Hanwha Defense and Oshkosh Defense team up to compete in US Army next generation IFV program


Hanwha Defense has signed an exclusive teaming agreement with Oshkosh Defense for the digital design phase of the US Army's next-generation combat vehicle program. The agreement is followed by Hanwha Defense's recent success in Australia's LAND 400 Phase 3 armored vehicle modernization program and LAND 8116's acquisition of the AS9 Self-Propelled Howitzer and AS10 fully-automated Armored Ammunition Resupply Vehicle.
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Hanwha AS21 Redback IFV firing a Spike LR2 antitank missile during a test conducted in Israel (Picture source: Hanwha Defense)


The OMFV program is a key element of the US Army's Next-Generation Combat Vehicle modernization effort that includes replacing the M2A3 Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle which has seen service since the early 1980s. The program's five-phase acquisition plan will award the first contract in the fourth quarter of Fiscal Year 2021, with the first units receiving their OMFVs in the fourth quarter of the Fiscal Year 2028.

"Bringing together the heritage of two innovative, reliable, and successful land systems companies, gives me great confidence that Hanwha and Oshkosh, with our other consortium partners, will deliver the next generation Infantry Fighting Vehicle the American Soldier clearly deserves," said the head of Hanwha Defense's U.S. operations, Lieutenant General Bernard S. Champoux, U.S. Army, Retired.

Hanwha Defense is the leading wheeled and tracked combat vehicle and weapons systems developer in the Republic of Korea with a half-century of accumulated experience, capabilities, and technology in multiple proven direct and indirect fire solutions. Expanding its global vision, Hanwha Defense has provided over 7,000 cutting-edge combat vehicles to the Republic of Korea and exports to Malaysia, Norway, Finland, Estonia, Poland, Turkey, and India.

Hanwha Defense has designed and is developing the Redback for Australia. The Redback was shortlisted in 2019 as one of the two final candidates for the LAND 400 Phase 3 program, with three prototype vehicles are now undergoing tests and evaluations for the Australian Army's Risk Mitigation Activity.