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Sustaining Expeditions: New Tech Keeps Warfighters Fed in Arctic Conditions

December 23rd, 2025

WASHINGTON — Batteries for cellphones and other small devices deplete quickly outside in the winter, and that’s no different for warfighters in the field. To make sure they’re focused on the mission — and not the temperature or malfunctioning equipment — War Department experts are creating specialized technology and adapting current equipment to survive in frigid climates.

More countries, including U.S. adversaries, are increasing their presence in the Arctic thanks to its vast natural resources and new shipping lanes that have opened due to ice melt. Those changes have helped to shift the future of expeditionary warfare toward small, self-sustained units that can function in the extreme cold. Supply lines aren’t well-established in those areas, so units often have to carry their own food and cooking equipment.

In temperatures that are often minus 25 degrees Fahrenheit or below, currently fielded cooking equipment used by troops just won’t cut it. Materials used throughout field feeding systems — such as plastic, rubber and textiles — can freeze and break, while other items lose their ability to function, affecting a warfighter’s productivity or even shutting down operations.

At the Army Combat Capabilities Development Command Soldier Center’s Combat Feeding Division in Natick, Massachusetts, researchers are working to create and supply equipment that will keep warfighters on task for mission success. While the division’s main focus is the nutritional needs of warfighters, how they’re able to prepare their meals to meet those needs is also important.

That’s where Ben Williams, a mechanical engineer and the division’s self-described de facto cold-weather sustainment expert, comes in. He’s helped develop numerous cold-weather field feeding and sustainment technologies for expeditionary forces.

Until recently, portable kitchens used in the field were built to feed between 250 and 800 soldiers and weren’t designed to work below minus 25 degrees. So, Williams and his colleagues set out to design and build newer equipment that’s smaller in scale but offers the same capabilities in a cost-effective expeditionary package.

Thus was born the Expeditionary Field Feeding Equipment System, or EFFES, a collapsible kitchen system developed with the help of the Marine Corps as a way to feed about 100 to 150 warfighters.

“It’s basically a kitchen in a box,” Williams said of the tent, equipment and gear that fits in a pallet-sized container. “It’s very mobile, very lightweight. You can airdrop it, you can sling load it, put [it] in the back of a pickup truck. You don’t need standardized military equipment to transport it.”

The EFFES cooks using most standard fuel types and has no external power source; it’s battery-powered and self-sustained through thermoelectrics, a process where a temperature difference creates an electric current. A majority of its components are commercially available, keeping costs much lower than if parts were custom-built. It also helps soldiers in the field when it comes to replacements.

“If something breaks, they can just use unit dollars to replace it,” Williams said. “And since most components are commercial off-the-shelf, the likelihood that they’ll be available and in stock is high. This ensures that equipment in the field remains operationally available.”

Service Member Tested

The Combat Feeding Division has tested 10 EFFES prototypes over the past three years in several locations, including with units at the Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center in central California and by the Army’s 11th Airborne Division in Alaska during Joint Pacific Multinational Readiness Center exercises.

It was also tested by the Army’s Cold Regions Research Engineering Laboratory during one of its yearly Arctic-led international expeditions, where the system was transported across 1,300 kilometers, and minus 30 degrees was the daily operational temperature.

“They were trading with the native population … cooking moose meat and making biscuits,” Williams said. “Military personnel who had no food service background were able to utilize the equipment with minimal training.”

So, how does this kitchen-in-a-box work in the extreme cold? Underneath a small, insulated tent, its users set up three cooking stations, each of which uses an insulated 2-gallon fuel tank that’s attached to a Marine Corps standard squad stove known as the MSR XGK stove, which is usually intended for individual use.

“We’re going to use three of those to cook for 150 people,” Williams said. It’s something they’ve managed by modifying the burner to triple the heat output and make some other functional tweaks.

“We can cook faster, and the fuel consumption is drastically lower,” Williams said. “We’re using 80% less fuel than burners we use in our other kitchens. It’ll run for about 30 hours off one tank. It’s a big difference.”

