Land Warfare

AUSA Day 3: How much is that doggy in the AMPV? [PHOTOS]

AUSA's 2025 Annual Meeting and Exposition in downtown Washington winds down.

A four-legged attendee checks whether the infantry carrier variant of BAE Systems' Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle can also carry canines. (Sydney Freedberg/Breaking Defense)

AUSA 2025 — Defense trade shows don’t only peddle things that go boom. Between the massive displays of traditional firepower sit microwave weapons, artificially intelligence-powered shooting targets and even mechanical versions of man’s best friend.

On the last day of America’s largest annual defense exposition, companies packed up their wares with the hope that the Army’s push for nontraditional acquisition will lead to new contracts. Service officials pointed to their homeland defense and space missions as areas of particular growth ahead, hinting that there’s more to come on acquisition reform.

Check out all of our pictures and videos from AUSA 2025, and find our full coverage of the show here.

Epirus’s Leonidas high-powered microwave counter-drone system sits atop of a General Dynamics land vehicle. (Michael Marrow/Breaking Defense)
A four-legged attendee checks whether the infantry carrier variant of BAE Systems’ Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle can also carry canines. (Sydney Freedberg/Breaking Defense)
Honeywell showcases a hybrid quadcopter/fixed-wing drone on the show floor. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
RTX displays its missiles in front of a Lower Tier Air and Missile Defense Sensor. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
It wouldn’t be a defense trade show in 2025 without a robot dog on hand. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Marathon Targets says soldiers can use its “AI-driven, armored, autonomous robotic humanoids” for realistic target practice before they reach a battlefield. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)

PHOTOS: AUSA 2025

PHOTOS: AUSA 2025

A view of a show floor at the 2025 Association of the US Army's Annual Meeting & Exposition in Washington, DC, Oct. 13, 2025. (Rachel Cohen/Breaking Defense)
Oshkosh Defense debuts its Extreme Multi-Mission Autonomous Vehicle (X-MAV), an "autonomous-capable launcher solution that is engineered to support the future of long-range munitions," Oct. 13, 2025, at the Association of the US Army's Annual Meeting & Exposition in Washington, DC. (Rachel Cohen/Breaking Defense)
Rheinmetall brought its HX Common Tactical Truck, built in partnership with GM Defense, to the Association of the US Army's Annual Meeting & Exposition, Oct. 13, 2025. (Rachel Cohen/Breaking Defense)
Saab's Ground-Launched Small Diameter Bomb is based on Boeing's SDB and Lockheed Martin's Multiple Launch Rocket System. (Rachel Cohen/Breaking Defense)
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems and Hanwha Aerospace are collaborating on a short takeoff-and-landing version of the MQ-1C Gray Eagle drone. (Rachel Cohen/Breaking Defense)
Rafael's Iron Beam is a 100kW-class laser weapon on track for operational use this year. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Honeywell's SAMURAI anti-drone system is one of myriad counter-drone technologies on display at AUSA 2025. (Daniel Woolfolk/Breaking Defense)
Hanwha Defense USA pitches its 155 mm, 52-caliber K9 Thunder self-propelled howitzer at the Association of the US Army's Annual Meeting & Exposition in Washington, DC. (Rachel Cohen/Breaking Defense)
Conference attendees try out Trijicon's firearm sights and scopes. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Attendees roam the halls of the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in downtown Washington, DC, Oct. 13, 2025. (Daniel Woolfolk/Breaking Defense)
The Bell 505 Jet Ranger X is a contender for the Army's Flight School Next program. (Daniel Woolfolk/Breaking Defense)
GM Defense's Infantry Squad Vehicle-Utility is based on the Chevrolet Colorado ZR2 and can be adapted to carry mortars, counter-drone equipment and more. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Name a more iconic duo. I'll wait. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Epirus’s Leonidas high-powered microwave system is mounted on top of a General Dynamics land vehicle. (Michael Marrow/Breaking Defense)
A four-legged attendee checks whether the infantry carrier variant of BAE Systems' Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle can also carry canines. (Sydney Freedberg/Breaking Defense)
It wouldn't be a defense trade show in 2025 without a robot dog on hand. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Honeywell showcases a hybrid quadcopter/fixed-wing drone on the show floor. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
RTX displays its missiles and a Lower Tier Air and Missile Defense Sensor. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)