The Department of Defense awarded six separate defense contracts Wednesday, worth $960 million in total. Defense contractor Northrop Grumman (NOC 2.23%) won two of them.

The smaller of the two awards, worth $30.8 million to Northrop, came in the form of a contract modification calling upon the company to provide unspecified "continued logistic support services" to the U.S. Army through Jan. 31, 2015.

The larger award, worth $750 million, was easily the largest contract awarded Wednesday, consuming more than 78% of all funds on offer. This award modified a previously awarded indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity, 10-year contract running from Nov. 21, 2005 through Nov. 21, 2015, under which Northrop will perform research, development, testing, and evaluation services for the development of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency's Ballistic Missile Defense System's Command, Control, Battle Management, and Communications division.

Northrop will support all information technology, facilities, ground and flight tests, warfighter wargames and exercises, and modeling and simulation work conducted by BMDS, and will in particular support the Ballistic Missile Defense Network Operations and Security Center, the Joint Functional Command Component for Integrated Missile Defense, and the 100th Missile Defense Brigade.

Originally valued at $2.5 billion, this contract will now be worth $3.25 billion to Northrop Grumman as a result of this contract modification.