TYR Tactical

Archive for August, 2025

McAlester Army Ammunition Plant Provides Critical Munitions Loading Function

Sunday, August 24th, 2025

MCALESTER, Okla. — Thanks to cutting-edge technology, the Multi-Purpose Load Facility, or MPLF, at the McAlester Army Ammunition Plant in Oklahoma is revolutionizing the way large-caliber munitions are loaded.

Jointly developed by the Army and Air Force, the $58 million facility streamlines multiple loading operations into a single, centralized location. This integration significantly boosts both worker safety and production efficiency.

The vision for MPLF began several years ago as MCAAP searched for a home for full-rate production of unique penetrator assets. An underutilized facility was identified, the Air Force provided funding, and the concept took root with a focus on flexibility and adaptivity.

MCAAP self-executed the project using advanced in-house engineers, a robust artisan workforce and a skilled procurement staff. The project began with a relatively small amount of facility modifications which led to the ability to implement new industrial processes through the installation of state-of-the-art explosive loading equipment.

“The MPLF stands as a testament to what happens when joint forces have a common goal in mind,” said Col. Curtis Perkins, MCAAP’s commander. “The future of defense is shaped every day at McAlester through relentless innovation, unwavering commitment, safety, and precision in execution.”

At the heart of the MPLF is a bladeless, resonance-based mixer capable of processing 55-gallon batches of energetic materials. This advanced system reduces mixing times from hours to mere minutes, resulting in significant increases in efficiency and substantial cost savings.

“What happens here inside the MPLF isn’t mixing,” Perkins said. “It’s the critical path where resources, speed, precision and purpose converge to drive the production mission forward.”

Designed to support precision near-net-shape manufacturing, the MPLF represents a major leap forward in energetic material production, with enhanced safety protocols embedded throughout its operations. It is designed with a focus on flexibility and enhanced quality throughput transitioning operations from World War II era facility constraints to a more modern work environment.

“The MPLF serves as a prime example of joint service collaboration with the common goal of providing increased readiness and lethality to the warfighter,” Perkins said. “This teaming concept has helped to modernize one of our nation’s most important insurance policies while highlighting the talent that exists in our organic workforce. It is a true OIB success story.”

By Matthew Wheaton, Joint Munitions Command, Public and Congressional Affairs

Hegseth Announces Establishment of Mexican Border Defense Medal

Saturday, August 23rd, 2025

Effective immediately, the Mexican Border Defense Medal is established to recognize service members deployed to the U.S. international border with Mexico for Defense Department support to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in an Aug. 13 memorandum.

Service members deployed in support of CBP previously were recognized with the Armed Forces Service Medal.

To receive the new award, service members must have been permanently assigned, attached or detailed to a unit that deployed to participate in a designated DOD military operation supporting CBP within the area of eligibility for 30 consecutive or nonconsecutive days, from Jan. 20 to a future termination date to be determined, Hegseth said.

The area of eligibility is U.S. land within 100 nautical miles from the international border with Mexico within Texas, including the city of San Antonio, as well as New Mexico, Arizona, California and the adjacent U.S. waters out to 24 nautical miles, he said.

Service members and veterans previously awarded the AFSM may apply for the new award in lieu of the AFSM previously awarded, the secretary said, adding no one can be awarded both medals for the same period of qualifying service.

“Securing the southern border, protecting the territorial integrity of the U.S. and defending our homeland are Department of Defense priorities,” said Anthony J. Tata, undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness.

Tata underscored the timeliness and criticality of this award, adding, “The service members deployed to support this national security imperative deserve to be recognized for their bravery and contributions — and we look forward to pinning the Mexican Border Defense Medal on them soon.”

The U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry will expedite procurement of MBDMs made to DOD standards, and the Defense Logistics Agency will expedite the process for procuring and placing the MBDM in the supply system to ensure timely availability of the award for qualifying service members and veterans.

About the Medal

According to Institute of Heraldry, the MBDM is identical to the Mexican Border Service Medal, struck in 1918, for service in 1916 and 1917 in the Mexican state of Chihuahua and on the U.S. side in the vicinity of the New Mexico and Texas borders with Mexico.

The medals are bronze. On the front is a sheathed Roman sword hanging on a tablet, along with an inscription that reads “For Service on the Mexican Border.”

The sword symbolizes war or military strength and is sheathed to indicate service in the United States rather than in actual combat.

On the reverse side is the Coat of Arms of the United States above a scroll and surrounded by a wreath ending at the center with cross rifles in dexter, crossed sabers in sinister and crossed cannons in base.

