WARSAW, Poland — Poland and Slovakia have signed a letter of intent to jointly produce ammunition and cooperate on the procurement of armored vehicles, tank, and air defense weapons.
WÅ‚adysÅ‚aw Kosiniak-Kamysz, Polish deputy prime minister and defense minister, and his Slovak counterpart, Robert Kaliňák, inked an agreement that effect during a meeting in Warsaw on Monday.
Under the first initiative covered by the document, Poland is to benefit from Slovakia’s know-how and technology for 155-millimeter artillery shell manufacturing. In late 2024, Warsaw decided to set up new fund of around PLN 3 billion ($759 million) to support investments by domestic and foreign players in ramping up the country’s ammunition manufacturing capacities, with a focus on 155 mm rounds.
The second project concerns joint production of an armored fighting vehicle based on the eight-wheel-drive Rosomak, which is made by Poland’s state-run defense group PGZ under a license from Fin..
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Following a lengthy delay as the U.S. Army and Navy struggled to test the round, the Army will field its long-range hypersonic weapon to the first unit by the end of fiscal 2025, a defense official confirmed Wednesday in a statement to Defense News.
The Army had planned to field the live, ground-launched hypersonic rounds to the 1st Multi-Domain Task Force, 5th Battalion, 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, 17th Field Artillery Brigade unit at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state by the fall of 2023. But the milestone continued to be pushed back after several aborted tests in 2023 due to challenges at the range, related not to the round, but the process of firing up the missile for launch.
Testing the all-up round was considered critical to ensure the system was safe, effective and ready for fielding, said then-Army acquisition chief Doug Bush.
The U.S. is in a race to field the capability and develop systems to defend against hypersonic missiles. China and Russia are actively develo..