American Rheinmetall Shows Next-Gen Squad Systems at Modern Day Marine

American Rheinmetall Shows Next-Gen Squad Systems at Modern Day Marine

Defence Blog
Defence BlogApr 28, 2026

Companies Mentioned

Why It Matters

These systems give Marine infantry autonomous resupply and firepower, reducing logistical risk and accelerating the fielding of mature, expeditionary technology.

Key Takeaways

  • MMSP‑H transports 2,200 lb, amphibious, NAVAIR‑certified for helicopter drops
  • Wild Goose drone delivers 330 lb over 25 km, TRL 9, field‑ready
  • Both platforms integrate with existing Marine vehicles and aircraft inventory
  • HAMMR rifle adds precision lethality to the autonomous squad concept
  • Amphibious capability closes supply gaps during beach and littoral operations

Pulse Analysis

The Marine Corps has made autonomous logistics a procurement priority, seeking platforms that can keep pace with its expeditionary doctrine. Rheinmetall’s MMSP‑H answers that call by merging heavy‑payload ground transport with true amphibious capability. Its NAVAIR certification means the vehicle can be slung beneath a CH‑53K or parachuted from a helicopter, then transition seamlessly from water to land, eliminating the hand‑off that traditionally stalls supply chains during amphibious assaults.

Equally compelling is the Wild Goose drone, a compact, attritable system that has already reached Technology Readiness Level 9. With a 330‑pound payload capacity and a 25‑kilometer reach, it can be launched from a UH‑60 Black Hawk or JLTV and deliver supplies directly to forward squads without dedicated launch infrastructure. Its proven field performance removes the development risk that often stalls acquisition, allowing program managers to move straight to full-rate production and operational integration.

Together with the Highly Advanced Multi‑Mission Rifle (HAMMR), these offerings illustrate a holistic vision for the modern Marine squad: autonomous resupply, enhanced precision fire, and reduced exposure for personnel. By leveraging existing vehicle and aircraft fleets, Rheinmetall’s portfolio minimizes additional training and logistics burdens, positioning the Marine Corps to field a ready‑now, interoperable solution that could set the standard for small‑unit unmanned operations across the services.

American Rheinmetall shows next-gen squad systems at Modern Day Marine

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