Hundreds of corporations, big and small, comprise the U.S. war industry.
Endless war is the most profitable racket on Earth. The U.S.
Department of Defense (DOD) allocated at least $81,017,709,583 on 358 individual contracts during March
2019.
FOREIGN MILITARY SALES (FMS) – Through FMS, the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to
allied nations and international organizations. 32 FMS contracts during March 2019
totaled $3,382,245,260.
AeroVironment $17,356,084 for FMS (Iraq): Data Link systems for Puma.
Boeing $9,919,602 for FMS (Indonesia): six ScanEagle air vehicles, technical
services and related support equipment.
Intuitive Research & Technology Corp. $36,479,628 for FMS (Taiwan): rapid response and cost
effective hardware solutions.
General Atomics $34,306,321 for FMS (Spain): MQ-9 Block 5 Òprocurement
action definitization effort.Ó General Atomics $123,293,911 for FMS (Netherlands): four MQ-9 drones, four
Mobile Ground Control Stations, spares, and support equipment. General
Atomics $8,925,748 for FMS (France): production and integration of
weapons kits onto MQ-9 drones. General Atomics $9,211,561 for FMS (UK): ongoing sustainment of the UK MQ-9
fleet.
MAG Aerospace $11,386,672 for FMS (UK): ongoing sustainment, management,
development, and network administration of UK MQ-9 Reaper Operations Centers at
Creech AFB, Nevada, USA; and RAF Waddington, Lincolnshire, England.
Lockheed Martin $264,655,025 for additional operation and
technical services in support of South
KoreaÕs F-35 program.
L3 $142,000,000 for FMS (unnamed): Group B
material and the Ground System Integration Lab for 645th Aeronautical Systems
Group. L3 $11,465,007 for FMS (unnamed): Ground
System Development and Integration within the 645th Aeronautical Systems
Group.
Northrop Grumman $349,377,402 for FMS (Poland): two battery sets of Integrated
Air & Missile Defense Battle Command System hardware & software.
Polskie Zaklady Lotnicze Sp. (Mielec, Poland) $18,982,157 for FMS (Nepal): two M28 aircraft, training,
technical publications, and ferrying from Poland, to Kathmandu.
United Technologies roughly $29,216,493 for constant frequency
generators for U.S. Navy and Japan.
United Technologies in support of the F-35 for FMS ($8,170,105). Provides
for supplies or services for
non-recurring engineering for the identification and correction of service
safety and durability deficiencies, maintains specification performance, and
matures the propulsion system in advance of service operational use.
FMS TO BRUTAL REGIMES
BlueForce Inc. $12,325,425 for English language training
for the Saudi Air Force at King
Abdul Aziz Air Base, Saudi Arabia.
Conti Federal Services $15,346,734 for FMS (Apartheid Israel): construction and
renovation of an existing kitchen and runway.
Harris Corp. $43,263,695 for FMS (Kuwaiti regime): additional AN/ALQ-214 A(V)4/5 Onboard Jammer
systems for the F/A-18 E/F aircraft.
Lockheed Martin $945,900,000 for FMS (Saudi Arabia): Terminal High Altitude
Area Defense (THAAD) Phase I long lead
items, obsolescence, tooling and test equipment, key personnel, line
requalification activities, initial training development, System Integration
Lab and testbeds, three-level maintenance concept, exportability, and early
engineering development.
Lockheed Martin $8,469,594 for FMS
(Japan, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Kuwait, Qatar, Taiwan, UAE, Germany, Netherlands): PAC-3 Missile
Support Center Field Missile Activities.
Lockheed Martin $1,135,410,156
for FMS (Poland, Bahrain, Romania): Guided Multiple
Launch Rocket Systems production. Later corrected to include U.S. Army and
USMC procurement.
Raytheon $20,853,145 for FMS (Kuwaiti regime): production hardware,
upgrade kits, spares.
Telephonics Corp. $12,623,588 for FMS (Saudi regime): manufacture, test, and
delivery of Next Generation Identification Friend or Foe AN/UPX-40 Interrogator
shipsets and installation kits for the Saudi AWACS fleet.
UNINHABITED VEHICLES & CRAFT (ÒdronesÓ)
Aerovironment $11,176,242 for All Up Rounds.
ArgenTech Solutions $44,998,104 for repair and sustainment
of sensors (the ÒeyesÓ of the drone) utilized on General Atomics MQ-1. Projects
managed by Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Electro-Optic Technology
Division, including military operations
in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, and Africa.
Boeing $46,700,000 for the Orca Extra Large
Unmanned Undersea Vehicle (XLUUV) program. This award completes the XLUUV
competition and brings the total awarded amount for five XLUUVs and associated
support elements to $274,400,000.
Boeing $17,452,196 for technical services,
training, site survey and activation teams, and program management supporting ScanEagle sites in Afghanistan.
DZYNE Technologies $48,990,806 to develop technologies
established under previous and current contracts, and rapid development and
maturation of Airborne, Space, and Terrestrial (ground) technologies and
systems so that MONARCH technologies and associated capabilities can be
transitioned to military markets.
Martin UAV and Textron $99,500,000 for non-developmental tactical
unmanned aerial systems.
Northrop Grumman $89,534,733 for sustainment and
engineering services on the MQ-4C Triton. Also provides field
service reps, logisticians, and test support to get MQ-4C air vehicles and
mission control and operator training systems up and running.
Precision Integrated Programs $11,345,577 for continued drone intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance services for U.S. Marine Corps in Afghanistan.
RECRUITMENT & RETENTION – The Pentagon spends hundreds of millions of dollars each year to convince
the U.S. populace to fight and support elective wars.
Blaine Warren Advertising $19,833,335 for Air Force Reserve
Command recruiting service advertising: plan, create, design, produce, place, evaluate, and measure the effectiveness
of advertising and special events in support of recruiting & marketing.
AAR $34,093,983 for continued helicopter air
transportation, moving passengers, cargo, casualties, and human remains in support
of the Afghan Air Force. Paid for with U.S. tax dollars: Afghanistan Security
Force Funds.
ExpFederal $11,254,947 for electrical safety
assessments, repairs program, materials management and control services for
U.S. Forces-Afghanistan in Bagram.
Salient Federal Solutions $21,295,700 for Òmission criticalÓ IT communications
infrastructure and services in Fayetteville, NC, and Bagram, Afghanistan.
SES Government Solutions $8,356,608 for commercial
satellite communications service directly supporting U.S. Central Command
operations.
Vectrus $547,634,003 for base operations support
services (BOSS) and security support services at Camp Arifjan, Kuwait.
Vectrus $44,752,571 for BOSS in Doha, Qatar.
Wara Construction Co. $22,206,641 to build an unaccompanied
officer's quarters for the Kuwait Ministry of Defense on Camp Arifjan, Kuwait.
EUCOM
Cubic $7,996,042 for analytical support
services in Stuttgart, Germany.
Centerra Group $7,858,289 for BOSS at military and
civilian installations in Singapore (includes taking care of the swimming pool).
Gilbane $8,403,802 for cleaning, inspecting,
and repair of fuel storage tanks at Defense Fuel Support Point Tsurumi, Japan.
JJLL LLC $18,353,983 for Philippines operations support for Marine Corps Forces
Pacific and Pacific Command Augmentation Team. Work provides management and
administration; commercial telephones, cable TV; security; airfield facilities;
passenger terminal and cargo handling; ordnance; material management; supply
services; morale, welfare and recreation support; galley; billeting; facility
management; facility investment; facility services; utilities; base support
vehicles and equipment; and environmental services.
Valiant Global Defense Services $8,717,022 for operations support
services for the Korea Battlefield Simulation Center in Seoul, South Korea.
Barrett Firearms roughly $49,936,300 for advanced sniper rifles.
Leading Technology Composites $50,000,000 for SOF Personal Equipment
Advance Requirements Tactical Standalone (SPEAR) and Modular Supplemental Armor
Protection (MASP) ballistic plates.
Sierra Nevada Corp. $23,702,941 for permanent installation
of MC-130J Airborne Mission
Networking (AbMN).
Tactical & Survival Specialties, W.S. Darley & Co., Atlantic
Diving Supply, Federal Resources Supply Co., Unifire Inc., Quantico Tactical shared $4,000,000,000 for special operations equipment.
DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS
AGENCY (DARPA)
Agile Defense $7,157,890 for unclassified IT services
for DARPA. Galois Inc. $9,925,508 for
System Security Integrated Through Hardware and firmware (SSITH) program for
DARPA.
