Raytheon Technologies Corporation (RTX) just took a significant step toward reshoring critical defense manufacturing. R2S Inc., a joint venture between Raytheon and Israeli defense contractor Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, landed a $1.25 billion contract to produce Tamir missile interceptors at a newly developed facility in East Camden, Arkansas.
The deal, announced Friday, authorizes full-scale production of Tamir units for both American and Israeli defense programs. The work happens at R2S's plant in Highland Industrial Park, which got a $33 million capital investment to make this whole operation possible.
Here's what makes this interesting: the Arkansas site is the first location in the United States capable of producing fully assembled Tamir interceptors. It'll also manufacture the American version called SkyHunter. That's a pretty big deal when you're talking about domestic supply chains and reducing dependence on overseas manufacturing for critical defense systems.
Tamir interceptors are the munitions that make Israel's Iron Dome work—you know, the missile defense system that's been intercepting rockets since 2011 with impressive real-world results. The U.S. variant, SkyHunter, is getting integrated into the Marine Corps' Medium-Range Intercept Capability program. This contract essentially supports modernization efforts across allied defense networks on both sides of the Atlantic.
R2S plans to scale up production immediately, which means new technical jobs heading to Arkansas and a bigger role for the state in America's missile-defense manufacturing landscape. More hiring and supplier partnerships are expected as the facility ramps toward full-capacity output.
In related RTX news, the company's Collins Aerospace division recently partnered with the Royal Netherlands Air and Space Force to establish a military avionics and mission-systems center in the Netherlands. The collaboration focuses on developing advanced avionics, strengthening training infrastructure, and expanding support for allied aircraft—further deepening RTX's industrial footprint in Europe.
RTX Price Action: Raytheon shares traded down 1.48% at $170.17 at the time of publication on Friday.