- GM Defense launched GM Defense UK to lead engagement with the UK Ministry of Defence and support its bid for the British Army’s Light Mobility Vehicle program.
- The new UK unit will anchor GM Defense’s European operations and support Team LionStrike’s vehicle delivery, sustainment, and industrial participation plans.
GM Defense has launched GM Defense UK, establishing a dedicated British presence to support the United Kingdom’s defense priorities and lead engagement with the UK Ministry of Defence, the company announced this week.
The new entity will operate from General Motors facilities in Leamington Spa and Silverstone and will serve as the focal point for GM Defense’s UK, NATO, and wider European defense activities. According to the company, GM Defense UK will also support delivery and sustainment planning for Team LionStrike ahead of the British Army’s upcoming Light Mobility Vehicle (LMV) program competition.
As noted by GM Defense, the move is intended to strengthen sovereign capability and create a long-term industrial base inside the UK defense sector. The company said the new organization will manage all UK Ministry of Defence engagement while anchoring broader European defense work from Britain.
The launch comes as GM Defense intensifies preparations for the LMV program, which is expected to replace and expand the British Army’s light mobility fleet. Team LionStrike, led by GM Defense, is preparing to bid for the program and is positioning itself as a domestic industrial partner rather than a purely foreign supplier.
“Standing up GM Defense UK is a major milestone in our long-term commitment to the United Kingdom,” said Bradley Watters, vice president of international business development. “Team LionStrike is different because GM—backed by more than a century of engineering excellence—is directly embedded as the vehicle OEM. That level of involvement delivers real capability, efficiency and long-term assurance for the UK Armed Forces. Establishing a UK business is essential to providing that through-life support.”
GM Defense said the timing of the announcement aligns with the International Armoured Vehicles conference and follows the UK Ministry of Defence’s recent LMV Industry Day, where potential suppliers outlined concepts and industrial approaches for the program. The company described the new UK presence as a practical step toward meeting British requirements for local support, sustainment, and industrial participation.
Team LionStrike brings together GM Defense, NP Aerospace, BAE Systems, and several UK-based subject matter experts. The consortium is offering a family of modern, commercially derived light and utility vehicles tailored for British Army use, with an emphasis on scalability and long-term support. According to the company, the team’s approach supports the UK’s Land Industrial Strategy by building a domestic supply chain rather than relying on offshore production.
Over the past year, Team LionStrike has increased its visibility in the UK market. GM Defense debuted its General Support Utility Platform at the DSEI defense exhibition and later conducted a UK Ride & Drive event, where four commercial off-the-shelf light and utility vehicle platforms were demonstrated for military stakeholders. The company said these activities were intended to show maturity, availability, and low-risk integration for the LMV requirement.
GM Defense stated that the new UK hub will also connect British operations to GM’s global parts distribution network, supporting sustainment and fleet availability over the life of the vehicles. NP Aerospace and BAE Systems will provide local manufacturing, integration, and support experience drawn from decades of work with the UK Armed Forces, according to the company.
“We are fully committed to the UK LMV programme and to investing in British industry and communities,” Watters added. “GM Defense UK strengthens our ability to fully support Team LionStrike and deliver exactly what the British Army needs—now and for decades to come.”
The Light Mobility Vehicle program is viewed as a core modernization effort for the British Army, replacing aging light vehicles used for patrol, logistics, and support roles. The Ministry of Defence has emphasized availability, sustainment, and domestic industrial involvement as key evaluation criteria, making local presence a central factor for bidders.