NATIONAL GEOSPATIAL-INTELLIGENCE
AGENCY (NGA)
McCarthy HITT – Next NGA West JV $711,651,970 to build the National
Geospatial-Intelligence AgencyÕs new facility in St. Louis, MO.
ACADEMIA –
U.S. academia is part of the U.S.
war industry. Their reasons for participating vary.
Boston College $10,632,835 for R&D Òextending and
exploiting existing tools, assets, and information to maximize near-term
benefitsÓ to the federal government, Òwhile simultaneously generating new
ideas, innovations and basic research for next-generation technologies
promising new, in some cases revolutionary, capabilities for the warfighter.Ó
TELECOM COMPLICITY
AT&T $12,080,764, for year three of the
Northstar Long-Haul Telecommunications Network and associated transmission
circuits for an Ultra-High Frequency/Line of Sight communications system
network.
JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (F-35)
Granite Construction $10,090,645 for F-35 vertical landing
pads and taxiway at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, CA.
Lockheed Martin $32,721,119 for F-35 kits, tooling and
retrofit activities for air systems for USAF ($9,702,671; 30%); Navy
($9,212,841; 28%); Marine Corps ($7,844,070; 24%); non-U.S. DOD participants ($5,379,058;
16%); FMS ($582,479; 2%).
Lockheed Martin $9,963,210 for additional production
ancillary mission equipment in support of F-35 non-U.S. DOD participant aircraft.
Lockheed Martin $14,587,657 for 62 Organic Light
Emitting Diode Helmet Display Units and spares for F-35 for U.S. Navy
($7,293,829; 50%) and USMC ($7,293,828; 50%).
Lockheed Martin $9,685,470 to develop and integrate
the Digital Channelized Receiver/Techniques Generator and Tuner Insertion
Program into the F-35 Australia, Canada, U.K. Reprogramming Lab and deliver
other upgrades to the facility. Work at Eglin AFB, Eglin, FL.
United TechnologiesÕ Pratt & Whitney makes the F-35 engine. United
Technologies $18,434,122 for F-135 long lead items in
support of non-U.S. DOD participants. United Technologies in support of
F-35 for Navy ($25,363,518; 36%); Air Force ($24,943,370; 35%); non-DOD
($12,930,389; 18%): provides for supplies or services for
non-recurring engineering for the identification and correction of service
safety and durability deficiencies, maintains specification performance, and
matures the propulsion system in advance of service operational use.
Bell Boeing JPO $85,718,447 to upgrade four MV-22
aircraft from Block B to Block C configuration in support of the Common
Configuration Readiness and Modernization Program (CC-RAM). In addition,
provides for planned maintenance interval effort for one of the CC-RAM
aircraft.
Bell Boeing JPO $18,663,905 for V-22 Proprotor Hub
spring and drive link kits and spare kits. Purchases: USMC ($13,355,718; 72%),
Air Force ($2,891,600; 15%). Also provides twelve interim spare drive links,
three interim spare hub springs and nine proprotor hub spring and drive link
kits to Japan ($2,416,587; 13%).
EAGLE (F-15)
Raytheon Aberdeen Proving Ground $21,186,712 to retrofit F-15 fleet IFF
units.
HORNET (F-18)
Boeing max. ~$4 billion for the full-rate production
and delivery of 78 F/A-18 aircraft, specifically 61 F/A-18E and 17 F/A-18F
aircraft for fiscal years 2018 through 2021.
General Electric $77,600,136 for repair, replacement, and
program support of 35 family groups of F404 engine components used on the
F/A-18 A-D aircrafts.
Moog Inc. max. $18,618,768 to support the F/A-18
aircraft for U.S. Navy.
Raytheon $57,980,007 to repair weapon repairable
assemblies for the APG-79 radar system used on Boeing F/A-18 aircraft. Work in
Forest, MS.
United Technologies ~$13,099,996 for spare parts for F/A-18
aircraft.
ELECTRONIC WARFARE AIRCRAFT (GROWLER & PROWLER)
Raytheon $12,192,816 for engineering and test
support for the ALQ-249 Next Generation Jammer (NGJ) in development for U.S. Navy
Boeing EA-18G aircraft.
Raytheon roughly $17,828,176 for aircraft radar system
spare parts for USA and Canada.
Raytheon max. $26,490,520 for receiver
transmitters for the Navy.
AIRBORNE EARLY WARNING (HAWKEYE & SENTRY)
Northrop Grumman $23,300,000 for repair coverage of eight
items that are part of E-2D.
MERCURY (E-6)
Northrop Grumman $37,496,252 for seven MR-TCDL B-Kits, one Mission
Avionics Systems Trainer B-Kit, and associated A- and B-Kit spares for MR-TCDL
upgrade to the E-6B Mercury aircraft.
United Technologies Rockwell Collins $14,824,692 for engineering for
development of facilities, equipment, and material to implement the Block II Sustainment
and Support System, E-6B Mercury aircraft.
POSEIDON (P-8)
& ANTI-SUBMARINE WARFARE
Boeing $326,295,367 to develop, integrate and
test Increment 3 Block capabilities into P-8A aircraft for U.S. Navy and
Australia.
Boeing $7,123,294 for turret drive units for
the P-8 aircraft. Some FMS (UK).
ViaSat $7,133,760 for radio receivers for the
P-8 aircraft.
SPOOKY
Sierra Nevada Corp. $317,000,000 for Precision Strike Package
program (provides contractor logistics support in support of AC-130W and
AC-130J gunships) at Cannon AFB, NM; and Hurlburt Field, FL.
STRATEGIC / TACTICAL AIRLIFT
Aero Components max. $10,000,000 for consumable and
depot-level repairables for C5 panels for USAF. Top Flight Aerostructures max.
$10,000,000 for consumable and
depot-level repairables for C5 panels for USAF.
AERIAL REFUELING
CAE USA $7,245,585 for support of the KC-135
Aircrew Training System.
FlightSafety Services Corp. $29,496,514 for KC-46 Aircrew Training
System production.
Omega Aerial Refueling Services $92,370,920 for continued aerial
refueling services for USA and FMS during missions ranging from basic training
to multi-national exercises.
MILITARY RESEARCH LABS
Assurance Technology Corp. $13,959,231 for R&D for the Command,
Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, and
Reconnaissance (C4ISR) System for Naval Research Laboratory Space Systems
Development Department.
Atmospheric & Environmental Research (AER) $21,559,320 for R&D on
next-generation space environment model, space environment related product
development support, and design/prototyping of space weather sensors in
Lexington, MA, and Kirtland AFB, NM.
Etegent Technologies Ltd. $24,500,000 for R&D of
cognitively-derived analyst tools to support the integration of more fully
integrated intelligence products to the warfighter, and Òtransitioning of
analyst-aiding tools and technologies within the DOD Ôintelligence community.ÕÓ
Work at Air Force Research Lab, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH.
JASR Systems $8,107,308 for R&D of chip-scale
Optical Phased Arrays and Light Detection and Ranging systems that leverages
DARPA Modular Optical Aperture Building Blocks (MOABB) Phase 1, and maps to
Phases 2 and 3.
Millennium Engineering & Integration Co. $340,000,000 for R&D in
support of the AFRL Space Vehicles Directorate, Kirtland AFB, NM.
National Aerospace Solutions $72,894,364 for test operations,
technology development, equipment and facility sustainment, capital
improvements and some support services for Arnold Engineering Development
Complex at Arnold AFB, TN.
Scientific Applications Research Associates $100,000,000 for Golden Horde Science &
Technology demonstration effort: support R&D of emerging munition
technologies and integrated weapon demonstrations. Effort is
conceptualized as a fast-paced AFRL-led demonstration project executed under
the auspices of Team Eglin Weapon Consortium.
Space Ground Systems Solutions $19,729,508 for spacecraft engineering,
software, R&D services to the Naval Center for Space Technology, Naval
Research Lab. Space Ground Systems Solutions is a subsidiary of Braxton Science
& Technology Group (Colorado Springs, CO).
SRI International $11,312,731 for low frequency high power
satellite calibration research and development. Work in Menlo Park, CA
(65%); at the Bluestar Antenna Facility in Stanford, CA (35%) for Naval
Research Laboratory.
