Skip to main content

U.S. Army Orders More M109A7 Paladin Howitzers in $535M Firepower Sustainment Deal.


BAE Systems will continue building M109A7 Paladin 155mm self-propelled howitzers and M992A3 ammunition carriers for U.S. armored brigade combat teams under a $535 million U.S. Army contract announced on June 16, 2026, keeping heavy tracked artillery aligned with the pace and protection of armored forces. The award strengthens the Army’s ability to deliver mobile indirect fire from formations that can maneuver with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles instead of relying on fixed or road-bound firing positions.

The contract sustains production of digitally controlled Paladin artillery sets after a $473 million order in January 2026, preserving near-term firepower while the Army studies longer-range self-propelled howitzers. It reflects a broader push to maintain survivable cannon artillery for high-intensity warfare as future fires programs evolve.

Related topic: U.S. Navy Orders First 50 Blackbeard Hypersonic Missiles for Super Hornet Fighters.

BAE Systems has received a $535 million U.S. Army contract to continue production of M109A7 Paladin 155mm self-propelled howitzers and M992A3 ammunition carriers, sustaining armored brigade artillery capability while the Army evaluates future longer-range cannon systems (Picture source: U.S. DoW).

BAE Systems has received a $535 million U.S. Army contract to continue production of M109A7 Paladin 155mm self-propelled howitzers and M992A3 ammunition carriers, sustaining armored brigade artillery capability while the Army evaluates future longer-range cannon systems (Picture source: U.S. DoW).


The latest award should be read less as a new artillery modernization breakthrough than as a production and readiness decision. BAE Systems identified the order as covering additional M109A7 howitzers and M992A3 ammunition carriers, while earlier contract reporting described the same production line as including vehicles, support vehicles, and total package fielding kits through December 31, 2029. That distinction matters for Army procurement analysis: a Paladin set is not only a gun vehicle, but a fielded artillery package with ammunition handling, technical documentation, spares, training equipment, and unit-level support needed to turn factory output into deployable fires capacity.

The M109A7 retains the 155mm M284/M284A2 cannon and M182A1 gun mount associated with the M109A6 Paladin, rather than introducing a new long-barrel weapon. This gives the Army a known 39-caliber artillery configuration with established ammunition compatibility, maintenance procedures, and fire-control integration, but it also means the vehicle remains range-limited compared with newer 52-caliber European and South Korean self-propelled howitzers. The practical value of the A7 upgrade is therefore concentrated in mobility, electrical power, survivability, digital fire control, and supportability, not in a major increase in gun range.

In firing terms, the M109A7 provides conventional 155mm high-explosive, smoke, illumination, and precision-guided fires at brigade level. A U.S. Army Center for Army Lessons Learned study identifies the M109A7 as a self-propelled 155mm howitzer with an M284 cannon, a maximum range of 30 km for standard munitions, a maximum firing rate of four rounds per minute for three minutes, and a sustained rate of one round per minute. The same source describes a standard Paladin combat load of 42 projectiles and 31 propellant canisters, with U.S. battalions normally organized around 18 howitzers divided among three batteries.

The armament package gives commanders several tactical options, but each has a different operational implication. Standard 155mm high-explosive ammunition remains the volume-fire option for suppression, neutralization, and destruction of area targets such as mortar positions, infantry concentrations, assembly areas, exposed logistics nodes, and lightly prepared defensive positions. Precision munitions change the employment model: the M982 Excalibur family provides a GPS-guided, unitary high-explosive projectile for point targets, while the M1156 Precision Guidance Kit converts selected conventional 155mm rounds into near-precision weapons by replacing the fuze with a GPS-guided course-correcting fuze.

This ammunition mix is central to the M109A7’s operational relevance. Excalibur is useful when a battery must engage a command post, radar, bridge span, urban firing point, or target close to friendly troops with fewer rounds and lower collateral risk. PGK is less precise than Excalibur but can reduce round expenditure and logistics demand when the target does not require a unitary precision projectile. For a brigade commander, the result is a fire-support tool that can alternate between massed fires and selected precision engagements without shifting the mission to rockets, aircraft, or higher-echelon strike assets.

The vehicle specifications show why the Army continues buying the A7 even without a new cannon. BAE Systems lists the M109A7 at 84,000 lb, with a crew of four, 675 hp engine, 145-gallon fuel capacity, 38 mph maximum road speed, 186-mile estimated cruising range, 60 percent slope capability, 40 percent side slope, 72-inch trench crossing, 42-inch fording depth, and a 70 kW 600 VDC/28 VDC generator. The same data sheet states that the M109A7 and M992A3 have greater commonality with the Bradley Fighting Vehicle through shared power pack, drive train, track, and suspension components, reducing the number of unique items carried by sustainment units inside an armored brigade.

The 600-volt architecture is more than an engineering footnote. Earlier Army reporting stated that the onboard power system was designed to support emerging technologies and battlefield network requirements, while replacing older hydraulic functions with electric drives and an electric rammer improves maintainability and consistency in gun operation. BAE’s data sheet says the M109A7 can receive a fire mission, compute firing data, transition from travel to firing configuration, lay the cannon, and fire within 60 seconds from movement. In an environment shaped by counter-battery radar, acoustic detection, unmanned aerial vehicles, and loitering munitions, that timeline is directly tied to crew survival.

The M992A3 ammunition carrier is therefore not an accessory but part of the tactical system. It carries and transfers 155mm ammunition under armor, allowing resupply closer to the gun line while reducing exposure compared with truck-based ammunition handling. In high-intensity operations, the limiting factor for a Paladin battery is often not the cannon itself but the ability to move ammunition, maintain communications, select viable position areas, and displace before enemy fires arrive. Army lessons from training areas in Europe also show that terrain, slope, concealment, road access, and communications coverage can constrain Paladin employment as much as range.

The contract also reflects an industrial-base calculation. BAE has previously identified production and support work across York, Pennsylvania; Anniston Army Depot, Alabama; Elgin, Oklahoma; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Sterling Heights, Michigan; Endicott, New York; and Aiken, South Carolina. Keeping that network active preserves welding, tracked-vehicle integration, turret refurbishment, electronics, and depot-level skills relevant not only to Paladin but also to other armored vehicle programs.

The main limitation remains range. A 39-caliber M109A7 cannot match the reach of 52-caliber systems being promoted for the Army’s future Mobile Tactical Cannon requirement, and the ERCA cancellation left the service without a near-term tracked 70 km cannon solution. The Paladin order, therefore, represents a risk-management choice: maintain a known, supportable tracked 155mm self-propelled howitzer for armored brigades while the Army tests whether newer wheeled or tracked artillery designs can provide greater range, faster automation, smaller crews, and better survivability under drone observation. For Congress and Army planners, the question is not whether the M109A7 is modern in every respect; it is whether enough reliable armored cannon artillery can be fielded now while the next fires system remains under evaluation.

Explore More Defense News

 Land Defense News
 Naval Defense News
 Defense Aerospace News


Copyright © 2019 - 2024 Army Recognition | Webdesign by Zzam