The wreath represents achievement. The rifles, sabers and cannons represent the infantry, cavalry and artillery.

The ribbon’s field of green is symbolic of freedom, while the golden yellow color alludes to virtue. These colors represent civic virtue by serving the government in the pursuit of freedom.

The order of precedence for the MBDM will be before the AFSM and after the Korea Defense Service Medal.

By David Vergun, DOD News

Signal Corps Radio-Controlled Drones: Origins of the UAS Program

Saturday, August 23rd, 2025

Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) are a hallmark of the transforming mission of the U.S. Army Communications-Electronics Command as it embraces the principles behind Army Continuous Transformation. Modern UAS technology is touted as the future of the force, capable of performing a wide array of tasks while keeping Soldiers safe from harm. Although UAS use has been highlighted in recent news coverage of war-fighting efforts across the globe, the basis for current developments begins with the Signal Corps almost 70 years ago.

The CECOM Historical Archive collection documents the use of drone technology for surveillance throughout the late 1950s and early 1960s, a natural progression of the U.S. Army Signal Corps’ historic aviation and photography missions.

An article in the March-April 1956 edition of “Tec-Tac,” Technical and Tactical Training Aid Nonresident Conference Course, produced by The Signal School, Fort Monmouth, NJ, highlights the early development of drone technology for surveillance, written for the knowledge of Signal Soldiers.

Development by the Signal Corps of a new camera-carrying drone will give the combat commander front-line aerial surveillance photographs in less than an hour and at no risk to personnel. The drone, a radio-controlled aerial target plane, was equipped at the Army Electronic Proving Ground (at Fort Huachuca, AZ) for its aerial surveillance mission. The drone can fly in excess of 200 miles an hour and climb at a rate of several thousand feet a minute. Although its take-off is jet-assisted, the drone operates on a gasoline motor-driven propeller while in the air. Equipped with still and motion picture cameras, the drone provides aerial photographic coverage at altitudes from a few hundred feet up to more than four miles.

That same year, a captioned photograph depicted Soldiers operating radio remote controls that could pilot a television robot plane up to 40 miles away. The unmanned aircraft transmitted aerial views of distant sites, using lightweight television equipment developed at the Army’s Signal Corps Engineering Laboratories at Fort Monmouth. The airborne TV station weighed 135 pounds, less than a human pilot.

Development continued through the late 1950s and early 1960s, with the 1957 experiments of a Night Hawk drone, a nighttime photo system, and a still picture camera installed in Target Drone RP-71; the surveillance drone SD-2 of 1959 tested at Yuma Proving Ground, and the 1962 Infrared Surveillance System AN/UAS-4.

In Germany, a photograph taken in April 1960 documents the men of the Drone Section USA Surveillance Unit, Europe, lined up behind the SD-1 Surveillance Drone that flew the first and one hundredth Surveillance Drone flight in Europe as a demonstration for Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates, Jr. This was the next-to-last demonstration — the last one was for AUSA members.

In 1965, however, the Army Chief of Staff directed the Army Materiel Command that funds would not be expended on a complete drone system until formal requirements for drones were established, and a study was conducted regarding the need for drones, weighing the desired capabilities against the complexity of operations, maintenance, and training. As the U.S. began operations in Southeast Asia in the mid-1960s, the widespread testing and development of the technology vanished from the historical record, likely due to the densely forested landscape of Vietnam that limited the effectiveness of this type of developing surveillance technology. By 1966, many of the programs that were being developed and tested were declared obsolete, and the technologies and resources were reallocated to other areas across the U.S. Army Electronics Command, a CECOM predecessor.

Though sidelined in the 1960s due to mission needs and the changing face of warfare, the Signal Corps’ drone program laid the foundation for the autonomous systems and capabilities that continue to shape the future of military operations.

By Susan Thompson, CECOM Command Historian

Army Accelerates Long Range Reconnaissance UAS Capability

Saturday, August 23rd, 2025

The Army recently awarded contracts to AeroVironment and Edge Autonomy to rapidly deliver initial Long-Range Reconnaissance (LRR) systems. The AeroVironment P550 and Edge Autonomy Stalker Block 35X are Group 2 UAS designed to provide Reconnaissance, Surveillance, and Target Acquisition (RSTA) organic to maneuver battalions. Capabilities include an open systems architecture, allowing quick integration of additional capabilities to meet ground commanders’ mission requirements, primarily at the Battalion level.