United Technologies (Goodrich) $92,890,000 for Hyperspectral Imaging,
AgilePod¨, Standoff High Resolution Imaging Next Era, and Multi-Mode Lidar R&D:
provides research and integration of existing electro-optical, infrared, radio
frequency, multispectral imaging, hyperspectral imaging, and lidar sensors and
related ISR technologies in order to develop the Air ForceÕs next generation
ISR sensor.
REDSTONE ARSENAL – Every
major war corporation has a presence at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville,
Alabama.
Torch Technologies $8,815,000 for strategic systems
engineering, integration, test and analysis, Redstone Arsenal, AL.
ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND
Edmond Scientific Co. $46,750,681 for scientific services for
Aberdeen Proving Ground. Kiple Acquisition Science Technology Logistics &
Engineering $10,000,000 to provide technical and analytical expertise, and
administrative assistance.
HELICOPTERS
AECOM $21,842,000 for repair or recap of
aircraft structures, engines, transmissions, blades, and components for various
rotary wing aircraft in Corpus Christi, TX. AECOM $11,938,722 for support functions of the
depot in facilities maintenance, supply logistics, and administrative duties in
Corpus Christi, TX.
Beaver Aerospace & Defense max. $9,036,355 for linear
electro-mechanical actuators for U.S. Army.
DynCorp $9,673,729 for the rotary wing aircraft
maintenance in support of aircraft assigned to the 11th Wing and their
customers at Joint Base Andrews, MD.
Lockheed Martin $23,882,121 for engineering, logistics,
tooling management support and technical data services for sustainment, operation,
maintenance, and training in support of all domestic and foreign H-60 variants.
Northrop Grumman $10,242,891 for depot level repair,
maintenance, and modifications of AN/AQS-24 Mine Detecting System for currently
deployed airborne mine countermeasures legacy systems. NG will provide depot
repairs and incorporate engineering change proposals, including updates of all
integrated logistics support documentation to support conversions and
sustainment.
Northrop Grumman $104,043,071 for up to 503 technical
refresh mission computers for UH-1Y, AH-1Z and UH-60V aircraft, including
production units; retrofit units; and spare units for the Marine Corps, DLA,
and Bahrain under the FMS Act.
GENERAL AIRCRAFT MAINTENANCE
Boeing $71,345,504 for engineering and
integrated logistics to maintain the T/AV-8B Harrier. Boeing $16,187,822 for engineering services in
support of the development of the T/AV-8B aircraft, including
system configuration set updates, avionics and weapons integration, and
avionics obsolescence mitigation.
DynCorp $18,578,053 for J85 engine maintenance
at Laughlin AFB, TX.
DynCorp $19,502,855 for USA and FMS (Netherlands and Kuwait): aviation field maintenance services. Work in Fort Worth,
TX; Germany; and Kuwait.
DynCorp $114,891,439 for organizational level
maintenance and logistics support and support equipment for rotary, fixed,
lighter-than-air, and unmanned aircraft assigned to the Naval Test Wing
Atlantic, Patuxent River, MD.
Merex Aircraft $18,300,000 for flap assemblies for the A-10.
Parker Hannifin Corp. $7,979,568 for adding national stock
numbers supporting multiple Navy aircrafts.
Vertex Aerospace $19,963,187 for additional TH-57
logistics support services and materials for organizational and depot level
maintenance.
INDUSTRIAL BASE – GENERAL
Lockheed Martin $22,587,012 for the Air Force Industrial
Product-Support Vendor (IPV) program.
AIRCRAFT INSTRUMENTATION, PODS & SENSORS
Air Cruisers Co. $8,026,673 to repair five various life
raft inflatables in support of the Multi-Place Life Rafts System for use on
various aircraft.
Eaton Aeroquip max. $8,992,216 for hoses, assemblies and
other related parts.
Honeywell $12,788,000 for Inertial Navigation
Systems for U.S. Army. Honeywell $7,724,728 for Inertial Navigation Kits
for U.S. Army.
Lockheed Martin $8,821,316 for Honeywell Inertial
Measurement Units.
S&K Engineering & Research $18,581,032 for the Reliability,
Availability, & Maintainability Logistics Engineering Support System for
Pods and Integrated Systems program. RAMPOD supports collection of maintenance
and inventory data for all Air Force pods, support equipment, and specialized
avionics. Services are continuous operations, system engineering, and software
sustainment support for RAMPOD program, servers, applications and users.
AIRCRAFT PERSONNEL DEVICES
Rockwell Collins & Elbit $22,137,097 for 132 Joint
Helmet Mounted Cueing System (JHMCS), Night Vision Cueing and Display Systems
(NVCD)—56 for U.S. Navy, 55 for Australia and 21 for Switzerland. Purchases:
U.S. Navy ($9,312,361; 42%), Australia ($9,108,738; 41%); Switzerland
($3,715,998; 17%). Also provides technical data, non-recurring engineering and
services to perform installation & testing of the JHMCS/NVCD.
AIRBORNE COUNTERMEASURES
Leonardo DRS (an Italian corporation run by a former U.S. Deputy War
Secretary) $16,446,556 for Distributed Aperture
Infrared Countermeasures (DAIRCM) sensors and processors for USAF ($9,205,760;
56%), Navy ($4,363,996; 27%); Army ($2,876,800; 17%).
AIRCRAFT PROPULSION
Boeing $20,000,000 for Advanced Turbine
Technologies for Affordable Mission-Capability Phase I.
EXPEDITIONARY FAST TRANSPORT (EPF) – The U.S. war
machine co-opts foreign nations in part through spending money on their niche
war corporations. Austal is an Australian corporation that the Pentagon
contracts for certain Naval products.
Austal USA $13,586,012 for incorporating
a structural bow section engineering change proposal to the 11th and 12th
Expeditionary Fast Transport (EPF) ships
(formerly Joint High Speed Vessel – JHSV). Austal USA $261,776,539 for detail design and
construction of the 13th and 14th EPF ships, and to ÒdefinitizeÓ the
long-lead-time material for EPF 13 and 14.
LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)
Northrop Grumman $45,529,117 for engineering services to
support the Littoral Combat Ship Mission Modules Program. Engineering
services will be provided to support the existing efforts of the LCS Mission
Modules Program.
Rolls-Royce $32,462,990 for two spare MT30 and one
MT5S Marine Gas Turbine Engines (MGTEs). MGTEs are installed in LCS 1-variant
littoral combat ships (hulls 5 through 25 only) and DDG 1000-class destroyers.
Archer Western Construction $17,820,000 for design and construction
of P426 Littoral Combat Ship parking garage (five-stories, 1,355-vehicles) at
Naval Station Mayport, FL.
LANDING PLATFORM, DOCK (LPD)
BAE Systems $41,895,897 for USS Anchorage (LPD 23) FY2019
selected restricted availability.
Huntington Ingalls $1,471,290,677
for detail design and
construction of LPD 30.
ARLEIGH BURKE-CLASS DESTROYERS (DDG)
General Dynamics $10,950,758 for DDG 51 class lead yard
services, including engineering and technical assistance for new-construction
DDG 51-class ships.
Ultra Electronics Ocean Systems $46,795,460 for TR-343 Sonar Transducers
shipsets for new construction of Arleigh Burke class destroyers. TR-343
transducer is part of the AN/SQS-53 hull mounted sonar array assembly which is
a component of AN/SQQ-89(V) acoustic sonar weapons system.
ZUMWALT-CLASS DESTROYERS (DDG-1000) – DDG-1000 class ships
are marketed as fulfilling Òvolume firepower and precision strike requirements.Ó
These ships are packed with electronic goods from war corporations.
Raytheon $9,140,826 for DDG 1000 ship class
integrated logistics support and engineering services.
NIMITZ-CLASS AIRCRAFT CARRIERS (CVN)
General Atomics $11,739,438 for manufacture
of 181 line items for initial spares acquisition in support of Electromagnetic
Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) used on
aircraft carriers. General Atomics $18,898,425 for EMALS integrated test
and evaluation effort for test site operations, Failure Reporting Analysis and
Corrective Actions System, prototype and testing, environmental qualification
testing and remediation, electromagnetic interference testing, and training
efforts.
General Dynamics max. $465,150,000 for CVN shipyard
availabilities.
Merrill Technologies Group and Precision Custom Components LLC shared
$42,240,000 for the delivery of various
components in support of the aircraft launch and recovery and support equipment
programs, to include critical safety item/critical application item.
SUBMARINES
BAE Systems $21,489,013 for propulsors and tailcones
for Virginia-class submarines SSN 802 and SSN 803.
