CACI wins $855M Army intelligence support contract

The Army Intelligence and Security Command's headquarters at Fort Belvoir, Virginia.

The Army Intelligence and Security Command's headquarters at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. Army photo by Jordan Pearson

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The Army Intelligence and Security Command set up this contract to cover engineering, maintenance and other types of non-personal services.

CACI International has won a potential five-year, $855 million contract for global intelligence and logistics support services to aid the Army in how it operates facilities and infrastructure.

Army officials received three bids for the contract that has an initial base year valued at $147.5 million. Engineering services are also included in the scope of work, the Pentagon said in its Wednesday awards digest, while the contract’s full ceiling was disclosed on Sam.gov.

The Global Intelligence Logistics and Engineering Support contract, also called GILE, is run by the Army Intelligence and Security Command and available for use by other agencies. Joint Forces, the combatant commands and intelligence community can place orders through GILE.

INSCOM set up the contract to cover non-personal services such as multi-disciplined engineering, maintenance, facilities, sustainment and logistics support. GILE’s main areas of focus include operations, tactical and strategic intelligence units, ground and aerial intelligence equipment, personnel, facilities and infrastructure.

Solicitation documents released in the fall of 2024 describe the scope of work as also including program management, software development, intelligence system maintenance, hardware design and integration, and network management.