AUSA 2024 — The US Army is on track to begin receiving upgunned Stryker vehicles early next year, but there are several lingering deficiencies that will need to be addressed down the road, according to a pair of service officials.
The service has had fits and starts integrating a 30mm cannon onto Double V–Hull A1 Stryker infantry carrier vehicles, including software-driven issues that prompted a slight delay in fielding the system, formally the Medium Caliber Weapon System (MCWS) program. Production verification testing has now been completed and the Army is poised to begin delivering the vehicles to soldiers next year.
However, testing showed three key fixes need to be made.
“[We’re] actually going to work as fast as we can to get them fixed, but as part of our material release process, we have to submit a ‘get well’ plan to the Army, and that ‘get well’ plan allows us to have up to three years,” said Clifton Boyd, the project manager for the Stryker brigade combat team.
The three key issues to address, Boyd said, are “software glitches” with the display that continue to crop up, light emission through vehicle seams, and a casing ejection problem that leaves rounds rolling around on the deck of the vehicle or can “jam” the turret. That last issue is the most notable, because if not corrected, it potentially leaves soldiers without a cannon on a battlefield — the entire purpose of the vehicle upgrade.
Boyd, however, downplayed the severity of the problem, saying the true purpose of the vehicle is to move soldiers across the battlefield, with the gun more of a nice-to-have than must-have for the Stryker’s core operational purpose.
“I want to make it very clear that the turret is not a mission essential system, if the turret was to go down, the vehicle is still mission capable… because it delivers infantry soldiers to the fight,” Boyd told reporters on Tuesday
The service and Oshkosh, Boyd said, are still working on the fixes and will have up to three years to roll them out.
In an interview with Breaking Defense today, Oshkosh Defense’s chief programs officer Pat Williams said the company has not yet seen the test report but will receive it in November. At that point, he said, it will have more insights into thedetails of the problems outlined by Boyd, and can plan the road ahead.
Despite those issues, the Army still says it’s going forward with fielding the upgraded Strykers, with Oshkosh on contract to upgun 269 vehicles across three brigades. After recent force structure changes, the service 65 upgunned Strykers, with a third receiving 83. Another 20 vehicles are bound for the schoolhouses and testing, while the service is still deciding what to do with the remaining 36 vehicles.
“If we’re going to continue to increase lethality, we are always going to have to modernize, and we’re always going to have to make the system better than when the first soldier gets it,” said Col. Jerome Parker, the director for the Army’s Stryker brigade combat team capability shop. “So yes, this is what we have in 2024. In 2027 we need to make it better, but we need to continue to get that feedback from the force to make it better.”
Aaron Mehta contributed to this report.