List of current equipment of the Iraqi Ground Forces
The following is a list of equipment currently in use with the Iraqi Ground Forces. For a list of previous equipment, please see List of former equipment of the Iraqi Army.
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| Components |
|---|
| History |
| Equipment |
Infantry weapons
Handguns
| Model | Image | Caliber | Origin | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glock 17 | | Used by ISOF[1] | ||
| Smith & Wesson M&P | | 9×19mm Parabellum | [2] | |
| Tariq | | 9×19mm Parabellum | Manufactured under license as the Tariq. Establishments from 1981 onwards. Production stopped in 2003 and resumed from 2009 onwards. The internal design appears identical to the original pistols.[3] | |
| Zastava CZ 99 | | 9×19mm Parabellum | [4] | |
| Beretta 92 | | 9×19mm Parabellum | Used by ISOF[5] | |
| HS2000 | | 9×19mm Parabellum | Used by ISOF[6] |
Submachine guns and personal defence weapons
| Model | Image | Caliber | Origin | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FB Glauberyt | | 9×19mm Parabellum | 6,000 PM-98s were sold to Iraq in mid-2000.[3] |
Assault and battle rifles
| Model | Image | Caliber | Origin | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M16 | | 5.56×45mm NATO | Used since 2007.[7] | |
| M4 M4A1 | | 5.56×45mm NATO | [8] | |
| Remington R4 | 5.56×45mm NATO | [9] | ||
| Mk 14 Enhanced Battle Rifle | | 7.62×51mm NATO | Used by ISOF[10] | |
| SIG Sauer SIGM400 | | 5.56×45mm NATO | Used by ISOF[5] | |
| K2C carbine | | 5.56×45mm NATO | [11] | |
| FB Tantal | 5.45×39mm | 10,000 Tantals were sold to Iraq in mid-2000.[3] | ||
| AKM | | 7.62×39mm | Used by previous Iraqi army. Some captured from the Islamic State. Mostly kept in storage. Used in parades. | |
| Zastava M70 | 7.62×39mm | In limited use. |
Sniper and anti-materiel rifles
| Model | Image | Caliber | Origin | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M24 | | 7.62×51mm NATO | Used by ISOF[6] | |
| Orsis T-5000 | | 7.62×51mm NATO | Used by ISOF[6] | |
| Barrett M82 | | 7.62×51mm NATO | ||
| AM-50 Sayyad | | 7.62×51mm NATO | [12] | |
| PSG1 | 7.62×51mm NATO | [13] | ||
| Dragunov | | 7.62×54mmR | In limited use. | |
| PSL (rifle) | 7.62×54mmR | |||
| Tabuk Sniper Rifle | | 7.62×39mm |
Machine guns
| Model | Image | Caliber | Origin | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M249 | | 5.56×45mm NATO | Used by ISOF[14] | |
| M240 | | 7.62×51mm NATO | [15] | |
| MG 3 | | 7.62×51mm NATO | [16] | |
| RPK | | 7.62×39mm | Manufactured under license between 1981 and 2003.[17] Kept in storage. | |
| PK machine gun | | 7.62×54mmR | In limited use.[18] | |
| M2 Browning | | .50 BMG | [18] | |
| M134 | 7.62×51mm NATO | |||
| DShK | | 12.7×108mm | [18] |
Portable guided missiles
| Model | Image | Type | Origin | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FIM-92 Stinger | | Man-portable air-defense system | [19] | |
| BGM-71 TOW | | Wire-guided missile | ||
| HOT | | Wire-guided missile | [19] | |
| 9M113 Konkurs | | Wire-guided missile | [19] | |
| 9M133 Kornet | | Laser beam-riding missile | [20] |
Protective gear
| Model | Image | Origin | Type | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M80 | Combat helmet | Used by Iraqi Armed Forces from the early 1980s to 2010. Used mostly for training.[21] | ||
| MICH | | Combat helmet | Used by ISOF[22] | |
| PASGT | | Combat helmet | Standard personnel armor.[23] | |
| I OTV | | Bulletproof vest | Standard issue in combat and duty personnel. With different versions. |
Vehicles and artillery