By working with multiple vendors, the Army continues to foster healthy, continued competition to ensure the Warfighter receives the best solutions quickly. The Army will use these initial LRR systems to establish operator training that remains Military Occupational Skill (MOS) agnostic, enabling any Soldier to operate the platforms and will begin fielding to operational units later this year as part of the Transformation in Contact 2.0 initiative.

The LRR program directly supports the Secretary of Defense’s July memorandum on “Unleashing U.S. Military Drone Dominance,” demonstrating the Army’s commitment to advancing drone technology and operational effectiveness.

A force-multiplier, LRR UAS will provide maneuver battalion commanders with increased RSTA capability organic to their formation. The Army anticipates additional LRR system selections in the future.

The Program Executive Office Aviation, through the Uncrewed Aircraft Systems (UAS) Project Office, equips Soldiers with cutting-edge tools to meet evolving mission demands and ensures the Army maintains tactical superiority on the battlefield.

Courtesy Story

Program Executive Office, Aviation

USSOCOM Selects LMT Defense for Medium Range Gas Gun – Assault Program

Saturday, August 23rd, 2025

USSOCOM has announced Lewis Machine & Tool as the winner of the Medium Range Gas Gun – Assault OTA. MRGG-A is a carbine chambered in 6.5 CM and capable of semi and full auto fire. It is a companion weapon to the Sniper variant of MRGG, awarded to Geissele Automatics in 2023.

Lewis Machine & Tools Defense, Eldridge, Iowa, was awarded a 10-year indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract (H9240325DE003) with a maximum ceiling of $92,000,000 for medium range gas gun-assault kits, spare parts and accessories, new equipment training, and engineering change proposals. The work will be performed in Eldridge, Iowa, and the last day to order under the contract is Aug. 14, 2035. U.S. Special Operations Command, MacDill Air Force Base, Florida, is the contracting activity. (Awarded Aug. 20, 2025)

Autonomous Multi-Domain Launcher Hits Major Milestone

Saturday, August 23rd, 2025

A major milestone has been achieved for the Autonomous Multi-Domain Launcher as it moves toward augmenting — and possibly replacing — existing Army launchers.

AML, a science and technology initiative led by the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command’s Aviation & Missile Center and Ground Vehicle Systems Center since 2020, has transitioned to the Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office, marking the next step in its journey towards fielding.

This transition comes with a new name, a nod to the expansion of its capabilities: Common Autonomous Multi-Domain Launcher, or CAML, as RCCTO pursues two iterations of the system — a medium and a heavy.

“AML started in February of 2020 as a congressional add-funded concept demonstration,” said Lucas Hunter, AML principal investigator and project lead at DEVCOM AvMC. “The Long-Range Precision Fire Cross Functional Team asked what the possibility of driving and firing a High Mobility Artillery Rocket System launcher from a remote location. HIMARS is 100% manual. It is driven manually. The gunner’s display unit has switches and buttons that you push, and a manual keyboard. While the mission comes in digitally, what you do to fire it is all done manually.”

The two DEVCOM centers procured a HIMARS and got to work determining how to install robotics capabilities into the vehicle. The catch? They had to return the HIMARS just as they received it: which meant no drilling and no welding. By summer 2021 they had their prototype, and their first test was a successful live fire in front of an audience of Army generals.

“In support of DEVCOM AvMC’ s project office, Detroit’s DEVCOM GVSC leveraged its deep roots in automotive and defense to deliver a robotic HIMARS in record time,” said GVSC Robotic Fires Branch Chief Colin Scott. “The centers’ close working relationship leveraged each center’s unique expertise to catalyze industry, bringing together best-in-breed solutions redefining Army fires for the 21st century.”

Over the next four years, they transformed that concept demonstrator into a fully unmanned, cab-less, autonomous launcher. In doing so, lethality of the launcher was doubled while the original mobility and transportability of its former HIMARS self was maintained.

“The team leveraged previous Army S&T investments in launcher, autonomy and power generation, incorporating direct Soldier input to produce the AML prototype rapidly and economically. This effort culminated in the AML participating in Valiant Shield 24, setting the stage for transition,” Hunter said.

RCCTO will serve as that bridge to move forward with AML as a formal program of record if the Army chooses to pursue the prototype program. The organization manages the transition of successful prototypes into official acquisition programs, setting the conditions for full-rate production and fielding. By taking proven technology and refining them into more robust prototypes, RCCTO gets promising S&T efforts like AML into Soldiers’ hands for experimentation and feedback much faster than traditional acquisition programs.

