Thank you, Joe, and good morning to everyone on our call. I want to start with a heartfelt thank you to my colleagues at Science Applications International Corporation for their focus, dedication, and empathy amidst a dynamic operating environment for the company and our customers. The strong financial results we delivered to close the year reflect our commitment to driving improved mission outcomes for our customers. I'll now provide an update on current market conditions and our perspective on the risks and opportunities from the administration's focus on accelerating the deployment of technology to drive greater efficiency across the government. To date, the financial impact to Science Applications International Corporation from recent executive orders and program cancellations across the government has been nominal, and our conversations with the administration to date have been productive. However, given how dynamic the environment has been, we believe it prudent to be prepared should conditions change. Prabu will discuss in greater detail in his remarks some of the actions we have taken to date. While our base case does not assume a meaningful change in the size of our addressable market in the coming years, we do expect changes to the procurement environment that will place a greater emphasis on mission criticality and the infusion of cutting-edge technology as well as outcome-based contracting. We view this as an acceleration, perhaps a rapid acceleration, of prior trends and one that our strategy and investments are designed to address. On slide four of our earnings presentation, we have shared several examples of programs which demonstrate our ability to build and integrate technology at the speed of the mission. I would like to call out a few of those examples today. For Customs and Border Protection, on the task PD program, we've rolled out facial and touchless fingerprint technology to over five thousand ICE agents, fully integrated with our cloud, machine learning, and AI capabilities, to rapidly identify shipments and travelers more efficiently and accurately for additional inspection. We have redesigned the license plate recognition system to a flexible open architecture system, which has relieved the agency from legacy vendor lock and has made seven hundred of these deployed systems configurable to weather conditions across more than one hundred of the busiest land border crossings and US border checkpoints nationwide. For the Space Force, on our GMAS program, we have leveraged our digital engineering and on-demand software development solutions to sustain and upgrade various radar systems in the United States and around the world at rates quicker and cheaper than the legacy providers. Our performance has contributed to GMAS ramping to full run-rate revenue faster than we had originally anticipated. In our commercial operating sector, we have a menu of offerings that customers can purchase on commercial terms. Revenue from our commercial operating sector has increased from less than one million in fiscal year 2022 to approximately forty-five million in fiscal year 2025 and a goal of approximately one hundred million by fiscal year 2028 with healthy margins consistent with commercial terms. Our top-selling offering is our DevSecOps sprints, which provide a skilled team of software developers ready to deploy, rapidly fix, and leave when the project is complete, typically in two-week increments, making them cost-efficient and agile, effectively sprints as a service. What makes our teams uniquely positioned to deliver this value is our role as a mission integrator with intimate and irreplaceable knowledge of customer missions. In other words, gritty tech, which underpins our legacy and undergirds our future. Lastly, we are currently assessing our cost-plus portfolio to determine with some specificity and appropriate guardrails how much of this work could transition to fixed-type contracting over time. As we have shared, we have performed quite well within our fixed-price portfolio over the years, beginning with our acquisition of Unisys Federal in fiscal year 2021. Our initial view is that a significant portion could migrate to fixed price over time, assuming that the scope of work is well-defined and opportunities for cost-plus carve-outs still exist. This is an opportunity for our industry and the right thing to do for our customers. I'll now provide an update on our enterprise growth strategy and business development trends. We delivered net bookings in the fourth quarter of $1.3 billion and $6.6 billion in fiscal year 2025, for a book-to-bill of 0.9. Not included in fourth-quarter bookings since it was awarded subsequent to quarter close, Science Applications International Corporation won the $1.8 billion system software lifecycle engineering contract, which is the next iteration of the software lifecycle development program, one of Science Applications International Corporation's largest programs by revenue. I am proud of our team at Huntsville for their efforts in securing this important program and for the continuation of our long-term relationship with the Army. As we show on slide five, we submitted bids totaling $28 billion in fiscal year 2025, well ahead of our initial plan of $22 billion. Our backlog of submitted bids increased to just over $20 billion at year-end, on a trailing twelve-month basis, over half of which is currently expected to award over the next two to three quarters. Our win on SSLE and our strong backlog of submitted bids provide visibility into driving our book-to-bill to our target of 1.2 by the first half of FY 2026. Of course, subject to the caveat, the timing may be impacted by the ongoing uncertainty facing our customers. While there have been some recent examples of procurement timelines being extended, it has not been broad-based. In addition, it is important to remember that procurement delays, while generally a headwind to bookings, also prolong recompete schedules such that the net effect to revenue and earnings will be far less material. I will now provide a review of our fourth quarter and full-year financials. We reported fourth-quarter revenue of $1.84 billion, an increase of 6% year-over-year, driven mainly by new program wins and on-contract growth, which offset program completions. Full-year fiscal year 2025 revenue of $7.48 billion represented 3.1% organic growth, which is at the high end of the guidance we provided at the start of the year. Fourth-quarter adjusted EBITDA of $177 million resulted in a margin of 9.6%. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA of $710 million produced a margin of 9.5%, which was 20 basis points ahead of guidance due primarily to strong program performance and lower incentive compensation expense compared to the prior year. Adjusted diluted earnings per share was $2.57 for the fourth quarter and $9.13 for the full year, benefiting from the strong operating performance and a lower effective tax rate. We delivered free cash flow of $236 million in the fourth quarter, resulting in free cash flow per share of just over $10. As Prabu will discuss, we expect to achieve our target for free cash flow per share of $11 in fiscal year 2026 and $12 in fiscal year 2027 and believe we can accomplish this in various revenue scenarios. Again, I want to thank everyone at Science Applications International Corporation for the dedication they've shown to the company, one another, and our customers. With that, I will turn the call over to Prabu.