Leidos U.S. Army Contract Expands IFPC Air Defense Production
The Leidos U.S. Army contract announced on April 23 gives the Pentagon another major step toward rebuilding short and medium range air defense capacity. According to an official company statement, Leidos said the $617 million U.S. Army award will fund additional launchers for the Indirect Fire Protection Capability Increment 2 (IFPC Inc 2) system, described as the Army’s newest mobile, ground based air defense platform. The company added that, combined with $356 million awarded in July and September 2025, Leidos now holds nearly $1.2 billion in production contracts tied to the program.
- :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0} received a $617 million U.S. Army award for additional IFPC Increment 2 launchers.
- Total disclosed Army production awards tied to the program now approach $1.2 billion.
- IFPC Inc 2 is designed to defeat cruise missiles, drones, rockets, artillery and mortar threats.
- More than 100 launchers are now committed for delivery, according to Leidos.
- The award reflects wider Pentagon efforts to rebuild air defense and munitions capacity.
The new award follows earlier 2025 contracts worth $356 million, bringing Leidos’ disclosed Army production awards for the program to nearly $1.2 billion. Company statements also said more than 100 launchers are now committed for delivery.
What Is IFPC Inc 2?
The IFPC Inc 2 system is one of the Army’s most important modernization efforts in ground based air defense. It is intended to protect fixed and semi fixed sites against threats that traditional short range systems may struggle to handle.
Those threats include:
- Cruise missiles
- Unmanned aerial systems
- Rockets
- Artillery rounds
- Mortars
The system fills a key layer between maneuver air defense units and larger strategic assets such as Patriot missile system and THAAD.
Why This Contract Matters Now
The timing is notable. The Pentagon has spent the past year pushing industry to increase output after sustained global demand for missiles, interceptors, and air defense systems. Reuters previously reported framework deals with major defense firms to accelerate weapons production and place U.S. forces on a stronger wartime footing.
That makes the Leidos U.S. Army contract more than a single procurement action. It also signals three wider priorities:
- Stockpile resilience
The U.S. wants deeper inventories after years of high consumption and foreign military support packages. - Counter drone defense
Cheap drones have changed battlefield economics, forcing demand for layered defenses. - Industrial scale-up
Multi year awards help contractors hire labor, secure suppliers, and expand production lines.
Industrial Base Signal
The timeline through 2029 is also important. Multi year production visibility gives suppliers confidence to invest in workforce expansion, components, and manufacturing capacity. For the Pentagon, that can shorten delivery timelines and reduce future procurement risk.
Strategic Outlook
IFPC Inc 2 could become one of the Army’s most in-demand air defense assets through the late 2020s. The latest award supports ongoing research, testing, and possible future orders through 2029, according to Leidos.
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