To pressurize the fuel bottles, they supplemented the stove’s manual hand pumps with insulated automatic air pumps.

Among other items, the EFFES also comes with flame-resistant, insulated covers that can be used with the system’s pots, pans and ovens; special adapters for heating group rations; and carbon monoxide sensors for safety. The larger components are collapsible.

“It’s got everything you need for prepping, cooking, serving and sanitation,” Williams said.

Crews also have specially insulated backpacks to hold 5-gallon water bladders that won’t freeze and can be folded when empty. “If you leave with 120-degree water from the tap, you can keep it above freezing for at least three days at minus 40 degrees, just sitting outside,” Williams said.

Climatized Indoor Testing

Williams and crew test all the equipment at the nearby U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine’s Doriot Climatic Chamber, which for decades has tested the effects of extreme environments on people and equipment.

“Every climate you could possibly imagine … we can re-create,” said Jeff Faulkner, the facility’s manager.

The chambers’ temperatures can range from 165 to minus 65 degrees, and they can create 40 mph of wind, rain and snow. Each chamber has inclining treadmills that can handle up to five soldiers at 15 mph on a 12-degree incline. Smaller conditioning rooms have the same capabilities as the chambers, except they can drop to minus 72 degrees.

Inside a tent in one of the conditioning rooms, Williams recently tested a prototype fireproof insulated combat equipment stove, known as the ICE stove. Unlike the EFFES, the ICE stove weighs 35 pounds, folds up and is transportable like a duffel bag.

“Everything’s thermoelectric, so there’s no external power,” Williams said.

The ICE stove’s burner, which is contained in an aluminum cradle for safety, is able to rapidly heat water or reheat meals, ready-to-eat entrees in temperatures down to minus 60 degrees. It comes with a cook pot for water and a second tank on top that can melt snow. There’s also an exhaust tube that allows the ICE stove to vent out the top of the tent, as well as carbon dioxide and monoxide sensors.

“The whole point of this is to rapidly heat enough water for a platoon of 50 people for their meal, cold water rations,” Williams said. “If you want to heat MRE pouches, other prepackaged foods or just some biscuits, you can do that in the top section.”

When warfighters want to create hot water or reheat their MREs outside the tent, the ICE stove’s insulated wrap maintains performance and keeps the water or rations warm. Water is then dispensed through a lithium-ion battery-powered electric pump and hose — much like a gas pump.

“A lot of things break instantaneously at [minus 40 or minus 60 degrees]. Rubber is one of them, so you have to get a special platinum-infused silicone hose, so it remains flexible,” Williams said. To keep the pump and other external parts running optimally, disposable hand warmers can be stuffed in specially designed insulated pockets.

The stove comes with several other small side components, including plasma lighters, matchless fire starters, an LED headlamp and a remote temperature monitor that can operate from several hundred feet away.

“The operator can be doing other things while his water or rations are heating. You don’t need to sit here and watch it and dedicate a soldier solely to cooking,” Williams said.

The water tanks can easily be exchanged to turn the stove into a tent heater as well, Williams said. A thermoelectric module can be plugged into the electric pump’s battery, acting as a power source. When Williams tested it inside a chamber at minus 50 degrees, it produced a small amount of heat, but it was enough to raise the temperature to a survivable level — about 62 degrees.

“We really want it to be at least 40 degrees without anybody in there, and we’re getting to about 47 degrees,” Williams said.

Testing Other Cold-Weather Creations

Meanwhile, Faulkner said he’s also seen researchers at the climate chamber test a heated bodysuit that went inside of a high-altitude, low-opening jumpsuit. HALO jumping is a technique used for stealthy infiltration into an area in which the jumper exits an aircraft, often at about 30,000 feet, and free falls to a lower altitude before deploying their parachute.

Since the air is thin and freezing at those heights, specialized equipment is required. The test mimicked a three to five-minute free fall.

“[The suit] would keep them warm instead of using this huge, bulky insulated uniform,” Faulkner said. “And to mimic the falling, they had piles of giant box fans blowing in [the volunteer participant’s] face in minus 65 degrees.”

