The US government has approved a potential $3.73-billion suite of air and missile defense sales to Denmark.
The primary request covers a $3-billion IBCS-IFPC package, which includes key battle management and launch components.
Among the items sought are 24 all-up round magazines, eight IFPC Increment 2 launchers, two Sentinel A4 radars, two engagement operations centers, two integrated collaborative environments, and six fire-control network relays under the IBCS architecture.
Denmark has also asked to purchase 200 AIM-120C-8 AMRAAMs, along with guidance sections and support gear, for roughly $730 million.
The Defense Security Cooperation Agency noted that the AMRAAM sale will give Denmark cutting-edge air-to-air capability and improve its already strong interoperability with US and NATO forces.
Primary industry partners for the IBCS-IFPC procurement are Northrop Grumman, Leidos, RTX, and Lockheed Martin.
With this acquisition, Denmark will significantly strengthen its layered air-defense posture. IBCS will serve as a centralized command network that fuses data from multiple sensors and directs interceptors as a single, coordinated system.
The IFPC Increment 2 component provides ground-based defense against drones, cruise missiles, and other aerial threats that fall between the short-range and Patriot engagement envelopes.
The IBCS has already shown interoperability with both IFPC and LTAMDS, confirming its capability across integrated air-defense architectures.
Upon completion, Denmark will be Europe’s second user of the IBCS-IFPC system, following Poland.
















































