Files / United States

Year Month Day Analysis Report of U.S. Department of Defense Contract List

Special assessment on recent major contract awards for the U.S. Navy, Army, and Transportation Command, focusing on foreign military sales, ship and aircraft modernization, and logistics support capacity building.

Detail

Published

22/12/2025

Key Chapter Title List

  1. Navy: Standard Missile-2 (SM-2) Production Spare Parts Procurement Contract (Foreign Military Sales)
  2. Navy: F/A-18E/F and EA-18G Aircraft Trailing Edge Flap Modification Kit Production
  3. Navy: Contracted Air Services (CAS) Electronic Warfare Jet Support
  4. Navy: E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Transition Support from Production to Sustainment
  5. Navy: Ship Propulsion Auxiliary Control and Machinery Control Human-Machine Interface System
  6. Navy: Harpoon and SLAM-ER Missile Related Engineering and Technical Services
  7. Navy: Modernized Radio Equipment Production and Delivery
  8. Army: Generator Step-Up Unit Transformer Replacement
  9. U.S. Transportation Command: Domestic Airlift Charter Services Multiple Award Contract

Document Introduction

This report is based on the official contract award list released by the U.S. Department of Defense on March 20, 2025, aiming to provide a specialized analysis of recent key procurement and sustainment activities of the U.S. military. The document details several important contracts signed on that day by the U.S. Navy, Army, and U.S. Transportation Command, covering areas from procurement of spare parts for cutting-edge weapon systems, modernization upgrades for in-service aircraft, and electronic warfare training support, to maintenance of critical infrastructure and strategic airlift capability building. These contracts not only reflect the U.S. military's prioritized capability development directions in the current strategic environment but also reveal the depth of its military cooperation with allies and the involvement of the domestic defense industrial base.

The core section of the report focuses on a series of high-value contracts for the U.S. Navy. Among them, the contract modification awarded to Raytheon Company, valued at over $141 million, is particularly noteworthy. This contract involves procuring production spare parts for the Standard Missile-2 (SM-2) and explicitly reveals its multinational joint procurement nature: Japan (57%), Australia (19%), the Netherlands (13%), Spain (6%), and Germany (5%) jointly fund it through the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program. This case typically exemplifies U.S. efforts to promote missile defense system standardization and interoperability among allies. Simultaneously, the order received by Boeing Company for F/A-18E/F and EA-18G aircraft trailing edge flap modification kits, and the support contract awarded to Northrop Grumman Corporation for the transition of the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye from production to sustainment, all point to continued investment in deep maintenance and life extension of existing critical aviation platforms.

Furthermore, the report reveals U.S. military investments in constructing complex training environments and modernizing the logistics sustainment system. The Contracted Air Services (CAS) contract awarded to Aery Aviation LLC aims to provide contractor-owned and operated electronic warfare jet services to simulate various aerial threats for training fleet air defense and responding to electronic warfare/electronic attack operations. This reflects the urgent need for realistic, multi-layered training environments in the context of "high-end warfare." On the other hand, the inclusion of Breeze Aviation Group Inc. by the U.S. Transportation Command in a domestic airlift charter services multiple award contract with an estimated total value of $873 million underscores the importance of maintaining large-scale, flexible strategic mobility capabilities for force projection and daily sustainment.

This report is strictly written based on original contract document data, without any external speculation or added context. It provides professional readers with a first-hand information slice regarding recent U.S. Department of Defense procurement trends, funding expenditure patterns (such as contract types like fixed-price, cost-plus-fixed-fee, etc.), project execution location distribution, and details of international cooperation. It serves as a valuable reference for analyzing the trajectory of U.S. military capability development, defense industry dynamics, and alliance security cooperation practices.