General Dynamics $76,210,586 for efforts and alterations
during USS South Dakota (SSN 790) post-delivery work period in Groton, CT. General
Dynamics $60,000,000 for additional support and
services during USS South DakotaÕs (SSN 790) post-delivery work period. General
Dynamics $55,077,981 for planning and execution
efforts and installation of the Stern Area System during USS South DakotaÕs
(SSN 790) post-delivery work period.
General Dynamics $23,689,683 for planning and material
procurement requirements associated with repair work on USS John Warner (SSN
785).
General Dynamics $41,835,268 to staff, operate and
accomplish the efforts associated with supporting a nuclear regional
maintenance department at Naval Submarine Base New London, Groton, CT, in
support of returning mission-ready submarines to the fleet.
General Dynamics $2,039,763,908 for additional material (to
include Long Lead Time Material and Economic Ordering) associated with the FY2019
– FY2023 Virginia class submarines (SSNs 802 – 811).
Lockheed Martin $27,510,334 for electronic warfare
AN/BLQ-10 kits and spares to support program requirements.
L3 $8,665,266 for production
of Low Profile Photonics Mast. The low profile photonics
mast provides visual and other capabilities for Navy submarines.
L3 $43,094,331 for TB-29C towed arrays.
Northrop Grumman $273,053,534 for technical engineering
services, design and development engineering, component and full scale test and
evaluation engineering, and tactical underwater launcher hardware production to
support the development and production of the Common Missile Compartment.
Vet Industrial, Inc. $7,462,050 for asbestos cleanup,
mechanical upgrades and trench repairs to Farragut Tunnel, Naval Base Kitsap
and Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, WA.
SURFACE SHIP MAINTENANCE
Cabrillo Enterprises, South Bay Sand Blasting & Tank Cleaning,
Surface Technologies Corp. got a combined $10,000,000
for deck covering removal and non-skid installation services on board Navy
ships at Southwest Regional Maintenance Center, San Diego.
East Coast Repair & Fabrication LLC $212,967,725 for repair, maintenance, and
modernization of surface combatants (DDG- and CG-) class and amphibious (LSD, LPD and LHD) class
ships homeported in Mayport, FL.
Huntington Ingalls $118,446,807 for USS Rushmore (LSD 47) FY2019
drydock selected restricted availability.
SHIP WEAPONRY
BAE Systems $70,672,462 for five overhauled/upgraded
Mk 45 Mod 4 gun mounts and associated components.
BAE Systems $18,184,174 for nine OE-120B/UPX
Identification Friend or Foe antenna groups and one retrofit kit for the Navy.
Boeing $40,000,000 for Infra-Red Search and
Track Ship Sets.
Chemring Ordnance $10,406,730 for 57mm High
Explosive – Point Detonating cartridges. The 57mm HE-PD Cartridge is an electrically-primed
cartridge designed to function in the MK 110 Gun Mount. The MK 110 is employed
on the Littoral Combat Ship class and the Coast Guard Legend-class National
Security Cutters.
Lockheed Martin $20,889,135 for continued development,
integration, and production of U.S. NavyÕs AN/SQQ-89A(V)15 Surface Ship
Undersea Warfare System, which is marketed as being able to search, detect,
classify, localize and track undersea contacts, and to engage and evade
submarines, mine-like small objects and torpedo threats. Some FMS to Australia.
Lockheed Martin $12,864,191 for engineering and
maintenance services for Mk 48 Torpedo Program at the Intermediate Maintenance
Activity Pearl Harbor, HI.
RAM-System, Gesellschaft Mit Beschrankter Haftung (Ottobrunn, Germany)
Û81,411,978 and $1,137,479 for requirements for Germany
Navy Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) MK 49 guided missile launching systems, and
associated shipboard hardware and spares. Funded 100% by Germany. In
cooperation with Germany, RAM is designed to provide anti-ship missile defense.
Overseas work in Ulm (17%), Roethenbach (16%), Schrobenhausen (16%), Ottobrunn
(9%), Germany. Raytheon $91,872,559 for RAM guided missile round
pack and spare replacement components. 44% of work in Ottobrunn, Germany.
Raytheon $97,784,232 for long-lead material in
support of Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile (ESSM) block 2 low-rate initial
production requirements.
Raytheon $402,658,015 for three Air and Missile
Defense Radar Program (AMDR) to be deployed on DDG 51 Flight III-class ships.
NAVAL SEA SYSTEMS COMMAND (NAVSEA)
General Dynamics $21,778,191 for engineering services and
Navy equipment.
Gravois Aluminum Boats $20,628,477 for twelve 40-foot patrol
boats.
Leonardo DRS $10,468,575 to procure an energy
magazine prototype design and associated prototypes to supply power to a laser
weapon system.
Progeny Systems $32,713,735 for Navy systems production
and modernization of Navy equipment and engineering services.
NAVAL AIR SYSTEMS COMMAND (NAVAIR)
Booz Allen Hamilton $18,143,171 for additional technical,
analytical and managerial services in support of the Naval Aviation Enterprise
in Patuxent River, MD.
NAVAL AIR WARFARE CENTER AIRCRAFT
DIVISION (NAWCAD)
BAE Systems $93,962,658 to design, procure,
integrate, test, train, deliver, and support command, control, communications,
computers and intelligence (C4I) systems, information and computer systems, and
sensor systems for various platforms, including ships, drones, shore installations
and ground based systems.
Research & Engineering Development LLC $42,791,557 to provide engineering
services in support of NAWCAD Human Systems Department. ÒThe Human Systems
Department identifies, develops, and implements Human Engineering and Human
Systems Integration analysis and design solutionsÓ for various aviation and
weapon systems, and associated maintenance and training elements.
NAVAL SURFACE WARFARE
Corvid Technologies $223,277,038 for hardware, equipment and
components for manufacturing and integration of short- and medium-range
sub-orbital flight vehicles supporting Navy, other government agencies, and FMS
testing over a five-year ordering period. The flight vehicles are
exo-atmospheric rocket-based vehicles specifically configured to deliver
payloads and test articles into a flight regime of interest for systems under
test. Purchases: U.S. Navy (76%); other government agencies (12%); FMS to Japan
(12%).
HDT Expeditionary Systems and Design West Technologies shared
$78,565,403 for M98 gas
particulate filter sets.
Optics 1 Inc. $12,000,000 for production, repair, and
engineering support for ground based operational surveillance system (G-BOSS) light optical camera.
Raytheon $49,989,867 to support radar antenna
system overhauls, coatings, shipboard installations and removals, and
incidental technical support services for multiple Radar Restoration Program
systems (Òcritical shipboard systems providing detect-to-engage capability to
defend against incoming enemy aircraft and/or missiles.Ó) Some systems provide
safe navigation processes for collision avoidance. Involves FMS to Taiwan.
Raytheon $39,718,809 for three APY-10 Radar
System production kits for P-8A Poseidon Lot 10 production aircraft for U.S.
Navy ($9,168,076; 23%); FMS ($30,550,733; 77%). 1.4% work in Etobicoke,
Ontario, Canada (1.4%).
Seemann Composites $74,370,830 for out-of-autoclave
composite fabrication practices and procedures for large-scale, marine
composite structures. Extends understanding gained within the prior initiatives
through further development, design integration and testing of engineering
solutions to address hybrid material and composite laminate fabrication of marine/Navy-relevant
components.
SimVentions $12,000,000 for continued development,
extension, and upgrade of AN/SLQ-32(V)X Tactical Simulator tools delivered in
support of Navy training.
Ultra Electronics Ocean Systems $27,978,119 for development and
production of Next Generation Surface Search Radar qualification systems
(NGSSR), which aims to find a replacement for legacy systems Òdue to current
military threats and obsolescence issues.Ó The new NGSSR system would replace
all variants of the current AN/SPS-67, AN/SPS-73, BridgeMaster E series, and
commercial-of-the-shelf RADAR systems.
Starwin Industries Inc., Garrity Tool Co., Loughmiller Machine, Tool
& Design Inc., D-J Engineering Inc., MSP Aviation Inc., Integrity Defense
Services, Middletown Composites Inc. $35,000,000 for machined parts or
composite components in support of build-to-print machine shop requirements for
supplies related to EA-6B, EA-18G and P-8A aircraft components, as well as
various other related platforms.
SPACE & NAVAL WARFARE SYSTEMS COMMAND (SPAWAR) – Recently
renamed
Naval
Information Warfare Center.
