The conferees of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1994 agreed that the US Army's BDM and the Marine Corps' short-range assault weapon (
SRAW) were too similar to justify separate long-term projects, and that the Army should pursue an interim BDM program. Congress limited BDM procurement to 6,000 units. Two candidates were evaluated for the Army's BDM program. A candidate from
McDonnell-Douglas (later Talley Defense Systems) used the same warhead as the Marine Corps SMAW, but with a rocket motor with a shorter burn time. A candidate developed by Sweden's FFV for
Alliant Techsystems (later
Honeywell) replaced the standard
high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) warhead of the
M136 AT4 with the same dual mode warhead used by the USMC SMAW. FFV designated the bunker buster version of the AT4 as the
FFV AT8. In 1996 the McDonnell-Douglas candidate was chosen. In a unique move, the US Army ordered one batch of 1,500 then a second batch of 4,500 which were placed in contingency storage for expedited issue to units in combat.
CNN news footage showed
US Army Rangers firing M141s at various fortified caves during the
Tora Bora operations against the Afghan
Taliban and
al Qaeda, being mistaken by the CNN reporters for M136 AT4 projectiles. Quantities of M141s were sent to the Ukrainian armed forces by the US before the
invasion of Ukraine by Russia in February 2022. Since then, the missile has also been employed successfully against Russian vehicles. ==Operators==