Just recently, the chamber hosted a company working with an Army drone team to test batteries and computer systems in extreme cold temperatures.

Faulkner said that while most of the equipment tested during his years at Doriot has been for cold climates, some warm-weather technology has been prototyped. Researchers tested a microclimate cooling vest that explosive ordnance disposal technicians and others who wear various nonbreathable suits could wear to prevent heat-related injuries.

By Katie Lange, Pentagon News

Reinforcement of the Bundeswehr’s Puma Fleet: Rheinmetall and KNDS Deutschland to Supply 200 Infantry Fighting Vehicles to the German Army – Contract Value Around €4.2 Billion

December 22nd, 2025

It has commissioned Projekt System & Management GmbH (PSM), a joint venture between Rheinmetall and KNDS Deutschland (KNDS), to supply 200 Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicles (IFVs). The corresponding amendment to the existing framework contract has now been signed at the Federal Office for Equipment, Information Technology and In-Service Support of the Bundeswehr (BAAINBw) in Koblenz. The contract will take legal effect in January 2026. The total gross volume of the procurement is €4,2 billion gross of which KNDS will receive €2.1 billion and €2.1 billion will go to the Rheinmetall subsidiary Rheinmetall Landsysteme GmbH. Both companies are implementing the project as subcontractors. The first vehicles are scheduled for delivery in mid-2028. 

In May 2023, the BAAINBw awarded PSM GmbH a framework contract for the delivery of the Puma IFVs, with an initial order for the first 50 vehicles upon signing the contract. This contract has now been enlarged. In addition to the 200 combat vehicles ordered to date, the contract also includes the procurement of corresponding protection modules and storage containers. Furthermore, a contract amendment for the S2 construction status is planned for mid-2026. The aim is to eliminate obsolescence and implement additional capabilities such as drone defence, based on the turret of the Jackal armoured vehicle. 

 The Puma IFV is the primary weapon system of the German armoured infantry and is one of the world’s most powerful and modern systems of its kind. It can accommodate a crew of nine, including the commander, the gunner and the driver, as well as a unit of six soldiers. In addition to its highly effective modular protection, the Puma has a unique level of assertiveness and the capability to be deployed in networked operations. 

Between 2023 and 2024, the BAAINBw commissioned the comprehensive modernisation of 297 Puma IFVs from the Bundeswehr’s stocks that do not yet comply with the S1 series standard. The retrofit, which will be completed in 2029, includes the integration of high-resolution day and night vision camera systems, the multi-role light guided missile system (MELLS in German) and the integration of digital radio equipment. 

B&T Hush Puppy SIG P226 Silenced Pistol Kit Available Exclusively from Arms Unlimited

December 22nd, 2025

Offered exclusively from Arms Unlimited the B&T Hush Puppy SIG P226 Silenced Pistol Kit is based on the reliable SIG P226 DAO platform. Each gun is modified with a slide lock for maximum stealth while firing (and prevention of spent case) but which can be immediately returned to semi auto fire.

The kit also includes a B&T suppressor develeoped specifically for this application. Tuned specifically to this pistol, it balances size and performance. At just 3 inches in length, the Hush Puppy suppressor doesn’t require a booster or nielsen device to function reliably, and utilizes user-replaceable wipes for the greatest level of performance possible in such a small package.

Finally, the slide is milled to accept a SIG Romeo-X Pro Enclosed red-dot sight which is set so low, it is cowitnessed with standard sights.

Key Features:

SIG Romeo-X Pro Enclosed:

Set at the lowest mounting position possible

Reduces the overall profile and allows co-witnessing with factory low-mount sights.

Hush Puppy Slide-Locking Feature:

Enables the slide to be locked closed for minimal sound signature.

Concealable Wipe Suppressor:

Compact 3-inch design made from aluminum.

Utilizes user-replaceable polymer wipes for optimal performance.

Does not require a booster or nielsen device for reliable operation.