| Name | Image | Origin | Type | In service | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tanks(1325) | |||||
| M1A1 Abrams | | Main battle tank | 487[24] | ||
| T-90S | | Main battle tank | 73[25] | ||
| T-72 Lion of Babylon | | Main battle tank | 478+[19] | T-72M/M1 | |
| T-55 | Main battle tank | 150[19] | |||
| Armoured recovery | |||||
| M88 Hercules | | Armoured recovery vehicle | 35+[19] | M-88A1/2 | |
| BREM-1 | | Armoured recovery vehicle | 180[19] | ||
| VT-55A | | Armoured recovery vehicle | 150[19] | ||
| T-54/55 | Armoured recovery vehicle | N/A[19] | |||
| Type-653 | Armoured recovery vehicle | N/A[19] | |||
Armoured fighting vehicles
| Name | Image | Origin | Type | In service | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infantry fighting vehicles(1470) | |||||
| BMP-3 | | Infantry fighting vehicle | 300[26][19] | BMP-3M Variant ordered in 2015 delivered in 2018-2019. | |
| BMP-1 | | Infantry fighting vehicle | 600[19] | ||
| BTR-4 | | Infantry fighting vehicle | 270[27][19] | ||
| VN22 | Infantry fighting vehicle | 200[28][29] | Localized version | ||
| BTR-80 | | Infantry fighting vehicle | 100[19] | BTR-80A | |
| Armoured personnel carrier (Tracked) | |||||
| M113 | | Armoured personnel carrier | 500[19] | M113A2 variant | |
| MT-LB / MT-LBu | Armoured personnel carrier | ≈400[19] | |||
| APC Talha | Armoured personnel carrier | 44[30] | In November 2004, the Iraqi Ministry of Defence signed a deal with HIT worth US$31 million in which it ordered 44 Talha APCs, 60 Mohafiz security vehicles and 300 Aahan Armoured Guard Posts making Iraq the first export customer for the Talha.[30] | ||
| Protected patrol vehicle | |||||
| TM-170 Barracuda | | Armoured personnel carrier | 12[19] | ||
| Caiman | | MRAP | 250[19] | ||
| Goretz-M | Armoured vehicle | N/A[19] | |||
| Cougar/ILAV Badger | | MRAP | 400[19] | ||
| International MaxxPro | | MRAP | 30[19] | ||
| Armoured utility vehicles | |||||
| Oshkosh M-ATV | | MRAP | ≈200 | Used by ISOF.[31] | |
| Otokar Akrep | | Infantry mobility vehicle | 400[19] | ||
| Mohafiz (vehicle) | Internal security vehicle / Infantry Mobility Vehicle | 60[32][30] | In November 2004, the Iraqi Ministry of Defence signed a deal with HIT worth US$31 million in which it ordered 44 Talha APCs, 60 Mohafiz security vehicles and 300 Aahan Armoured Guard Posts making Iraq the first export customer for the Mohafiz.[30] | ||
| M1117 | | Armoured personnel carrier | 324[33] | ||
| Armoured reconnaissance vehicles | |||||
| BRDM-2 | Reconnaissance vehicle | 18[19] | |||
| EE-9 Cascavel | | Reconnaissance vehicle | 35[19] | ||
| Utility vehicles | |||||
| HMMWV | Light utility vehicle | +10,000[34] | |||
| Promoter DAPC | | Infantry mobility vehicle | 50 | Used by ISOF, possible replacement for HMMWV.[35] | |
| Oshkosh M1070 | | Tank transporter and tractor unit | 60[36] | M1070A0 | |
| FMTV | | Heavy utility truck | ≈500[37] | ||
| HEMTT | | Heavy utility truck | 150 | [38] | |
| MTVR | Medium utility truck | 270[39] | |||
| Navistar 7000 | | Armoured personnel carrier | ≈300[40] | 115 Navistar 7000-MV on order in addition to unknown number in service.[41] | |
| M939 | | Armoured personnel carrier | ≈250 | ||
| KrAZ-6322 | | Armoured personnel carrier | 2150[42] | ||
| FV103 Spartan | | Armoured personnel carrier | 100[43] | ||
| Saxon | | Armoured personnel carrier | 60[43] | ||
| BTR-94 | Armoured personnel carrier | 50[43] | |||
Rockets and artillery
| Name | Image | Origin | Type | Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-propelled artillery | |||||
| Type-83 | 152mm self-propelled howitzer | 38+[19] | |||
