Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Ejército Serbio. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Ejército Serbio. Mostrar todas las entradas

domingo, 19 de enero de 2020

Modernización de los IFV M-80A serbios

Serbian Army plans to modernize its fleet of BVP M-80A tracked IFV Infantry Fighting Vehicles

Army Recognition

Serbian army plans to modernize its fleet of BVP-M80A, a tracked armored IFV (Infantry Fighting Vehicle) that enters in service with the Serbian Army in 1982. The BVP-M80A is an improved variant of the M-80 IFV which was seen for the first time in public during a parade in Belgrade in May 1975.


A modernized version of Serbian BVP M-80A tracked armored IFV Infantry Fighting Vehicle during a demonstration in December 2019, Serbia. (Picture source Serbian MoD)

At the end of December 2019, Serbian Center for Weapons and Military Equipment Testing has presented a modernized version of the BVP M-80A during a live demonstration that was attended by the Serbian Minister of Defense Aleksandar Vulin.

The BVP-M80A is a backbone of the Mechanized Infantry Units of the Serbian Armed Forces, and its modernization is a priority for the Military Technical Institute’s development along with the Serbian Defense Industry.

One of the basic requirements for modernization is to significantly increase the level of ballistic protection of this device and to increase the firepower – Miloradović explains, adding that in order to increase the ballistic protection of the armored body, a complete reorganization of the interior space and elements for the accommodation of the crew of the vehicle was carried out and to compensate for the increase in the vehicle mass, the engine power was increased.

The modernized version of the BVP-M80A has new ballistic protection and new firepower including a new 30mm automatic cannon and new anti-tank launcher systems able to fire modernized 2F and 2T Malyutka anti-tank guided missiles. The roof of the turret is also equipped with a new optoelectronic system with a long-range thermal imaging camera. The previous version of the BVP M-80 is armed with a Hispano-Suiza HS.804 20mm automatic cannon that has an effective range of about 1500 meters and a twin launcher for the Yugoslav-built Sagger ATGM Anti-Tank Guided Missile.

Colonel Zvonko Marić of the Planning and Development Department of the General Staff of the Serbian Armed Forces points out three main reasons why the Serbian Armed Forces submitted a request for modernization of the BVP M-80A infantry fighting vehicle to the Military Technical Institute.

The first reason is that there is a respectable number of such assets with the Land Forces and the Land Forces have high hopes for these assets in the future. The second task is to significantly improve the combat capabilities of this vehicle, thus widening the technological gap between the generational armaments, and we are witnessing that the surrounding countries are also arming themselves with or modernizing such or similar assets, which would be the third reason why all this is happening – says Colonel Marić.

miércoles, 2 de octubre de 2013

Foto y video: Cañones argentinos contra el ejército serbio

Citer L33 de 155 mm operando en manos del Ejército Croata en 1995

La fotografía corresponde al momento en que la artillería croata abre fuego contra posiciones del Ejército de la autoproclamada República Serbia de Krajina (RSK) durante la operación "Flash/Bljesak", que tuvo lugar entre el 1 y el 3 de mayo de 1995. Este ataque permitió recuperar la ciudad de Okučani y cerca de 558 km cuadrados de territorio croata ocupado y limpiado étnicamente por las fuerzas serbias entre 1991 y 1993 con el apoyo del ejército de Belgrado. 


Army Photos 

El siguiente video corresponde a la operación "Storm/Oluja", que se inició el 4 de agosto de 1995 y que es considerada la mayor operación militar en Europa desde la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Esta ofensiva terminó con la caída de todos los reductos serbios en territorio croata y la disolución de la RSK. En esta operación, los cañones actuaron en el denominado "Frente Norte", acompañando los avances del Ejército Croata sobre Petrinja, Banija y Hrvatska Kostajnica hasta la rendición del 21 Korpus - Kordunaški (21º Cuerpo Kordun) del Ejército de la RSK, en la localidad de Glina. 



En ambas ocasiones, estas piezas de artillería fueron parte de la dotación de la 18ª Topnički Divizijun Varaždin (18ª División de Artillería Varazdin) y, al igual que la mayoría de los sistemas de artillería croatas (de tubo y cohetes) de la época, contaron con la asistencia de UAVs para la localización y asignación de sus blancos, lo que les otorgó una enorme ventaja para el fuego de contrabatería sobre la artillería serbia.