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[Digital Today AI Reporter] The U.S. Department of Defense has signed an approximately 14.6 trillion KRW, five-year software contract with Dell (about $9.7 billion).
On the 27th (local time), CNBC reported that Dell will provide the U.S. military with a software package that includes Microsoft 365, advanced cloud subscription services and on-premises licensing.
The agreement is formally titled the Microsoft Department of Defense Enterprise Software Agreement II Core Enterprise Technology Agreement. Dell Federal Systems, Dell’s government-focused unit, won the contract. The Defense Department said it selected the vendor through a competitive bidding process.
At a Pentagon briefing, Defense Department Chief Information Officer Kirsten Davies and Acting Navy CIO Barry Tanner said evaluators prioritized price competitiveness, comparisons to General Services Administration procurement rates and department-wide value. Tanner said suppliers were assessed against those criteria and that Dell received the top score.
The central goal of the deal is to consolidate licensing for Microsoft-based systems under a single procurement vehicle. The department expects the move to cut redundant technology licenses that had been scattered across offices and subordinate organizations.
Davies said the second-generation enterprise purchasing agreement will integrate and streamline key Microsoft software and services across the Defense Department, the intelligence community and the U.S. Coast Guard. By consolidating separate service- and agency-level IT budgets into a single procurement framework, the department expects to realize roughly 634 billion KRW in annual savings (about $422 million).
Budgetary and audit pressures also played a role. The Pentagon has requested a fiscal 2027 budget of about 2,300 trillion KRW (about $1.5 trillion) and is under congressional pressure to improve audit transparency. Simplifying software procurement and reducing duplicate expenditures aligns with those priorities.
The award has drawn attention amid Dell’s recent ties to President Donald Trump. Michael Dell, CEO of Dell Technologies, pledged last year to donate about 9.4 trillion KRW (about $6.25 billion) to a children’s investment fund linked to Trump. Earlier this month, at a White House Mother’s Day event, Trump noted the Dell family donation and urged attendees to consider Dell products.
Michael Dell congratulated Donald Trump on his 2024 election victory and said he looked forward to “continued progress and opportunity under his leadership.” Dell has also joined Trump’s technology advisory committee.
The Defense Department reiterated that the contract resulted from a competitive process. Tanner said a comprehensive review—comparing GSA prices, competitive evaluations and department-wide value metrics—gave Dell the advantage. The contract is likely to be recorded as an example of a major government software procurement that pursued both cost savings and license consolidation.











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