| M109 | | 155mm self-propelled howitzer | 220[19] | M109A1/A2 | |
| AMX-GCT | 152mm self-propelled howitzer | 86[19] | |||
| 2S1 Gvozdika | | 152mm self-propelled howitzer | 90[44] | ||
| Towed artillery | |||||
| M-46/Type-59 | | 130mm howitzer | +100[19] | ||
| D-20 | | 152mm howitzer | +100[19] | ||
| Type-83 | 152mm howitzer | 50[19] | |||
| M198 | | 155mm howitzer | 160[19] | ||
| 2A36 Giatsint-B | | 155mm howitzer | +200[19] | ||
| Multiple rocket launcher | |||||
| Astros II MLRS | | Multiple rocket launcher | 66[45][46] | Built under license as the Sajil-60 | |
| BM-21 Grad | | Multiple rocket launcher | 300[19] | ||
| TOS-1 | | Multiple rocket launcher | 6+[19] | ||
| Type 63 | | Multiple rocket launcher | +200[19] | ||
Anti-aircraft
| KM-SAM | | Anti-aircraft | 8 on order[47][48] | ||
| Pantsir-S1 | | Anti-aircraft | 24[43] | ||
| TWQ-1 Avenger | | Anti-aircraft | 100[43] | ||
| MIM-23 Hawk | | Anti-aircraft | 50 | XXI variant | |
| Bofors 40 mm | | Anti-aircraft autocanon | 100[49] | Recently refurbished and made operational |
Radar systems
| Model | Image | Origin | Type | In service |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GM 403 | Mobile radar | 13[50][51] | ||
| GM 200 | | Mobile radar | 3[52] | |
| AN/MPQ-64 | | Mobile radar | Unknown | |
| AN/FPS-117 | | Mobile radar | Unknown | |
| AN/TPQ-37 | Mobile radar | Unknown | ||
| Beagle | Mobile radar | Unknown |
Army Aviation
These are aircraft in Iraqi Ground Forces command. For other aircraft see List of active aircraft of the Iraqi Air Force page.
| Aircraft | Image | Origin | Type | Variant | Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Combat helicopter | ||||||
| Eurocopter EC725 | | Combat search & rescue | 2[53] | 12 ordered[54] | ||
| Mil Mi-24 | Attack | Mi-35M | 23[55][19] | 12 optional order[56] | ||
| Mil Mi-28 | | Close air support/Anti-armor | Mi-28NE Mi-28UB | 17[57][19] | 19 optional order[56] | |
| T129 ATAK | Attack Helicopter | 12 planned[58] | ||||
| Utility/Transport helicopter | ||||||
| Aerospatiale Gazelle | | Utility | SA342 | 4+[19] | ||
| Bell 407 | Light utility | 40[59] | 5 optional order[56] | |||
| Eurocopter EC635 | | Germany | Utility/Light attack | 23[19] | ||
| Mil Mi-8/Mil Mi-17 | | Transport/Utility | 41[55] | |||
| Bell UH-1 | | Utility | UH-1H | 16[19] | ||
| Training/Reconnaissance | ||||||
| Bell 206 | | rotorcraft trainer | 10[19] | |||
| Bell OH-58 | | Scout/rotorcraft trainer | OH-58C | 10[19] | ||
| Bell 505 | | rotorcraft trainer | 15 optional order[56] | |||
| Drones | ||||||
| CH-5 | | Unmanned combat aerial vehicle | Unknown[60][61] | |||
| CH-4 | | Unmanned combat aerial vehicle | 12[19] | |||
| RQ-11 Raven | | unmanned aerial vehicle | 10 | Locally manufactured | ||
| N/A | unmanned aerial vehicle | Dozens | Locally manufactured | |||
See also
References
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- ^ "Smith & Wesson Fills M&P9 Pistol Order for Iraqi Military and Security Forces". ir.smith-wesson.com. Retrieved 2022-01-06.
- ^ a b c Jones, Richard (2010). Jane's Infantry Weapons. Coulsdon: Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0-7106-2869-5.
- ^ "First arms shipment bound for Iraq". 2008-06-03. Archived from the original on 2008-06-03. Retrieved 2022-01-07.
- ^ a b "ISOF Arms & Equipment Part 1 – Personal Equipment - Armament Research Services (ARES)". 2016-11-27. Retrieved 2022-01-07.
- ^ a b c "ISOF Arms & Equipment Part 2 – Precision Rifles - Armament Research Services (ARES)". 2017-04-21. Retrieved 2022-01-07.
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