The Air Force awarded just over $6 million in market-research contracts to four defense contractors to study active defense systems for tanker aircraft under the Large Aircraft Survivability Systems (LASS) program.…

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The Air Force awarded just over $6 million in market-research contracts to four defense contractors to study active defense systems for tanker aircraft under the Large Aircraft Survivability Systems (LASS) program.…
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The Air Force awarded over $6 million in market research contracts to four defense contractors (Anduril, BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin, and Sierra Nevada) to study active defense systems for tanker aircraft under the Large Aircraft Survivability Systems (LASS) program.…
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The Air Force awarded over $6 million in market research contracts to four defense companies to study active defense systems for tanker aircraft under the Large Aircraft Survivability Systems (LASS) program.…
Read full report →The Air Force awarded just over $6 million in market-research contracts to four defense contractors to study active defense systems for tanker aircraft under the Large Aircraft Survivability Systems (LASS) program. Awardees named in the study phase are Anduril, BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin, and Sierra Nevada. This contract research represents the initial phase of a projected $508 million investment through 2031 to equip aerial refuelers with sensors and kinetic/non-kinetic effects to counter drone and missile threats. The study results are explicitly intended to inform future procurement opportunities in the aircraft self-defense market and will shape follow-on solicitations and competitive dynamics. Immediate implications: primes and subs in Defense/Aerospace and related market segments should expect new requirements and capture opportunities; security and compliance surfaces (ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations), DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement), CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification), NIST 800-171 (NIST Special Publication 800-171)) will be relevant to bidders. Cabrillo Club recommends rapid capture postureing to track solicitations, rescore pipelines, and prepare compliant proposal artifacts.
Defense and aerospace contractors that design, integrate, or supply aircraft survivability systems and related sensors/effects are affected. Specific NAICS codes, agencies, and contract vehicles are listed in the segmentation above: 336411, 334511, 541712, 541330, 336413; DOD and Air Force; LASS. Compliance regimes called out include ITAR, DFARS, CMMC, and NIST 800-171.
A: The Air Force awarded over $6 million in market-research contracts to four defense contractors — Anduril, BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin, and Sierra Nevada — to study active defense systems for tanker aircraft under the Large Aircraft Survivability Systems (LASS) program.
A: The Summary states the study will inform future procurement opportunities and is the initial phase of a projected $508 million investment through 2031. It does not, by itself, constitute a procurement award. Details on specific follow-on solicitations are pending source review.
A: Prioritize ITAR controls for export-controlled hardware/software, DFARS flowdowns for defense contracts, CMMC maturity practices, and NIST 800-171 protections for controlled unclassified information. Exact contract clauses and assessment requirements for follow-on solicitations are pending source review.
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