Lockheed Martin uk signs five year contract
to support the combined arms tactical trainer
WARMINSTER, UK March 20, 2008
Lockheed Martin UK has signed a five year, £24.5 million
partnering contract with the Ministry of Defence to operate
and maintain the Combined Arms Tactical Trainer (CATT).
A team comprised of Lockheed Martin UK
Simulation, Training & Support (STS) and BAE Systems will be
responsible for managing the simulators and related
facilities to ensure training is available for forces in
both the UK and Sennelager, Germany. Lockheed Martin
originally designed and built the simulator in 2002, which
is listed in the 2004 Guinness Book of World Records
as the “Most Sophisticated Battlefield Simulator” in the
world.
“CATT is an integral part of the
training programme for UK troops preparing for operations,”
said Toby Mills, managing director of Lockheed Martin UK
STS. “CATT-Training Services will help achieve and sustain
current British Army collective performance training
objectives in order to deliver force elements at readiness.”
“The CATT Training Service represents a
further strengthening of a very successful relationship,”
said Matt Tovey, CATT programme manager at the Defence
Equipment and Support Organisation. “The high quality of
training output will be further enhanced through a
partnering approach which provides the basis for exploring
further efficiencies.”
Lt Col Nick Baily added: “Brigade and
Battlegroup training are extremely complex processes. CATT
is a peerless facility where troops can fine tune tactics,
techniques and procedures in the virtual environment, prior
to exercising in the field. Although virtual, it provides
many of the frictions and uncertainties of warfare and
allows activities to be conducted which for safety and
environmental reasons, can only otherwise be conducted on
operation. We look forward to working with the Lockheed
Martin team to help us deliver troops with the skills they
need to fight successfully and win.”
Each CATT installation covers an area
the size of three football pitches and has 170 vehicle
simulators. Half of these replicate, in detail, the
interiors of vehicles such as Challenger II main battle
tanks, Warrior armoured fighting vehicles and Scimitar
armoured reconnaissance vehicles. The remainder are designed
to generic standards and can replicate a variety of
vehicles, helicopters and dismounted infantry. The facility
can accommodate as many as 700 troops in a simulated battle,
either against each other or using computer-generates forces
across thousands of kilometres of the Wiltshire and
Hampshire countryside. The system can replay an exercise for
post-exercise analysis and assessment.
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Warren Wright, 407-306-4447;
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