The US Marine Corps announced in a 声明 先週 Marine Air Defense Integrated System (MADIS) has been successfully fielded to the 3rd Littoral Anti-Air Battalion (3d LAAB) in Hawaii, representing a “significant milestone” in “equipping Marines with capabilities critical for maintaining air dominance and superiority.”
MADIS, which is able to detect, track, and defeat aerial threats, is described by Lieutenant Colonel Craig Warner, Future Weapons Systems Product Manager as “critical” to protecting Marines from the increasing use of UAS for surveillance, targeting and attacks. Lt. Col. Warner also highlighted that the system “serves as a powerful deterrent, signaling to adversaries that their aerial assets will not succeed against U.S. forces.”
After being successfully tested in live-fire conditions at Yuma Proving Ground in December 2023, the fielding the system to 3D LAAB only a year later is an impressive achievement. Colonel Andrew Konicki, Program Manager for Ground-Based Air Defense, remarked that “MADIS is a testament to the Marine Corps’ ability to swiftly respond to evolving threats” and hailing the fielding as an “amazing accomplishment that is just the beginning of providing the Marine Corps with the counter air capabilities greatly needed” in a LinkedIn post.
Col. Konicki emphasized in the PEO Land Systems statement that this is “only the first step” with the systems capabilities being incrementally improved over the next few years “to stay ahead of the threat while providing Marines the system they need to protect themselves.”
The plans to increase MADIS capability are already in action, with 株式会社インヴァリアント そして アンドゥリル工業 being awarded $200 million contracts each in November 2024 to develop and deliver a Counter-Unmanned Aerial System Engagement System (CES) to be integrated into MADIS.
The Marine Corps is scheduled to deploy additional MADIS units to the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Low Altitude Air Defense Battalions in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2025.