Advantaged Solutions, Alamo City Engineering, Carahsoft, Oakland
Consulting Group share roughly $975,000,000 for DOD Enterprise Software
Initiative for SAP Public Services Inc. commercial-off-the-shelf software;
software maintenance support; IT professional services; and Cloud services. For
DOD, U.S. Òintelligence community,Ó Coast Guard, and the federal government worldwide.
Gartner Inc., Forrester Research Inc., and FEDmine shared $446,000,000
under DOD Enterprise Software Initiative (ESI) blanket purchase agreement in the
category of Information Technology Research and Informative Services for DOD U.S. Òintelligence
community,Ó and Coast Guard activities worldwide.
Leonardo DRS $29,556,100 for design and system
engineering support for interior communication systems material support to U.S.
naval vessels for Naval Information Warfare Center Atlantic, Charleston, SC.
QRC Technologies $13,748,268 for QRC brand materials and
components, hardware deliverables, and engineering services required to support
design, upgrade, integration, test, and evaluation of sensor system integration
projects for the Navy and SOCOM.
CYBER, SIGINT & CRYPTOGRAPHY
Assured Information Security $48,444,066 provides Air Force with tools and
technologies to aid cyber warfare. Provides R&D and transition of cyber
technologies Òto enable rapid cyber operationsÓ and will Òresult in the
accelerated delivery of innovative cyber solutions to the warfighter.Ó This is a sound example of industry jargon
in Pentagon contracts.
CACI $810,000,000 for sustainment and
modernization of mobile command & control systems.
Carahsoft $11,493,287 for Veritas software
maintenance at Fort Belvoir. Carahsoft $13,350,000 to provide Symantec
brand-name software licenses, maintenance, and subscription renewals for Navy /
USMC agencies worldwide.
General Dynamics $217,000,000 for the 480th Intelligence,
Surveillance and Reconnaissance Wing (480 ISRW) technical operations
support. Supports Distributed Common Ground System (DCGS) network weapon system
and such supporting activities as development, integration, maintenance,
administration, management, documentation, assessment, disposal and
troubleshooting of 480 ISRW IT assets at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, VA; and
Beale AFB, CA.
Hensel Phelps Construction $650,518,000 for East Campus Building 3
construction project at Fort Meade, MD.
L3 $48,417,986 for FMS (unnamed):
additional engineering effort. Provides for non-recurring engineering for the
design effort of the ground system for 645th Aeronautical Systems Group.
Northrop Grumman $113,806,534 for computing services at
Fort Huachuca, AZ.
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & THE CLOUD
Applied Visual Technology $10,153,464 for systems engineering and
software support.
CA Inc. $84,913,699 for software capacity
licensing and maintenance / sustainment support at various Defense Information
Systems Agency (DISA) locations
(Mechanicsburg, PA; Ogden, UT; Montgomery, AL; and Oklahoma City). NextGen
Federal Systems $7,142,540 for independent verification
/ validation of software in support of DISA Command & Control, primarily at
Fort Meade DISA HQ.
Dell roughly $231,170,000 for VMware software
licenses, maintenance and services to U.S. Navy. Products will meet following
capabilities: data center & Cloud infrastructure; networking & security;
storage & availability; Cloud management; network functions virtualization;
digital workspace; desktop & application virtualization; and training.
GovSmart Inc. $13,836,827 for Solarwinds network
maintenance software licenses and engineer toolkit annual maintenance licenses.
Pinnacle Solutions Inc. $553,200,000 for instruction, mission
support, information technology network support, operations and logistics.
Siemens $8,342,000 for commercially available
off-the-shelf brand-name Siemens software licenses and support at a Navy
facility in Norfolk, VA.
Smartronix Inc. $72,374,593 to provide information
management and IT support to sustain analysis, design, development,
integration, test, deployment and operations of IT systems and services. Includes
help desk, software engineering, financial and business application, server
operations, application hosting, desktop, audiovisual and video teleconferencing
support services.
Valiant Global Defense Services $60,685,000 for mission support services
at Fort Polk.
7 corporations compete for $37,400,000,000
for knowledge based
professional engineering support services for programs with C4ISR related requirements.
COMMUNICATIONS
General Dynamics ~$92,900,000 for the Warfighter
Information Network-Tactical Increment 1 system.
General Dynamics $7,200,000 for Air Force Air Defense
Communications Services throughout mainland U.S., AK, HI, and the colony of Guam.
L3 $13,439,800 for Remote Operated Video
Enhanced Receiver (ROVER.pdf) hardware production.
R. B. Allen Co. max. $7,531,007 to provide U.S. Navy with
casualty control communication systems to include technical data, training,
testing, and shipping.
Tribalco $12,043,813 for radio systems and
services.
Raytheon $7,602,005 to produce, test and
deliver fully integrated Navy Multiband Terminals (NMT). NMT is a satellite
communications system.
MICROELECTRONICS
GlobalFoundries U.S. 2 $121,000,000 for Òaccess to leading edge,
current, and legacy microelectronics and trusted processesÓ for Defense
Microelectronics Activity, McClellan, CA. SRI International ~$87,707,816 for generalized emulation of
microcircuits production program.
SATELLITE LAUNCHES
Call Henry $10,200,000 for management &
support, maintenance & repair, operations, other services and minor
alteration related to launch operations support at Vandenberg AFB, CA. RGNext (a
JV between Raytheon and General Dynamics) $81,597,046 for Launch and Test Range
System Integrated Support operations, maintenance, and sustainment primarily at
the Western Range at Vandenberg AFB, CA; and the Eastern Range at Patrick AFB,
FL.
SATELLITES & SPACE SUPPORT
Lockheed Martin $92,839,119 for engineering services,
interim logistics services, spares and associated material on Mobile User
Objective System (MUOS).
Northrop Grumman $16,271,270 for post-operational support
for the Enhanced Polar System Control & Planning Segment. Provides
factory expertise/support to ongoing operations, support transition from
development to sustainment activities, and the delivery and installation of two
software updates.
MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY (MDA) – After intense lobbying by the U.S.
war industry, the D.C. regime pulled out of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
in 2002. This paved the way for the establishment of the Missile Defense
Agency, and allowed the U.S. war industry to develop, market, and sell
Òballistic missile defenseÓ weaponry. This weaponry is one of the most profitable
sectors of the U.S. war industry.
Boeing $29,000,000 to complete their laser
scaling and beam control critical design review in support of the Low Power Laser
Demonstrator risk reduction for MDA.
Boeing $4,141,315,338 for Ground-based Midcourse
Defense (GMD) Development and
Sustainment (DSC). Includes delivery of a new missile field with 20 silos
and two additional silos in a previously constructed missile field at Fort
Greely, AK. BoeingÕs team includes Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, and other
subcontractors.
General Atomics $29,000,000 to complete its laser
scaling and beam control critical design review in support of the Low Power
Laser Demonstrator risk reduction. Lockheed Martin $30,000,000 to complete their laser
scaling and beam control critical design review in support of the Low Power
Laser Demonstrator risk reduction.
Lockheed Martin $506,900,000 for incidental services,
hardware, facilities, equipment, and technical, planning, management,
manufacturing, and testing efforts to produce PAC-3 missiles.
Lockheed Martin $237,523,200 for development and
qualification of a hardware design to the Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System.
L3 $8,272,568 to investigate, model, and
execute proof-of-principle and scaled ground-test demonstrations to assess the
ability of a laser to enhance and impart effects on plasma.
Raytheon $14,162,806 for continued production
support and engineering for the SM-3 Block IB program. (Total
spent so far on this one contract: $1,809,111,002.)
MISSILE TRACKING
Summit Technical Solutions $7,399,030 for Perimeter Acquisition
Radar Attack Characterization System (PARCS). management, operation,
maintenance, and logistical support at Cavalier Air Force Station, North Dakota.
NUCLEAR WEAPONRY
Boeing $250,000,000 for Long Range Stand-Off
Cruise Missile weapon system integration. Issued via Air Force Nuclear Weapons
Center, Eglin AFB, FL.
Peerless Technologies $18,470,211 for engineering and
technical formulating a framework for systems engineering, testing,
sustainment, and operational support for integration of B61-12 All Up Round and
legacy gravity systems at Kirtland AFB, NM. FMS funds will also be used during
the period of performance.
HYPERSONICS – War corporations, think tanks, and Congress hype the
ÒthreatÓ of Beijing and Moscow in order to justify design, development, and
sale of an entirely new sector of the war industry: hypersonic missiles and
aircraft.
