The U.S. Army is advancing the Enduring High Energy Laser (E-HEL) effort, shifting emphasis from the cancelled Stryker-based DE-MSHORAD work toward lighter tactical platforms such as JLTV and ISV.…

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The U.S. Army is advancing the Enduring High Energy Laser (E-HEL) effort, shifting emphasis from the cancelled Stryker-based DE-MSHORAD work toward lighter tactical platforms such as JLTV and ISV.…
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The U.S. Army’s Enduring High Energy Laser (E-HEL) effort signals a notable shift toward fielding directed-energy capability on light tactical platforms (the Summary cites JLTV and ISV) rather than the cancelled Stryker-based DE-MSHORAD approach.…
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The U.S. Army is advancing the Enduring High Energy Laser (E-HEL) program, shifting attention toward lighter tactical platforms and creating potential procurement opportunities in directed energy weapons, power systems, and tactical vehicle integration.…
Read full report →The U.S. Army is advancing the Enduring High Energy Laser (E-HEL) effort, shifting emphasis from the cancelled Stryker-based DE-MSHORAD work toward lighter tactical platforms such as JLTV and ISV. This pivot, coupled with operational testing of AeroVironment’s 20 kW LOCUST, signals an emerging acquisition focus on directed energy weapons, power systems, and tactical-vehicle integration to counter drones. Contractors in those markets should view E-HEL as a developing opportunity that could become the military’s first directed energy program of record. Immediate implications include increased demand for integration engineering, ruggedized power and thermal management, and DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement)/ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations)/CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification)/NIST 800-171 (NIST Special Publication 800-171)–aligned program controls. Expect follow-on solicitations and test-based requirements to appear as the Army transitions from developmental tests to fielding decisions. Timeline and solicitation specifics are TBD pending source review; prioritize capture awareness and compliance readiness now.
A: E-HEL is the Army program focused on fielding high-energy laser systems on light tactical vehicles (per the Summary). It has been described as a potential first directed energy program of record for the military. Pending source review for program documentation and solicitation details.
A: The Summary specifies light tactical vehicles such as JLTV and ISV; the Army has shifted focus away from the cancelled Stryker-based DE-MSHORAD toward these lighter platforms.
A: Yes — the Summary notes AeroVironment’s 20 kW LOCUST system is undergoing operational testing. Additional test schedules and solicitation timelines are pending source review.
Cabrillo Signals War Room has detected this event and delivered this briefing. Use the following Cabrillo products to operationalize monitoring, capture, and proposal readiness:
Notify: capture manager, proposal lead, CTO/engineering lead, compliance officer (CMMC/DFARS lead), and business development leads for tactical vehicles and power systems. First 48-hour playbook:
See foundational capture and compliance guidance in the Winning Federal Contracts Guide (/insights/winning-federal-contracts). For compliance specifics, reference the CMMC Compliance Guide (/insights/cmmc-compliance-guide) and operationally secure teaming practices in the CUI (Controlled Unclassified Information)-Safe CRM Guide (/insights/cui-safe-crm-guide).