Part of how CAML will redefine Army fires is with its autonomous missile reloading capabilities. The larger CAML-H variant will integrate a launcher onto a 15-ton class chassis that will fire the Tomahawk Land Attack Missile or the Patriot Advanced Capabilities Three Missile Segment Enhancement interceptor. Its smaller CAML-M counterpart will utilize a Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles to launch Multiple Launch Rocket System munitions or the new Indirect Fire Protection Capability with AIM-9X interceptors.

“The key thing Lucas’s team did was give the hardware such a good look that senior Army leaders took that and expanded upon it,” said Brad Easterwood, CAML deputy product manager at RCCTO. “They gave them such a good building block that they could add other building blocks to it and have a different solution.”

As RCCTO bridges the “valley of death” between S&T and program of record, DEVCOM AvMC will remain the technical experts for everything fire control missiles.

“DEVCOM AvMC is doing a great job transitioning all the lessons they’ve learned, so we don’t repeat the same mistakes as we go into a prototyping phase,” Easterwood said. “We feel like we have a leg up with DEVCOM AvMC as a partner, because they’ve already solved all these hard challenges and we’re not starting at zero. Bringing in DEVCOM AvMC as a teammate keeps us moving forward with no drop in knowledge.”

For Hunter and his team, their continued involvement in the future of CAML has been very rewarding as well as a unique experience in the S&T world.

“It is rare for an idea to go from concept to prototype and actually make that transition,” he said. “It is really exciting to see the work that the team produced over these five years getting out of the lab and making it into a transition partner that can take it to the force and make a difference.”

Via U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command’s Aviation & Missile Center and Ground Vehicle Systems Center

PureTech Systems and Clear Align Partner to Deliver Advanced Autonomous Security and Command-and-Control for US Air Force Tactical Security System

Friday, August 22nd, 2025

Phoenix, AZ — August 18, 2025 — PureTech Systems®, a leader in AI-boosted geospatial video analytics and command-and-control solutions, announced its role in a joint effort with Clear Align to deliver a rapidly deployable perimeter security solution for the U.S. Air Force’s Tactical Security System (TSS).

Awarded under a seven-year, $199 million contract, this modular, scalable system is designed to enhance base and perimeter protection for forward-deployed installations, airfields, and emergency missions worldwide. It integrates electro-optical and infrared cameras, radar, and advanced AI into a unified, autonomous command-and-control platform. Designed for challenging and remote environments, the solution enables operators to detect, classify, and track threats in real time — with or without direct operator intervention.

Autonomy + Command and Control

PureTech’s technology brings autonomous detection, classification, and tracking of potential threats — including people, vehicles, unmanned aerial systems (UAS), and watercraft — with the ability to seamlessly cue operators or trigger automated responses. The system’s open architecture command-and-control platform provides complete situational awareness across all deployed sensors, reducing cognitive load and increasing mission effectiveness.

ATAK Integration for Real-Time Field Operations

Incorporating Android Tactical Assault Kit (ATAK) compatibility ensures that situational awareness extends beyond the operations center. With ATAK integration, field personnel receive live intelligence and sensor alerts directly on mobile devices, enabling distributed teams to coordinate in real time and act with precision.

Rapid Deployment for Any Mission

The TSS is designed to be modular, lightweight, and rapidly deployable. Its autonomous operation and portable command centers make it ideal for protecting temporary or remote sites, securing perimeters in hostile environments, and supporting disaster response or high-value asset protection.

“This program demonstrates the Air Force’s commitment to leveraging the latest in AI, autonomy, and integrated command-and-control to protect personnel and assets in any environment,” said Larry Bowe, President & CEO, PureTech Systems. “We’re proud that our technology will play a central role in delivering unmatched situational awareness and operational agility to the mission.”

Learn more about the PureTech Systems at our website, www.puretechsystems.com.

See CTOMS at NTOA

Friday, August 22nd, 2025

Join CTOMS and AUFIRE at the 42nd Annual NTOA Law Enforcement Operations Conference and Trade Show!

CTOMS, a leader in tactical medical training and solutions, and AUFIRE, the cutting-edge tactical simulation tool, will be exhibiting at the NTOA Conference from August 24-25, 2025. Visit us at Booth 312!

CTOMS offers tactical medical training, rope access, and equipment solutions. Ask about CTOMS Academy, which provides tactical medicine training solutions for agencies of all sizes, to bring this vital capability to every frontline officer.

AUFIRE simulates debilitating wounds for tactical training scenarios. This unique and important training tool enhances officer decision-making and adaptability, training them to stay in the fight.

Discover how CTOMS and AUFIRE can enhance your readiness. See you at Booth 312!