Factory SIG Threaded Barrel:

4.4-inch barrel threaded to accommodate the included suppressor.

Custom Hard Case:

Features a laser-cut foam interior for secure storage and transport.

Ammunition Included:

Comes with two 50-round boxes of B&T 158gr Subsonic Ammunition (total of 100 rounds).

Get yours at armsunlimited.com/bt-hush-puppy-sig-p226-silenced-pistol-kit.

TacJobs – Tomahawk Performance: Sourcing and Logistics Manager

December 22nd, 2025

Tomahawk Performance: Sourcing and Logistics Manager

Location: Nashville, TN (Hybrid)
Reports to: Chief Operating Officer (COO)

About Tomahawk Performance

Tomahawk Performance provides a technical advantage for those who value hard work, pushing beyond limits, and the unwavering pursuit of freedom. Rooted in a deep heritage of military special operations and technical apparel expertise, we design layering systems engineered to empower mission success in any environment.

Position Overview

We are seeking a Sourcing and Logistics Manager to lead procurement and supply chain operations. This role ensures a continuous flow of materials, manages supplier relationships, and optimizes logistics processes to reduce costs and improve efficiency—all while maintaining compliance with Trade Agreements Act (TAA) and Berry Amendment requirements.

This is a key leadership role based in Nashville, TN (Hybrid) and reports directly to the COO.

Key Responsibilities:

Sourcing Leadership

• Identify, evaluate, and negotiate with suppliers to secure high-quality goods and services at competitive prices.

• Ensure sourcing is aligned with Tomahawk’s mission and compliance standards.

• Develop sourcing strategies to ensure compliance with TAA and Berry Amendment requirements.

• Manage supplier contracts and monitor performance for reliability and adherence to standards.

Logistics Management

• Oversee warehousing, transportation, and distribution to ensure timely and efficient delivery.

• Optimize logistics processes and transportation routes to reduce costs and improve service levels.

• Maintain accurate inventory levels to meet customer demand while minimizing excess stock.

Supply Chain Coordination

• Collaborate with manufacturing, sales, and operations teams to ensure seamless flow of materials and information.

• Drive alignment across departments to meet production schedules and customer requirements.

Cost Control & Optimization

• Analyze sourcing and logistics costs to identify areas for improvement.

• Implement strategies to reduce expenses and enhance efficiency through negotiation and process optimization.

• Leverage technology and automation to streamline operations.

Skills, Experience & Qualifications

Experience: 5+ years in sourcing, procurement, and logistics management, preferably in apparel, gear, or technical equipment sectors.

Education: Bachelor’s degree in Supply Chain Management, Logistics, Business Administration, or related field.

Compliance Knowledge: Strong understanding of TAA and Berry Amendment sourcing requirements.

Technical Expertise: Proficiency in supply chain software and tools; familiarity with international sourcing and compliance standards.

Leadership & Collaboration: Proven ability to lead cross-functional teams and manage supplier relationships.

Problem Solving: Analytical mindset with a focus on cost optimization and operational efficiency.

Adaptability: Ability to thrive in a fast-paced, mission-driven environment.

Organizational Skills: Exceptional planning, organizational, and decision-making abilities, with an eye for efficiency.

Preferred Experience

• Background in tactical gear, apparel, or defense-related supply chains.

• Experience managing compliance-driven procurement processes.

Interested parties should send their resumes to: contact@tomahawkperformance.com

Largest Order for Laser-Light-Modules: Rheinmetall to Supply LLM-VarioRay Units for the Bundeswehr’s New Assault Rifle – Order Value Several Hundred Million Euros

December 22nd, 2025

The Bundeswehr has commissioned Rheinmetall to supply Laser-Light-Modules for the German Armed Forces. Following the budget approval by the German Bundestag’s Budget Committee on 3 December 2025, the first definitive call-off has now been made under the framework agreement concluded in June 2021. This agreement entails the delivery of ‘LLM-VarioRay’ Laser-Light-Modules, scheduled for delivery over the next seven years. In addition, there is the option to procure further LLM-VR modules. These can be delivered additionally within the agreed time frame. This fixed call-off has a net order intake of several hundred million Euro for Rheinmetall. The devices are manufactured by Rheinmetall Soldier Electronics in Stockach at Lake Constance. This is the largest order intake in the history of the Rheinmetall subsidiary.

