BAE Systems said it has been awarded a series of Army contracts, worth approximately $40 million, for the third-generation (Gen3) configuration of its Common Missile Warning System (CMWS), that provide an enhanced capability for aircrews to locate and protect against infrared guided threats.

The Gen3 configuration includes hostile fire indication to detect and evade small arms fire and new data recording capabilities for detailed post-mission analysis.

 U.S. Army CH-47 Chinook, equipped with the CMWS/ATIRCM suite, expends flares  Photo: U.S. Army
U.S. Army CH-47 Chinook, equipped with the CMWS/ATIRCM suite, expends flares

Photo: U.S. Army

“These latest contracts build on nearly 10 years of experience providing the U.S. Army with thousands of aircraft survivability systems that have been integrated on more than 45 different platform types,” said Bill Staib, director of Threat Management Solutions at BAE. “As a result of these contracts, we’ll continue to deliver Gen3 systems in support of U.S. Army and foreign military sale requirements over the next two years.”

The latest orders are funded under a recently awarded $496 million, three-year indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) contract to deliver up to 1,300 Gen3 systems. The Army has now placed approximately $90 million in orders against the IDIQ since the first order in September 2013.

Under the contract, BAE will deliver CMWS hardware and provide systems engineering, software, and logistics support services for both the CMWS and the Advanced Threat Infrared Countermeasure system.