CUBRC Inc. $23,208,996 to research and testing of
high-speed vehicle concepts, and analysis of supersonic and hypersonic vehicles
and their components.
MISSILES, BOMBS, ROCKETS, PROJECTILES
Accurate Energetic Systems and Spectra Technologies compete for $45,000,000 for
Trinitrotoluene and plastic bonded explosive N-9.
General Dynamics $27,600,096 for the BLU-134/B Improved
Lethality Warhead.
General Dynamics $10,070,668 for capital maintenance of
Navy Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant in Pittsfield, MA. BAE Systems
$9,576,532 for natural gas and fuel oil
for the commissioning and emission testing of the new natural gas-fired steam
plant under construction at Holston Army Ammunition Plant in Kingsport, TN.
Hensel Phelps Construction $59,456,363 for construction of Advanced
Munitions Technology complex in Eglin AFB, FL.
Lockheed Martin $84,108,050 for design & development
studies, technology demonstrations, and engineering to develop Joint
Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile, Long Range Anti-Ship Missile, Joint Air-to-Ground
Missile, and Hellfire baseline weapon systems.
Lockheed Martin $9,127,496 for Joint Air-to-Surface
Standoff Missile Enterprise Management System 8.0.
L3 $10,826,161 for M734A1 Multi-Option
Fuze.
L3 $131,780,189 for Cockpit-Selectable
Height-of-Burst Sensor. Replaces current DSU-33D/B height-of-burst sensor
and will address obsolescence issues,
improve performance and add functionality. War corporations plan obsolescence into
their products just like other corporations. The only difference is that war
corporations then charge for obsolescence resolution and obsolescence
monitoring.
Northrop Grumman $322,504,595 for the engineering and
manufacturing development of AGM-88G, Advanced Anti-Radiation Guided Missile
– Extended Range (AARGM-ER). Includes design, integration and test
of a new solid rocket motor for AARGM-ER for use on the F/A-18E/F, EA-18G and
F-35A/C aircraft platforms.
Raytheon $18,687,676 for 120 antenna kits for
Tomahawk Block IV recertification.
Raytheon/Lockheed Martin Javelin JV $18,455,300 for Spiral 3 component
qualification and system design.
ORDNANCE DISPOSAL / COUNTER-IED
Northrop Grumman $245,048,211 for the Joint
Counter-Radio-Controlled Improvised Explosive Device Electronic Warfare (JCREW) Increment 1 Block 1
systems production. ÒThis integrated design maximizes commonality across all
capabilities, reduces life cycle costs and provides increased protection against
worldwide threats.Ó FMS funding from Australia $2,159,560 obligated.
Peraton $8,543,905 for procurement and support
of Transmitting Set Countermeasures AN/PLT-4 to support EOD personnel. AN/PLT-4 is a
man-portable system.
MOBILE RADAR
Northrop Grumman $8,542,569 for software release & electronic
protection supporting ongoing Ground/Air Task Oriented Radar (G/ATOR) Gallium Nitride efforts.
LAND VEHICLES
Acrow Corp. of America and Mabey Bridge Ltd. of Gloucestershire, UK $250,000,000
for wet and dry gap line of
communication bridges.
BAE Systems $9,323,130 for engineering, logistics,
and fielding support for Bradley Fighting Vehicles, the Multiple Launch Rocket
System Carrier, and the M113 Armored Personnel Carrier.
General Dynamics $10,004,869 for M1 Abrams systems technical
support. General Dynamics $46,249,658 for Abrams systems technical
support.
General Dynamics $58,911,077 for new 120mm M1002
cartridges and 120mm M865 recap cartridges for 120mm tank training ammunition.
Freightliner of Savannah max. $7,312,500 for diesel engines for U.S.
Army.
Oshkosh Defense $15,580,588 to incorporate an engineering
change proposal low velocity aerial delivery A1 transmission support plate,
mid-power pack, and mounts, rails and mid-power pack into the baseline
configuration of the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle family of vehicles.Oshkosh
Defense max. $11,789,305 for diesel engines for U.S.
Army.
Northrup Grumman $36,815,048 for 120mm tank training
ammunition M1002 new production cartridges and 120mm tank training ammunition
M865 recapitalized cartridges.
Oshkosh Defense $23,577,120 for recapitalized Heavy
Expanded Mobility Tactical Trucks.
Wiscraft $45,651,972 for the Urban Operations
Squad Set. Wiscraft $45,007,608 for the Urban Operations
Platoon Set.
VETTING
iWorks Corp. $48,980,260 for helping Defense Security
Service (DSS) Defense Vetting Directorate. Work at DSS VROC office in Hanover, MD,
and office in Fort Meade, MD.
SMALL ARMS & LIGHT WEAPONRY (SALW)
FN America $9,899,568 for machine gun
barrels.
GEAR & EQUIPMENT
Ceradyne, Leading Technology Composites, TenCate Advanced Armor USA compete
for $704,238,806 for
Enhanced Small Arms Protective Insert and X-Small Arms Protective Insert hard
armor plates.
Palomar Display Products $40,714,894 for repairs, engineering
support and technical services of the Binocular Image Control Units.
SourceAmerica $24,969,056 to re-purpose legacy body
armor vests into the newly-designed Modular Scalable Vest configuration.
SZY Holdings ~$25,000,000 for respirators, mask face
pieces and cartridges replacement parts for U.S. Navy.
RANGE FINDER & TARGET LOCATION DEVICE
Kollsman (an Elbit company) $7,251,573 for work on Common
Laser Range Finder – Integrated Capability (CLRF-IC) systems.
CLOTHING
Aurora Industries (Camuy, Puerto Rico) $18,672,261 for Army Combat Uniform and
Hot Weather Combat Uniform coats. M&M Manufacturing (Lajas, Puerto Rico) ~$13,781,250
for Navy Working Uniform
blouses and Army Combat Uniform coats. Golden Manufacturing $18,234,851 for Army Combat Uniform
coats and Hot Weather Combat Uniform. National Industries For The Blind
$8,916,000 for Army Physical Fitness
Uniform trousers.
Hyman Brickle & Son $9,736,800 for extreme cold weather
parkas for Air Force and Army.
SND Manufacturing max. $7,997,485 for Navy and Marine Corps
running suit jackets.
EDUCATION & TRAINING
American Ordnance $89,418,245 for M918E1 40mm High
Velocity Target Practice – Day/Night/Thermal cartridge.
Cardno TEC-Leidos LLC JV $50,000,000 for services to support the
Tactical Training Theater Assessment and Planning program, and it is intended
to ensure the sustainability of Navy training ranges and operating areas to
support warfighter readiness around the world. Requires the services of
environmental engineering and military operations specialists, and the use of
engineering and biological sciences and principles and methods of engineering
analysis. Work in Atlantic, Pacific, the Caribbean, Europe, and North Africa.
C4 Planning Solutions $15,208,087 for providing Marine Corps
technical expertise and assistance with installation of fielded Command, Control, Communications and
Computers (C4) systems at various Marine Corps installations in U.S. and
abroad.
Jacobs $785,000,000 for instructors for U.S.
Army.
KT Consulting $11,935,070 for F-16 academic
instruction, Aircrew Training Device instruction/console/cockpit operations,
courseware development, and training support at Luke AFB, AZ; Holloman AFB, NM.
Involves FMS to Singapore.
Web Business Solutions $9,595,573 for support services to the
Command & Control Training & Education Center of Excellence (C2TECOE). Mainly
provides C2 systems instruction and home station training for Marine Corps
Systems Command, Quantico. Wiley Wilson Burns & McDonnell JV $9,337,864 for preparation of a
construction package for construction of the Wargaming Center at Marine Corps
Base Quantico.
Whitesell-Green $26,376,465 to design and build student
dorms in Eglin AFB, FL.
7 corporations combined $245 million for Marine Air-Ground Task
Force (MAGTF) Training Systems Support.
Provides pre-deployment training to Marine Corps within a joint and combined
environment to improve warfighting skills. Training includes computer-based
simulation; C4ISR training; combined arms staff
trainer training; tactical warfare simulation; and Deployable Virtual Training
Environment.
FORCE PROTECTION
Metova Federal $16,706,404 for Security Force
Assistance Brigade support in Fort Benning, GA.
Serco $41,304,910 for lifecycle sustainment of
physical security/access control and command, control, communications,
computers, and intelligence systems in support of NAVFAC Anti-Terrorism/Force
Protection Ashore Program worldwide.