“We are grateful for the trust that the Bundeswehr has placed in our battle-proven tactical combat enhancers”, said Erkan Yildirim, CEO of Rheinmetall Soldier Electronics. “The LLM-VarioRay is one of our most versatile devices. The largest order in our company’s history is an incentive for us to continue delivering cutting-edge technology. Provided that the customer places a corresponding call-off, we could also deliver the additional optional quantity within the agreed period of seven years. This would provide both the Bundeswehr and us at Rheinmetall with planning security”.
The Rheinmetall LLM-VarioRay Laser-Light-Module is part of the latest generation of devices of this type. The Laser-Light-Modules are primarily used on the handguns of the infantry and dismounted forces, and serve to detect, identify and mark targets.

Weighing approximately 250 grams, including its mount, the LLM-VarioRay can be attached to any assault rifle via a MIL-STD 1913 rail/STANAG 4694 and can be operated via a trigger cable. It features a powerful white light LED, a red-light laser marker, an infrared laser marker and an electrically focusable infrared illuminator. The light source can be selected and adjusted stepless using a rotary switch. The device is equipped with a fully integrated, factory-aligned laser block. This laser block allows for easy adjustment and alignment of the visor and the weapon.

Equipped with night vision and thermal imaging devices, the German Armed Forces can thus accomplish their missions throughout the entire spectrum of operations, regardless of day- or night-time and in all weather conditions.

The LLM-VarioRay product family is also part of the German soldier system ‘Future Soldier – Extended System (IdZ-ES)’ and is likewise used in the British Army as the Laser-Light-Module MK3 and in the Swiss Army as the Laser-Light-Module 19.

Rheinmetall’s product portfolio encompasses a wide range of infantry equipment, including various targeting and illumination modules. These were developed in order to increase the tactical value of modern handguns. The LM-VTAL (Laser Module – Variable Tactical Aiming Laser) has been in operation at the Bundeswehr’s special operation forces for several years.

Developing a 2U LTOWB SOP for Damage Control Resuscitation

December 22nd, 2025

Managing two to three casualties in the real world from a first-line aid bag is not an ultralight solution in the modern age of DCR and Blood Cold Chain. There is an argument to be made that light and fast is an advantage, which is valid, but “heavier” often equals more capable (a Role 2 is more capable than POI, etc). That’s not to say bring the kitchen sink to the POI, just that efficiencies must be incorporated into the first-line bag to adhere to the standard of care, which includes carrying LTOWB (Low-Titer O neg Whole Blood). 

As protocols evolve, medics are asked to perform more tasks during Damage Control Resuscitation (DCR) at the Point of Injury. Due to advances in medical research that have driven protocols over the past 20 years, there is no choice but to increase the average Liter size of the first-line aid bag. 

To optimize the most current standard, the two-unit SOP, we have developed a stand-alone aid bag that breaks a few barriers.

Overview of DCR

To understand why the first-line aid bag design must evolve, it’s essential to define the operational challenges it faces. Effective DCR in the field requires maximizing efficiency and minimizing time to treatment. Medics are now expected to perform tasks that entire teams in Level 1 trauma centers often struggle to execute under controlled conditions.

DCR at the Point of Injury includes:

  • Mastery of TCCC fundamentals
  • Employing LTOWB at the point of injury, including cold-chain transport and blood warmers
  • Administering POI medications such as TXA and calcium
  • An advanced understanding of acute traumatic physiology to manage hemorrhage, optimize resuscitation, and mitigate shock, coagulopathy, and hypocalcemia

M9 Aidbag

Legacy products like the M9 bag paved the way for modern systems, which explains their longevity. But twenty years is a lifetime in this industry– and the M9 is showing its age. It’s heavy for its size (due to outdated construction), inefficient for modern resuscitation (it lacks the capacity to carry 2U of blood), and constrained by space in the main compartment. In short, it no longer meets modern requirements.

