The Army conducted a Platform Performance Demonstration at
Fort Knox in January 2000. The demonstration was intended to inform the Army about what was available as well as assess each vehicle's adaptability to the new brigades and their potential for the insertion of new technology to improve its capabilities. Vehicles assessed included the
Pandur, the
M1117, the
LAV III and LAV III
assault gun variant, the
Dragoon APC, the
Bionix 25, the
LAV 300 Mark II, the 6x6
Véhicule de l'Avant Blindé, the
TPz Fuchs, the GDLS
Dragoon, the
Mobile Tactical Vehicle Light and the
M8 Armored Gun System. Commonality between vehicles was seen as a desired, but not essential characteristic. As of February 2000, the Army believed that most of the Medium Armored Vehicle variants would be based on the infantry carrier vehicle variant. The mobile gun system (MGS) and howitzer variants would be permitted to share less commonality. In March 2000, the Army confirmed it would award up to two contracts. In February, Major General John Caldwell had said the Army would only award one contract, rather than splitting the contract among two winners. In April, Shinseki said the Army had no preference of wheeled versus tracks but said "management could be pretty challenging," if both wheeled and tracked options were chosen. The
3rd Infantry Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, a heavy brigade at
Fort Lewis, became the first to be converted into a Stryker Brigade beginning around March 2000. The U.S. Army outfitted the unit with LAV IIIs borrowed from Canada, which served as the main surrogate for the IAV. Others included the
Lynx,
TPz Fuchs,
B1 Centauro and M113. In April 2000, the Army released its
request for proposals for the IAV. Four teams submitted proposals: •
General Dynamics Land Systems (GDLS) and
General Motors Defense of Canada proposed a vehicle based on the
LAV III. GDLS would be responsible for the mobile gun system, nuclear, biological, and chemical (NBC) reconnaissance vehicle, medical evacuation vehicle, and mortar carrier. •
United Defense LP proposed the Mobile Tactical Vehicle Light (MTVL) and the
M8 Armored Gun System (AGS), both tracked vehicles. The MTVL was based on the
M113 armored personnel carrier and could carry 10 passengers. For the MGS requirement, three solutions were offered, the AGS and two variants of the MTVL; one with the AGS turret and 105mm gun, and another with a 90 mm
Cockerill turret (called MGS 90). • GDLS subsidiary AV Technology and
Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeug proposed the 6x6
Pandur. In November 2000, the Army awarded the IAV contract to GM-GDLS. At $4 billion, the deal was the largest combat vehicle purchase since the
Bradley Fighting Vehicle program in 1980. The Army was also impressed by the LAV's armor which, in its baseline configuration, could resist 14.5 mm rounds. The service rejected a split buy of the M8 AGS offered by UDLP, citing the system's lower top speed and different maintenance requirements. The service said a single fleet would simplify maintenance and allow units to "move as a fighting unit." At the same time as the contract award, the Army announced a 16-month schedule slip due to additional development work required on the MGS and fire support vehicle. The NBC vehicle also required additional integration work. The schedule slippage displeased Shinseki, who pressed GM–GDLS to hasten their work. The GAO denied UDLP's protest of the award in April 2001. In February 2002, the Army formally renamed the IAV as the "Stryker" after two unrelated U.S. soldiers who posthumously received the
Medal of Honor: Private First Class
Stuart S. Stryker, who died in
World War II, and Specialist Four
Robert F. Stryker, who died in the
Vietnam War. == Variants ==