The counterpart cannot be disclosed due to national security. The framework agreement is by far the largest to date for MilDef, estimated to SEK 2.8 billion over 20 years.
To facilitate the substantial upgrade of tactical IT integrated into a brand-new fleet of military vehicles this government organisation has turned to MilDef for a full array of deliveries within hardware, software, integration, and lifecycle services.
MilDef will provide the nation’s defence forces with computers, displays and network infrastructure for Command and Control.Björn Karlsson, CEO MilDef Group, said: “This government agency is creating a modern blueprint for digitalisation that we strongly believe in and are uniquely positioned to deliver.
“We look forward to being an integral part of this very ambitious program.
“Among NATO countries, this blueprint offers some exciting system design that can be replicated among other nations who require cutting-edge digitalisation.
“Although we are not disclosing which nation it is, we can say that it’s a small-to-midsize defence market, a NATO member with a strong history of collaboration with other nations within NATO and EU.”
The framework agreement also encompasses the first international export of MilDef’s zero-day deployment tool OneCIS, to be used on both static and deployable infrastructure.
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