What follows is the result of years of advancement in design, manufacturing techniques, and application of DCR principles at the point of injury.

Figure A. M9 vs. CRO 26L: Larger capacity, improved ergonomics, and purpose-built for DCR.

Our design philosophy is to maximize durability without unnecessary bulk– every medic remembers carrying “bomb-proof” gear that is far heavier than it needed to be (ie, STOMP bag).

We use modern materials and construction techniques. By utilizing double-stitch seams and eliminating excess fabric in the name of “strength,” we achieve a lighter product that is equally as “bomb-proof” as legacy milspec standards. This includes removing all edge bindings, doubling as a weight saver with visible workmanship (not hiding sloppy sewing).

Figure B. Increased depth improves closure and eliminates the need for supplementary external pouches.

Figure C. M9 vs CRO DCR 26L

CRO 26L Aid Bag

The CRO 26L represents a deliberate step toward the ultimate goal: fitting all required resuscitation equipment for 2-3 combat wounded (an M9 bag equivalent) into a first-line bag capable of carrying two units of blood, and scaling to Prolonged Casualty Care setups (vents, monitors, etc.). It replaces the RATS pack capacity with a fraction of the offset from the body and offers much better space utilization.

Specifications:

  • Chassis-opening design
  • Weight: 3.8 lb (Empty RATS: 8 lb for comparison)
  • Volume: 26L
  • Removable waist strap (no hip pads)
  • Adjustable shoulder straps
  • Chest strap
  • Lightweight adjustable chassis
  • Customizable interior loop field

Figure D. Chassis-opening, complete workstation, optimized for custom organization of resuscitative equipment plus two units LTOWB

Chassis-Opening

This feature is, to our knowledge, first-in-industry. After observing countless trauma lanes, most modern DCR-focused medics primarily work off their belt, making an effort not to drop their aid bag unless the patient needs to be resuscitated with blood. The chassis-opening feature eliminates the need to flip the bag over to access the main compartment. Something that seems so minor is one of the main features gaining attention from our user base.

Combined with its weight, capacity, and configurability, the 26L is designed to support best practices in DCR, including whole-blood resuscitation at the point of injury.

Thank you for your community engagement on this project and for supporting our mission to innovate medical equipment and improve treatment protocols to enable faster, more capable medics. 

If you have questions or would like a quote, email us at support@cromedical.com at

cromedical.com/shop/dcr-26l

GoTAK and Solace Communications Deliver Next Generation C4ISR Capabilities in Central Africa with TAK OS

December 22nd, 2025

GoTAK is proud to highlight a recent operational deployment delivered in partnership with Solace Communications, bringing a full TAK OS enabled C4ISR capability and mission-focused training to an allied partner force in Central Africa.

This deployment demonstrates how TAK OS, when paired with resilient communications, integrated sensors, and operator-led training, transitions from a platform into a field-proven operational capability—supporting situational awareness and mission execution under real-world conditions.

Fielding TAK OS in Operational Environments

Over the course of recent deployments, Solace Communications successfully fielded an integrated C4ISR stack built around TAK OS, delivering a common operating picture directly to operators and commanders in the field. The capability included:

  • Cloud-hosted and local TAK OS environments
  • Resilient connectivity via GlobalLink
  • Live UAS ISR feeds delivered directly to operators’ EUDs
  • Edge-based AI object detection and sensor integration
  • A fused, real-time intelligence picture via Solace Fusion

From the GoTAK perspective, this deployment reflects the intended design philosophy of TAK OS: a networked operational layer that connects sensors, operators, and decision-makers across multiple transport paths and environments.

Proven Capability, Moving Toward TRL 9

The system operated as a fully integrated capability under field conditions, supporting sustained situational awareness and mission execution. As a result, Solace Communications has demonstrated TRL 8 across this integrated architecture, with planned upgrades already underway to advance toward TRL 9 through continued operational use.

