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BAE, GDLS team up for vehicle upgrades

WARREN, Mich., Oct. 26 (UPI) -- BAE Systems and General Dynamics Land Systems have joined to upgrade Abrams tanks and Bradley vehicles.

BAE Systems said in a statement Friday that it had concluded a memorandum of agreement with GDLS, which is a business unit of General Dynamics, "to work collaboratively in support of the U.S. Army’s Heavy Brigade Combat Team modernization plan, which will upgrade, modernize and achieve commonality on BAE Systems’ family of Bradley fighting vehicles and General Dynamics M1 Abrams tanks, the primary combat vehicles of the Army’s Heavy Brigades."

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"The agreement, developed with the Army’s encouragement, defines how both companies will work with the Army’s Project Manager for Heavy Brigade Combat Team, and the Abrams and Bradley Product Managers, to jointly translate war fighter requirements into capabilities through collaborative design and development of common solutions. The agreement also establishes the basic process for collaborative specification and product development and provisions for the common procurement of material to support system evolution on both companies’ combat vehicles," BAE Systems said.

“As the Army adds capability to the Heavy Brigade Combat Teams, they desire common solutions to reduce logistics burdens, to lower development costs, and to make Soldier training easier,” said Mark Roualet, senior vice president and chief operating officer General Dynamics Land Systems.

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“BAE Systems and General Dynamics have responded with an agreement that harnesses the expertise of the world’s premier combat-vehicle developers to provide our customers the technology and capability they require in the 21st century,” Roualet said.

“This agreement is the natural conclusion of initiatives started under the leadership of Kevin Fahey, the Army’s Program Executive Officer, Ground Combat Systems to achieve greater commonality within the Heavy Brigade,” said Raj Rajagopal, president of BAE Systems’ Ground Systems business.

“It is a win-win for the U.S. Army, BAE Systems and General Dynamics, and illustrates how our partnership with the Army continues to evolve and apply best industry practices to the benefit of our customer and the American taxpayer,” Rajagopal said.

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