Several thousand Boeing machinists in the Midwest who assemble military aircraft and weapons voted Thursday to approve a new contract, ending a three-month strike that saw them reject four earlier offers from the company.

The breakthrough five-year labor agreement includes a 24% wage hike across the life of the contract and a $6.000 signing bonus, according to the union representing the 3.200 workers who walked off the job on Aug. 4.

“We’re proud of what our members have fought for together and are ready to get back to building the world’s most advanced military aircraft,” the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers said in a statement.

With their new contract in hand, the machinists are set to return to work Sunday at manufacturing plants in the Missouri cities of St. Louis and St. Charles, as well as in Mascoutah, Illinois. The workers build fighter jets, weapons systems and the U.S. Navy’s first carrier-based unmanned aircraft at those facilities.

Boeing said in a statement that it looks forward to “bringing our full team back together.”

While the strike was smaller than last year’s walkout by 33.000 Boeing workers who build commercial jetliners, it still threatened to slow the aerospace company’s efforts to regain its financial footing. Boeing’s Defense, Space & Security division makes up more than a third of its revenue.

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