The deal, which follows settlement of a related criminal case on Wednesday, means the company will again be able to bid for U.S. government work after a seven-year ban.

Agility also agreed to forgo administrative claims seeking $249 million in additional payments after pleading guilty to a criminal misdemeanor offense for theft of government funds, the Justice Department said in a statement.

The Defense Department's Defense Logistics Agency also will release a claim of $27.9 million against Agility and lift its suspension as a contractor, the statement said.

Agility was the largest supplier to the U.S. Army in the Middle East during the war in Iraq but has been banned from contracting after it was accused of defrauding the military on multibillion-dollar supply contracts.

At one stage, the contracts accounted for around 40 percent of Agility's revenues and also provided it with a 30 percent margin, analysts estimated at the time.

(Reporting by Eric Walsh; Editing by Bill Trott)