Avon Protection Systems $245,961,250 for production of M53A1
Chemical Biological Protective Mask systems.
Jacobs $38,253,942 for evaluation of various
interactions of chemical and biological agents in Dugway Proving Ground, UT.
UTILITIES – Privatizing utilities is never a good idea. It prioritizes
profit over the health and wellbeing of the people. Additionally, water is a human right; corporate greed should
be nowhere near it.
City Light & Power roughly
$126,616,000 for ownership, operation and maintenance of the electric distribution
system at Keesler AFB, MS. City Light & Power $10,411,716 for the electric
distribution utility service charge at Fort Riley, KS.
Helix Electric Inc. $32,740,000 to build the Harbor Drive
switching station at Naval Base San Diego, CA.
5 corporations compete for $200,000,000 to design,
construct and repair utility systems.
Joseph J. Henderson & Son Inc. $30,700,000 to repair the wastewater
treatment plant at NAS Corpus Christi, TX. Old North Utility Services
$27,997,632 for a price adjustment to
calendar year 2019 for water/wastewater utility service charge.
MEDICAL
General Dynamics $44,165,348 to support the Defense
Health AgencyÕs Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center (DVBIC). Work
includes promoting access to state-of-the-science care for service members,
veterans, and their families Òto prevent and mitigate the consequences of
traumatic brain injuryÓ (TBI). DVBIC supports a network of 21 sites
operating out of 16 military treatment facilities (MTFs) and five Department of
Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMCs). Specific activities vary at each
site and can include conducting clinical research and conducting education and
outreach activities and assessing TBI injury data, while command and control
exist within the DVBIC Headquarters for continuity of services. General
Dynamics pressures Capitol Hill (via
campaign contributions and lobbying) for war, which sends troops overseas.
General Dynamics makes a lot of money from war. Here, in the
above contract, General Dynamics is profiting from the consequences of the wars
for which it pushed.
Angayut LLC $20,000,000 for professional,
scientific, and administrative support services in Bethesda, MD, and San
Antonio, TX, for the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
Atlantic Diving Supply, American Purchasing Services, TQM LLC compete for $20,500,000 for
brand-name medical equipment repair parts. Datex-Ohmeda max. $100,000,000 for patient monitoring systems,
accessories and training. Government Scientific Source max. $475,000,000 for laboratory supplies. Philips
Healthcare $450,000,000 for patient monitoring
systems, accessories and training. Steris Corp. $48,000,000 for hospital equipment and
accessories.
MEDICAL IT
B.E.A.T. LLC $10,441,035 (max.) to provide Infrastructure
Testing Center (ITC) management services and support for the day-to-day
operations of all ITC infrastructure applications, networks, and
environments. Services include systems management; system, application,
and database administration; environment configuration, monitoring; management;
and other support services.
Lintech Global $12,849,369 for data
processing, data validation operations and maintenance of the TRICARE Encounter
Data/Purchased Care Data Warehouse and Military Health System Data Repository
programs, as well as development, update, enhancement, repair, and testing of
specific IT apps managed by Defense Health Agency, Health Information
Technology (HIT) Directorate, Solutions Delivery Division Program Executive
Office. Work in Falls Church, VA.
QBase LLC $7,546,347 for non-personal IT services
in support of the Defense Health Agency (DHA), HIT,
Infrastructure & Operations Division (I&O), Enterprise Systems Branch.
SAFETY
Six corporations max. $985,000,000 for fire and emergency
services equipment.
FUEL & ENERGY – The U.S.
Armed Forces consume more fossil fuels than any
other organization in the world.
16 fossil fuel corporations $2,817,799,719 for various types of fuel. EPIC
Aviation $10,115,665 for fuel. Freeman
Holdings of LA LLC min. $18,832,439 for fuel. Meridian Airport
Authority $18,062,977 for fuel. Trajen Flight
Support $10,437,209 for fuel. Truman Arnold
Companies max. $7,477,932 for fuel and max. $13,775,007
for fuel. Truman Arnold
Companies min. $7,376,860 for fuel.
MEB General Contractors $20,334,000 for building at Shaw AFB a
new 6400 sq. ft. petroleum, oils, and lubricants operations facility with
privately-owned vehicle parking for 60 vehicles; a new 2400 gallons per minute
(gpm) Type III pump house facility and control room; four new 600 gpm high
speed truck fillstands; a new reinforced concrete parking area for 20 fuel
refueler trucks; piping modifications to the three existing aboveground storage
tanks; new interconnecting piping; spill containment provision; a cathodic
protection system; and supporting site work and utilities for the new
facilities.
GTA Containers Inc., Apex Pinnacle Corp., MPC Containment Systems, Avon
Engineered Fabrications, North American Fuel Tank shared $47,000,000 for tank
fabrication berm liners.
TRANSPORTATION _ USTRANSCOM
25 companies (incl. American Air, Delta, Fed-Ex, United Air, and UPS)
share $284,932,621 for heavyweight delivery of domestic
and international shipments.
International Auto Logistics $89,700,672 for continued
support of transportation and storage of DOD shipments of privately-owned
vehicles belonging to military service members, and transportation of DOD
shipments of privately-owned vehicles of DOD civilian employees.
TRANSPORTATION _ MILITARY SEALIFT COMMAND (MSC)
Patriot Services $77,030,190 for the operation and
maintenance of eight government-owned Watson-class large roll-on/roll-off ships
as part of worldwide prepositioning. Ocean Ships $13,097,120 for operation and
maintenance of two USNS Gordon Class and two USNS Shughart Class Surge Large,
Medium-Speed Roll-On/Roll-Off vessels.
Sentient Digital $49,000,000 for IT engineering services assisting
MSC Command, Control, Communications, And Computer Systems (C4S) Division (N6).
Will also assist in development of governance to align IT capabilities with N6
strategic business support plan, technical architecture road maps, and DOD mandates.
Aims to satisfy emergent cyber security mandates and technical refreshes for
end of life hardware and software.
WAREHOUSING & DISTRIBUTION
LVI $15,000,000 for warehousing, storage,
logistics and distribution. Using customers are organizational clothing and
individual equipment personnel in the southern tier of the U.S. and the DLA. Travis Association for the Blind $19,958,826 for warehousing, storage,
logistics and distribution functions.
ENVIRONMENTAL
Jacobs (Ch2m Hill) $68,000,000 for long-term environmental
architect-engineering services on Navy and Marine Corps installations at sites
in NAVFAC Atlantic.
NOREAS Environmental Services $8,006,844 for environmental services
for the management of HAZMAT material/waste and industrial and oily wastewater
treatment plants and collection systems at installations in San Diego, CA.
Sevenson Environmental Services $99,000,000 for remedial action at the
Raymark Superfund Site in Stamford, CT.
Tetra Tech, AMEC Foster Wheeler E & I GMBH, and AECOM
will compete for
$41,100,000 for environmental remediation services, run out of USACE Wiesbaden,
Germany.
ÒGREENINGÓ THE
MILITARY
Concurrent Technologies Corp. $7,614,277 for support services in
efforts to meet USMC energy reliability and resilience requirements for utility
distribution systems and various energy security positions supporting
headquarters, regions and installations. Overseas work at Okinawa Prefecture,
Japan (12%); San Diego, CA (11%); Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan (1%); Pohang,
South Korea (1%).
FOOD SERVICES
California Department of Rehabilitation $19,865,600 for full food service
operations at Fort Irwin, CA. Mississippi Department of Rehabilitation Services
$14,523,875 for dining facility
management functions. Professional Services Inc. $17,285,295 for full food and dining
facility attendant support services. South Carolina Commission for the Blind
$186,580,917 for full food services at
Fort Jackson, SC. Valley Foods $10,000,000 for subsistence items and
meals for the Virginia National Guard.
BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT SERVICES (BOSS) - BOSS usually involves a
combination of: facility management, fire
& emergency services, grounds maintenance, janitorial services, pavement
clearance, pest control, port operations, utilities, minor vehicles &
equipment service, and waste management. This work was once done by the
troops, prior to the corporate takeover of the Pentagon.
NCS/EML SB JV LLC $11,981,174 for BOSS at Naval Air
Station (NAS) Whiting Field and outlying areas.
Phoenix Management $7,886,394 for BOSS at
Westover Air Reserve Base, MA.
Professional Services Inc. $26,684,510 for BOSS at Naval Medical
Center Portsmouth, VA, and its outlying sites.
