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LAND


INTERNATIONAL INTEREST GROWING FOR ARMY’S BATTLE COMMAND SYSTEM

By Jen Judson
 Aug 16, 04:16 AM

The Army successfully completed an intercept test at White Sands Missile Range,
N.M., using the IBCS. (Northrop Grumman)

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — International demand for the U.S. Army’s Integrated Battle
Command System is growing, driven partly by the war in Ukraine, according to
manufacturer Northrop Grumman.

The Army originally developed IBCS as the brains of a future air and missile
defense system. The service intended to link it with a new 360-degree radar and
potentially new launchers, replacing the aging Patriot air-and-missile defense
system component by component.



But in 2018, the Army expanded the planned role for IBCS, deciding the system
would also connect other sensors and shooters on the battlefield. However, the
expanded mission has delayed the effort.

Even as the Army experienced schedule hold-ups related to both the expanded
mission and technical difficulties in tests, Poland, which had agreed to
purchase the RTX-made Patriot systems in 2018, opted to move forward even though
the system wasn’t ready to be fielded to U.S. soldiers. Poland received a waiver
to acquire IBCS ahead of the U.S.

With the threat of Russian aggression looming over the past decade, Poland has
been clambering to buy high-end defense capabilities, including a robust
air-and-missile defense system.



Poland received its first IBCS systems earlier this year and declared initial
operational capability this week, according to Col. Chris Hill, the Army’s
project manager for integrated fires within Program Executive Office Missiles &
Space.

Michael Hahn, Northrop’s IBCS program director, told reporters touring the
company’s new production facility for the system in Huntsville last week that
with Poland bringing its systems online, the Army officially declaring full-rate
production for the IBCS program in April, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine
raging on, “the demand for [IBCS] is pretty significant, obviously, [based on]
the sort of public employment of cruise and ballistic missiles, hypersonic
missiles in Ukraine.”

“Clearly if you’re a ... NATO partner, that has some concerns, and we are seeing
some demand signals,” he said.

Eight new countries have recently reached out to Northrop expressing interest in
buying IBCS, Ian Reynolds, the company’s director of network solutions, added.
They include Germany, Romania, Greece, Switzerland, Netherlands, Spain, Denmark
and Sweden. Northrop demonstrated the system to these countries earlier this
year.



Except for Denmark, these countries already own the Patriot system; Switzerland
is the newest customer, contracting for the system at the end of 2022.

Additionally, Northrop submitted IBCS to an Australian competition for a joint
air battle management system and is expecting a decision this summer. Both Japan
and the U.K. are seeking international proposals for an air defense battle
command capability.

Poland also plans to use IBCS for its Narew short-range air defense program, and
the country is working on issuing a letter of offer and acceptance with the U.S.
government before the end of the year. Poland is buying MBDA’s Common Anti-Air
Modular Missile for the Narew program.

As interest in IBCS grows, the Army and Northrop are working through how best to
configure systems that can tie into countries’ various sensors and shooters
without ending up with a variety of “one-off” systems, Hill said.



“What we’re doing to help facilitate that on the Army side, we already have a
requirement to what I call ‘componentiz[ing]’ IBCS,” Hill said. IBCS could be
installed on a truck or a shelter and used at a fixed site.

“Our position moving forward really is, step one, if you come and you want IBCS,
buy what you see and we get you to a capability,” Hill said. “Phase two would be
now let’s start looking at integrating some of your indigenous sensors and
effectors, so that’s how we’re trying to delineate that just to give some
predictability because if everything is a one-off, at some point, it gets pretty
difficult to manage.”

Meanwhile, the first unit to receive the IBCS system in the U.S. Army will get
full-rate production versions in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024. The Army
will then field two battalions of IBCS per year to the remaining Patriot units,
Hill said.

The service anticipates receiving the Lower-Tier Air and Missile Defense Sensor
along with IBCS in 2027 to begin building out the future Integrated Air and
Missile Defense Systems that will ultimately replace the Patriot systems,
according to Hill.

About Jen Judson

Jen Judson is an award-winning journalist covering land warfare for Defense
News. She has also worked for Politico and Inside Defense. She holds a Master of
Science degree in journalism from Boston University and a Bachelor of Arts
degree from Kenyon College.

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