Ajax: 'Serious failings' found in beleaguered vehicle programme
A further review undertaken by a "senior legal figure" will be commissioned into the armoured vehicle project.
A further review undertaken by a "senior legal figure" will be commissioned into the armoured vehicle project.
The training system is reconfigurable and mobile, so it can be used to prevent skill fade when troops are deployed overseas.
The Ajax project, worth up to £5.5bn, is designed to provide the UK military with the new armoured fighting vehicles.
On the road with a restored Jeep, and a detailed look at the history of the iconic vehicle.
The 120mm weapons are ahead of schedule and will form part of a new digitised turret in the UK.
Some of the most exciting new AFVs on the military market.
The vehicle comes with a 22m bridge which can be used by medium-sized military vehicles.
The wheeled Mobility Test Rig can climb obstacles and cross gaps only tracked vehicles have been able to in the past.
As well as robots and autonomous vehicles, the Army will look to introduce electric vehicles as part of its vision for the future.
More than 300 former and serving personnel involved in the Ajax programme have been contacted for an urgent hearing assessment.
An extra 189 serving personnel have required an urgent assessment due to noise exposure associated with the fighting vehicle.
The Titan and Viking vehicles could deliver essentials like water, ammunition and fuel to the frontline without risking human life.
The train may be old and quaint but it comes from a dark time in British history when it was used to move materials for weapon production.
Britain's main battle tank requires similar changes to the armoured vehicle programme recently put in reverse.
The MRZR-D4 vehicle could be used to take recce groups, snipers or heavy weapons teams into previously hard-to-reach places.
The vehicles, including a Jackal, a Foxhound and a MAN supply truck, are part of the military's aim to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.