket. The 2.75-inch rocket with APKWS II guidance section and M282 Multipurpose Penetrator warhead is replacing the standard 5.0 inch high explosive warhead.

Photo by Lance Cpl. Ashley McLaughlin

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor
  • In this story
  • USA

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

U.S. Marines get unmanned ship-killer missiles in Okinawa

The U.S. Marines stationed on Okinawa, Japan, can now sink enemy warships from land and shoot down drones from the back of a truck,...

South Korea’s missile shield is home — but are the missiles with it?

All six truck-mounted launchers belonging to the U.S. Army's only THAAD battery in South Korea have returned to their home base in Seongju County,...

Indian truck-mounted cannon enters the U.S. Army artillery race

An Indian-made artillery gun is now in the running to equip the U.S. Army, after AM General, the Michigan-based military vehicle maker best known...

U.S. Navy research chief: stop copying what industry builds

The U.S. Navy is overhauling how it moves research from laboratory to warship, with its top science official announcing a new strategy that strips...

U.S. Marines launch spy drone from warship deep in the South China Sea

A surveillance drone that needs no runway, no catapult, and no dedicated launch infrastructure lifted off from the deck of a U.S. Navy warship...