Rock Island Integrated Services $19,436,427 for BOSS in Rock Island
Arsenal, IL.
Rowe Contracting Service $25,000,000 for custodial
services at U.S. Air Force Academy.
Support Services LLC $22,977,890 for BOSS at NAS Pensacola,
FL, and outlying areas Saufley Field, Corry Station, and Bronson Field.
Techflow Mission Support $26,784,927 for BOSS at Camp Lejeune,
MCAS New River, and other outlying areas in eastern NC.
Technica Corp. $9,454,403 for Blanket Operations &
Security Sustainment support at JB San Antonio-Randolph, TX.
Vectrus $23,609,858 for BOSS at Maxwell-Gunter
AFB, AL.
OVERSEAS BOSS
Schuyler Line Navigation Company $23,042,991 for the Thule Base Air Base
Sea Lift Support contract: receiving cargo from vendors, providing in‐transit origin storage, loading/offloading and transporting
cargo to and from Denmark and Thule Air Base.
CONSULTING, ADMIN & LOGISTICS – A January 2015 report noted that trimming some outsourced
administrative waste (like we see in this category of consulting, admin, and
business logistics) would have saved roughly $125 billion over five years. The
Pentagon leadership (many of whom come from leadership positions in U.S. war
corporations) buried the report, fearing Congress might use it to cut the war
budget.
Alta Via Consulting $22,000,000 for cost management
services. Avion Solutions $8,656,308 for logistics support in
Huntsville, AL.
CACI $15,000,000 to provide planning,
analytical, operational and technical services in Arlington, VA. CACI
$10,031,056 for technical and functional
services for the Defense Agency Initiative for DLA.
Deloitte $39,933,653 for technical and
programmatic expertise and recommendations. Provides for force optimization
analysis support to HQ Air Combat Command at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, VA.
SAP National Security Services $16,014,307 for consulting services in
Alexandria, VA; and Aberdeen, MD.
The Urban Collaborative, HB&A/The Schreifer Group JV, Onyx of
Alexandria compete for $20,000,000 for
investigative studies, design services, and support services.
BUSINESS & OFFICE SUPPORT
Advance Technology Solutions $14,530,927 for services at Fort Gordon,
GA: military personnel actions, records processing & management, personnel
manning, casualty management, transition & separations processing,
personnel information systems management, and administrative processing of
soldiers.
CGI Federal $222,875,514 to provide the Navy with Electronic
Procurement System (ePS), a writing system standardizing management of
services, supplies, construction, and grants.
Marcon $10,646,332 for technical and managerial
assistance as related to all elements of facility planning, program and project
execution, including a wide range of analytical and planning, design, and
construction management support services to assist the Washington Headquarters
Services Facilities Services Directorate.
FINANCES
Guidehouse LLP $12,473,349 for audit finding remediation
support services. The infamous DOD audit is ongoing.
OVERSEAS CONSTRUCTION
AECOM, Aptim, Jacobs (CH2M Hill), Environmental Chemical Corp., Fluor, Perini
Management Services share a max. $975,000,000 for
global contingency construction projects worldwide—for civilian
construction in response to natural disasters, humanitarian assistance,
conflict, or projects with similar characteristics, and other urgent
requirements. Contractors may participate in military exercises.
Burns & McDonnell Engineering max. $20,000,000 for architect-engineer
services for fire protection projects in NAVFAC Pacific: Guam & the
Northern Marianas Islands (70%); Australia (20%); HI (10%).
Goodfellow Bros. $6,917,330 for rock crushing services at
Pohakuloa Training Area, HI. Kiewit Infrastructure West $64,993,500 for two major components at Joint
Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam: a new wastewater pump station, and a new gravity
sewer main.
Six corporations, including AECOM and Black & Veatch compete for $248,600,000 for general
architect and engineer services issued via USACE Wiesbaden, Germany.
HIan Dredging Construction $48,298,000 to install a potable water
transmission main and other construction at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, HI.
Noble Sales $14,126,593 to stock, store, and issue
supplies, construction materials, and hardware in support of NAVFAC at JB Pearl Harbor
Hickam, Oahu, HI.
MAINLAND INFRASTRUCTURE
AECOM $59,639,368 for Chickamauga Lock Chamber
replacement, Chattanooga, TN.
American Engineers, Stantec Consulting Services, Terracon
Consultants compete for
$20,000,000 for Dam Safety Mandatory Center of Expertise National Inland
Floating Plant and land drilling services.
Widman Inc. $30,000,000 for upper-river land repair
in West Alton, MO. Widman $15,000,000 for lower-river land repair.
AIRFIELD REHABILITATION
Anthony Allega Cement Contractor $13,770,342 to repair some airfields
and pave at Wright-Patterson AFB, OH.
Eastern Construction & Electric $10,369,000 for P-650 aircraft apron,
taxiway and support facilities in Trenton, NJ.
NAS Ventures $16,032,000 for runway repair at Marine
Corps Air Station Beaufort, SC.
5 firms shared $495 million for airfield paving projects
at government installations in CA, AZ, NV, UT, CO, and NM.
BORDER
Carothers Construction $22,821,540 for construction of a
storage building with loading dock in El Paso, TX.
MAINLAND CONSTRUCTION &
ENGINEERING – Endless war requires
endless construction and building repair. An added bonus for the Pentagon and
the U.S. war industry is how this construction activity effectively co-opts the
working class, making them feel like theyÕre on the same team as the troops. It
is a powerful narcotic.
AECOM (URS) $9,800,000 to repair multiple
buildings (damaged in Hurricane Michael) at Naval Support Activity Panama City.
ALLTRACK $10,000,000 for railroad maintenance and
repair services at the Naval Support Activity Crane, IN.
Bethel-Webcor JV-1 $11,470,000 for P-253 Fleet Support
Facility at NAS Whidbey Island, WA.
Black & Veatch $20,000,000 for architect-engineer
general design services.
B.L. Harbert $20,599,777 for construction of a combat
vehicle warehouse at Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany, GA.
Blue Rock Structures $9,207,530 for repairs to building
AS515 at Camp Lejeune. Environmental Chemical Corp. $121,682,327 for hurricane recovery
efforts at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, Jacksonville, NC. 5 firms shared
$40,000,000 for maintenance and repair
projects at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, NC, and the surrounding area.
Bosch Rexroth $11,401,973 to replace hydraulic doors,
Building 27496, Kirtland AFB.
Cleveland Construction $28,170,000 to construct a C-17
Corrosion Control and Fuel Cell Hangar, Charlotte, NC.
Creative Times Inc. $19,465,068 to construct a fuel
distribution pump house at Hill AFB, UT.
GHD-COWI JV max. $30,000,000 for waterfront engineering
services located in NAVFAC Southwest.
G-W Management Services $19,754,000 to improve Fuller Road at
Marine Corps Base Quantico. Work includes forest clearing, demolition and
removals, grading.
National Institute of Building Sciences $25,000,000 for architectural design and
engineering services for the National Institute of Building Sciences, DC.
Odyssey International $19,832,000 to build a replacement air
traffic control tower and base operations complex at Seymour Johnson AFB, NC.
Unit-ASRC Construction $128,657,500 for construction of Long
Range Discrimination Radar power plant at Clear Air Force Station, Anderson,
AK.
Up-Side Management Co. $46,000,000 for general construction and
repair.
Zodiac-Poettker HBZ JV LLC $7,330,000 for Department of Energy
Interpretive Center in St. Charles, MO. The site is where Weldon Spring Ordnance Works once polluted (via explosive manufacturing and
uranium processing). It is now under care of the DOE office of legacy
management.
5 corporations share $99,900,000 for crane
rehabilitation and replacement via USACE Omaha, NE.
6 firms shared $10,000,000 for construction projects
for general and administrative facilities located primarily within NAVFAC
Washington.
8 construction firms, including joint ventures, will compete for each order of
$150,000,000 for architect-engineer services.
DREDGING
Cottrell Contracting Corp. $21,815,000 for James River maintenance
dredging. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock $10,610,812 for dredging and rock
removal in Chester, PA. Manson Construction
$15,476,150 for Thimble
Shoal Channel maintenance dredging project in Norfolk, VA. Manson Construction
$18,122,000 for dredging in Portland,
OR; and San Francisco, CA. Southern Dredging $9,773,000 for maintenance dredging in
Kings Bay, GA. U.S. Facilities $20,047,415 for Atlantic Intracoastal
Waterway facilities operations and maintenance in Chesapeake, VA.