In February 1982,
Chrysler announced the sale of Chrysler Defense, its profitable defense subsidiary, to
General Dynamics for US$348.5 million. The sale was completed in March 1982 for the revised figure of US$336.1 million and renamed General Dynamics Land Systems. Under this newly formed division, General Dynamics would take over production of the
M60 and
M1 tanks for the United States Army. In 1985, 3 years after the sale from Chrysler, General Dynamics production plants in Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania went on strike. Members of these plants were part of the
United Automobile Workers union. The strike was primarily around wage increases. On April 11, 2024, the
Chinese Foreign Ministry announced
sanctions on the company due to its arms sales to Taiwan. On March 4, 2025, the
Chinese Ministry of Commerce placed 15 U.S. entities (including General Dynamics Land Systems) on its export control list, barring the export of dual-use commodities to that business.
General Dynamics Land Systems Australia General Dynamics Land Systems–Australia was established in 2000 as a subsidiary to support the production of
ASLAV. GDLS-A now provides engineering, manufacturing, systems integration, upgrade and fleet management services for GDLS Armoured Fighting Vehicles in the Asia Pacific region. In Australia this includes the ADF's
ASLAV Light Armoured Vehicles and
M1A1 Main Battle Tanks, supported under a Through Life Support Contract awarded in June 2011. GDLS-A reports operationally to General Dynamics Land Systems–Canada (GDLS-C). GDLS-A was established in October 2000 as General Motors Defence Australia. General Motors Defense operations worldwide were sold to General Dynamics Land Systems in March 2003. GDLS-A was established as a result of GDLS-C being awarded the Phase III contract to provide 144 Australian Light Armoured Vehicles (ASLAV) to the Commonwealth of Australia. The contract provided for the manufacture of the LAV-25 turret system in Adelaide and the establishment of a significant Australian supplier base to support manufacturing for GDLS' global supply chain for LAV-25 turrets. GDLS-A’s primary customer is the
Defence Materiel Organisation, Commonwealth of Australia, located in
Melbourne, Victoria. Its National Manufacturing and Support Centre is located north of
Adelaide in
Pooraka. GDLS-A also has Field Service Groups in
Darwin and
Brisbane, and a Fleet Management Services office in Southbank, Melbourne.
General Dynamics Land Systems Canada In 2003, GDLS acquired Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeug GmbH (SSF), the land defense vehicles unit of
Steyr-Daimler-Puch, and General Dynamics Land Systems – Canada (GDLS-C), a subsidiary of General Dynamics based in
London, Ontario, purchased
General Motors Diesel,
GM Defense unit from
General Motors. At the time, it produced vehicles such as the
LAV-25 and
Stryker. The London operation continued in the GM Diesel plant location. SSF merged into the
General Dynamics European Land Systems (GDELS) unit. In 2015, GDLS Canada secured a fourteen-year, $15-billion deal to supply light armoured vehicles to
Saudi Arabia. Representatives from
Unifor, the plant union, expressed concern that the London facility would suffer financially due to negative publicity surrounding the deal due to
human rights concerns within Saudi Arabia. Both
Bloc Québécois leader
Gilles Duceppe and
New Democrat Thomas Mulcair challenged Prime Minister
Stephen Harper on the secrecy surrounding military sales to Saudi Arabia. David Perry, senior analyst with the
Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, argued that secrecy in trade details is part of a pragmatic foreign
trade policy necessary for a domestic industry in a global market. == Manufacturing facilities ==