The sights of AUSA 2022 Day 3 – Breaking Defense

The Warriors Corner at AUSA 2022. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

AUSA 2022 The third and final day of the Association of the United States Army conference has come and gone, and now the meeting prepares for the home stretch. The Breaking Defense team had full coverage of the days news, from special operations to Project Convergence, so catch up here.

Over at Rheinmetalls booth sat the hefty Lynx OMFV (Optionally Manned Fighting Vehicle). The company, as its competitors, is hoping to make a strong impression as the Army looks for OMFV proposals later this fall the early stage of an almost certainly lucrative long-term contract award. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

AUSA was well attended by international officers and officials as well, and by foreign defense firms. The Korean booth, shown here, featured some products hoping to make a splash in the US military. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

All the way from down under, the Australian firm Defendtex presented some of its modular UAVs. Here visitors can see the Drone155, which the company says can be outfitted with ISR payloads or explosives. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

The MVPP from Globe Tech stands for Modular Vehicle Protection Platform, a vehicle add-on that can take the brunt of improvised explosive device detonations. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

Not your traditional defense contractor, the computing giant IBM has a booth at AUSA showing off its flashy but functional quantum computer. The US government as a whole, and the Pentagon in particular, are heavily invested in the quantum computing race with the likes of China. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

Among the fleet of vehicles parked throughout the AUSA floor for display was the Flyer 72-U, made by General Dynamics. The company says the vehicle takes a modular approach so it can be configured for anything from light strike assault to rescue and evacuation. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

The stuff of counter-UAS nightmares, the Virginia-based BlueHalo firm makes drone swarms that use AI and machine learning to provide battlefield intelligence to soldiers. The Armys Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office awarded the company $14 million in February to develop the HIVE. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

Its a .50 caliber Gatling gun, one that Dillon Aero says can fire 1,500 shots per minute, or 25 rounds per second. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith).

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The sights of AUSA 2022 Day 3 - Breaking Defense

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