These upgrades include transitioning deployed GlobalLink units to the Pro configuration, adding:

  • Local server hosting and off-grid power
  • Local TAK OS hosting for disconnected operations
  • LTE and SATCOM failover connectivity
  • Direct integration with MANET radios

This architecture reduces latency, removes dependence on backhaul connectivity, and enables sustained operations in disconnected, denied, and degraded environments.

Training That Enables Sustained Operations

Alongside capability delivery, Solace Communications provided end-to-end TAK OS and MANET training, deliberately structured to move beyond basic familiarization. Training tiers included:

  • Foundational instruction for operators new to TAK OS and MANET
  • Advanced configuration and network management for technical staff
  • Train-the-trainer modules to support independent sustainment and scale

This approach ensures TAK OS is not just deployed, but understood, trusted, and operationally owned by the teams using it.

A Shared Vision for Operational TAK

This Central Africa deployment highlights the strength of the partnership between GoTAK and Solace Communications. When TAK OS is combined with resilient transport, edge processing, and real-world training, it becomes a force multiplier—extending situational awareness at the edge and beyond, across time, distance, and connectivity constraints.

From integrated ISR feeds to fused intelligence and resilient communications, this deployment underscores what can be achieved when TAK capabilities are delivered by teams who understand operational reality.

GoTAK looks forward to continuing our collaboration with Solace Communications as TAK OS capabilities expand into new environments and mission sets.

US Marine Corps Fields MADIS to 1st LAAD

December 22nd, 2025

MARINE CORPS BASE HAWAII – The U.S. Marine Corps took a major step forward with a state-of-the-art system designed for short-range detection, tracking and engagement of aerial threats. On Dec. 12, 2025, Program Executive Office Land Systems fielded two Marine Air Defense Integrated Systems (MADIS) to 1st Low Altitude Air Defense (LAAD) Battalion, Marine Air Control Group 18, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing (MAW). The fielding of these systems marks a pivotal step in enhancing expeditionary defense capabilities within the Indo-Pacific region.

The MADIS consists of two Joint Light Tactical Vehicles (JLTVs), one focused on detection and the other oriented toward offensive action. Working together, they form a maneuverable ground-based air defense weapon system designed to defeat unmanned aircraft systems and manned fixed wing and rotary wing aircraft threats while on the move and at the halt.

The full-rate production configuration of the MADIS employs a powerful combination of 30mm cannons, Stinger missiles and multifunctional electronic warfare equipment. The 360-degree threat detection and protection allow the system to simultaneously engage and neutralize threats with both kinetic and non-kinetic forces.

“These systems will increase capabilities of counter-unmanned aircraft systems operations and provide automatic target recognition and weapon assignment to decrease engagement times and reduce the cognitive load on the Marine operator,” said Lt. Col. Mike Billings, product manager for Future Weapons Systems at PM Ground Based Air Defense. “The next step is to deliver the full rate production MADIS to all low altitude air defense battalions and littoral anti-air battalions across the Marine Corps, at a rapid rate.”

Since the reactivation of 1st LAAD Battalion in 2023, the unit has consistently advanced the U.S. Marine Corps’ force design initiatives. Key milestones include the activation of Firing Battery Alpha in August 2024 and Firing Battery Mike in December 2025. Most notably, the successful fielding of MADIS units, today, marks a pivotal step forward.

“Owning these systems gives us direct control capability,” said Master Gunnery Sgt. Mario Guadarrama, battalion operations chief for 1st LAAD Battalion. “Reducing the gap between training and combat employment allows seamless integration with partners and allies throughout the Indo-Pacific region.”

Fielding the MADIS directly to 1st LAAD Battalion significantly enhances expeditionary ground-based air defense capabilities in support of 1st MAW. The primary mission of 1st LAAD Battalion is to provide close-in, low-altitude, surface-to-air weapon capabilities, and the MADIS is a strategic step forward for the battalion.

Story by 2nd Lt. Joseph Adcock, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing