Milostian National Army: Difference between revisions
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|country= [[Milostia]] | |country= [[Milostia]] | ||
|allegiance= | |allegiance= | ||
|size= 238,000 nominal | |size= 238,000 nominal | ||
|command_structure= | |command_structure= | ||
|garrison= | |garrison= | ||
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==MNA Ground Force== | ==MNA Ground Force== | ||
In 2005, the MNA went to war with some modern equipment, but a force structure and operational doctrine fundamentally based on the lessons of the 1940's. It possessed 12 Infantry Divisions, 4 Mechanised Divisions, 2 Armoured Divisions, 6 Artillery Divisions, as well as a Republican Guards Corps of 2 Armoured Divisions, 2 Mechanised Divisions and an Airborne Division. | |||
The catastrophic Milostian defeat in the [[2005 Polnitsian War]] over the course of a three-day ground campaign fundamentally reshaped the doctrine and organisation of the MNA. Taking its cue from the 'brigadisation' reforms of Liothidia's [[People's Revolutionary Army Land Force (Liothidia)|PRA]], the MNA embarked upon a decade-long process of root and branch modernisation. Gone are the ponderous infantry divisions or the inflexible command and control doctrine of yesteryears. The modern MNA is a leaner, fully mechanised land force which incorporates many key technological developments indispensible to modern armies in the network-centric age and built around mobile combined arms brigade groups, which subdivide into battalion tactical teams with great latitude for independent action. At the same time, some traditional strengths, such as the use ''en masse'' in time and space of artillery and anti-aircraft weapons, remain standard operating procedure. The result is an force structure which, whilst smaller, is many times more lethal and effective than the pre-war force. | |||
===Higher organisation=== | ===Higher organisation=== | ||
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|{{Wp|M79 Osa}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||Reloadable AT launcher|| || | |{{Wp|M79 Osa}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||Reloadable AT launcher|| || | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|RPG-7| | |{{wp|RPG-7|PzF-07}}||{{flag|Liothidia}} ||AT launcher|| || | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|M90 Stršljen}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||AT launcher|| ||Elite units | |{{wp|M90 Stršljen}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||AT launcher|| ||Elite units | ||
Line 171: | Line 175: | ||
|{{Wp|9M133 Kornet|AT-14 Kornet}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Man-portable ATGM|| ||Elite units only | |{{Wp|9M133 Kornet|AT-14 Kornet}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Man-portable ATGM|| ||Elite units only | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{Wp|9K115-2 Metis-M|AT-13 Saxhorn 2}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Man-portable ATGM|| ||Equips the Guard Air Assault | |{{Wp|9K115-2 Metis-M|AT-13 Saxhorn 2}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Man-portable ATGM|| ||Equips the Guard Air Assault Brigade | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{Wp|T-12 antitank gun}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}|| || || Mostly employed by reserve formations | |{{Wp|T-12 antitank gun}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}|| || || Mostly employed by reserve formations | ||
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|{{wp|M-56 Howitzer}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||Field gun||105mm ||Mainly in reserve | |{{wp|M-56 Howitzer}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||Field gun||105mm ||Mainly in reserve | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|Gun-howitzer M84 NORA}} ||{{flag|Milostia}}||Towed gun||152mm|| | |{{wp|Gun-howitzer M84 NORA}} ||{{flag|Milostia}}||Towed gun||152mm|| Formerly used as a divisional-level piece. Largely relegated to reserve formations as a brigade-level weapon. | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp| | |{{wp|122 mm howitzer 2A18 (D-30)|D-30}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Towed gun || 122mm|| Mostly in reserve | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{ | |{{wp|130 mm towed field gun M1954 (M-46)|M-46}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Towed gun || 130mm||Two battalions per Independent Artillery Brigade | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{Wp| | |{{Wp|2S1 Gvozdika|PzH 12.2}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Self-propelled gun|| 122mm||Formerly used as a regimental-level piece. Largely relegated to reserve formations as a brigade-level weapon. | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{Wp| | |{{Wp|Sora 122mm}}||{{flag|Milostia}} ||Self-propelled gun|| 122mm||Primarily used as a brigade-level artillery piece | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|Nora B-52}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Self-propelled gun|| 155mm|| | |{{wp|Nora B-52}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Self-propelled gun|| 155mm||Primarily used as a brigade-level artillery piece | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|M-77 Oganj}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||Self-propelled MLRS|| 122mm/128mm rockets|| | |{{wp|M-77 Oganj}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||Self-propelled MLRS|| 122mm/128mm rockets||Brigade-level weapon | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|[http://www.yugoimport.com/en/proizvodi/kosava-whirlwind-truck-mounted-launcher-rocket-assisted-aerial-bombs Kosava Rocket-Assisted Aerial Bombs System]||{{flag|Milostia}}||Self-propelled rocket-assisted aerial bombs projector|| 100, 250 or 500kg aerial bombs|| | |[http://www.yugoimport.com/en/proizvodi/kosava-whirlwind-truck-mounted-launcher-rocket-assisted-aerial-bombs Kosava Rocket-Assisted Aerial Bombs System]||{{flag|Milostia}}||Self-propelled rocket-assisted aerial bombs projector|| 100, 250 or 500kg aerial bombs||Equips some independent battalions | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{Wp|M-87 Orkan}}||{{flag|Milostia}}|| MLRS||262mm rockets|| | |{{Wp|M-87 Orkan}}||{{flag|Milostia}}|| MLRS||262mm rockets||Two battalions per Independent Artillery Brigade | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|Koksan (artillery)|M-1978}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||Heavy artillery|| 170mm gun||One battalion per Independent Artillery Brigade | |{{wp|Koksan (artillery)|M-1978}}||{{flag|Milostia}}||Heavy artillery|| 170mm gun||One battalion per Independent Artillery Brigade | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|TOS-1|FrW-01}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Thermobaric rocket artillery||220mm|| | |{{wp|TOS-1|FrW-01}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Thermobaric rocket artillery||220mm||Equips some independent battalions | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|2S4 Tyulpan|2S4}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Heavy self-propelled mortar||240mm|| | |{{wp|2S4 Tyulpan|2S4}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Heavy self-propelled mortar||240mm||Equips some independent battalions | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|} | |} | ||
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|{{wp|OT M-60}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Tracked APC||All variants||Mostly in reserve | |{{wp|OT M-60}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Tracked APC||All variants||Mostly in reserve | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|BTR-70|TPZ-70}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Wheeled APC|| || | |{{wp|BTR-70|TPZ-70}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Wheeled APC|| ||Reserves | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|BOV (APC)|BOV}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Wheeled APC||All variants||Mostly in service with the Strategic Rocket Force Regiment, border guards, and the armed forces of various internal security apparatuses. | |{{wp|BOV (APC)|BOV}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Wheeled APC||All variants||Mostly in service with the Strategic Rocket Force Regiment, border guards, and the armed forces of various internal security apparatuses. | ||
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|{{Wp|BOV_(APC)#Variants|BOV-1}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Tank destroyer|| ||Armed with six AT-3D Sagger missiles [http://forum.valka.cz/files/bov-1.jpg in two launch baskets]. | |{{Wp|BOV_(APC)#Variants|BOV-1}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Tank destroyer|| ||Armed with six AT-3D Sagger missiles [http://forum.valka.cz/files/bov-1.jpg in two launch baskets]. | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|BOV M11}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Armoured reconnaissance vehicle|| ||To be introduced with the Guards | |{{wp|BOV M11}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Armoured reconnaissance vehicle|| ||To be introduced with the Guards Corps | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|BVP M-80}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Infantry fighting vehicle|| || | |{{wp|BVP M-80}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Infantry fighting vehicle|| || | ||
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|{{wp|M-84AS}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Main battle tank|| || Roughly 800 in service, equips elite units | |{{wp|M-84AS}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Main battle tank|| || Roughly 800 in service, equips elite units | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{Wp|T-55|Pz-55}} || {{flag|Liothidia}}||Main battle tank|| || | |{{Wp|T-55|Pz-55}} || {{flag|Liothidia}}||Main battle tank|| ||Reserves | ||
|----- | |||
|{{wp|2S25 Sprut-SD|Lufsturmpanzer-125}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Airborne light tank|| ||One company in service with the Guards Airborne Brigade | |||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp| | |{{wp|BMD-1|Lufsturmpanzer-1}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Airborne infantry fighting vehicle|| ||In service with the Guards Airborne Brigade | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp|VIU-55 Munja}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Heavy engineering vehicle|| || | |{{wp|VIU-55 Munja}}||{{Flag|Milostia}}||Heavy engineering vehicle|| || | ||
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|[[Tubong Tu-64|Tu-64]]||{{flag|Liothidia}}||STOL medium transport|| ||15 | |[[Tubong Tu-64|Tu-64]]||{{flag|Liothidia}}||STOL medium transport|| ||15 | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
|{{wp| | |{{wp|Antonov An-12|Ze-75}}||{{flag|Liothidia}}||Medium transport|| ||12 | ||
|----- | |----- | ||
| | | |
Latest revision as of 02:46, 30 December 2019
Milostian National Army | |
---|---|
Country | Milostia |
Size | 238,000 nominal |
The Milostian National Army ('MNA') is the regular national armed forces of the Milostian state, one of the nation's three armed forces alongside the Ecclesia Guard, and the Martyr's Militia. It is composed of the Milostian National Army Ground Force, the Milostian National Army Air Force, the Milostian National Army Navy and the Milostian Army Strategic Rocket Force. It is manned by conscription - male Milostian citizens are compelled by law to serve for three years, and females two years. In times of war, it may be augmented by whatever militia and paramilitary forces which can be mustered in an emergency.
MNA Ground Force
In 2005, the MNA went to war with some modern equipment, but a force structure and operational doctrine fundamentally based on the lessons of the 1940's. It possessed 12 Infantry Divisions, 4 Mechanised Divisions, 2 Armoured Divisions, 6 Artillery Divisions, as well as a Republican Guards Corps of 2 Armoured Divisions, 2 Mechanised Divisions and an Airborne Division.
The catastrophic Milostian defeat in the 2005 Polnitsian War over the course of a three-day ground campaign fundamentally reshaped the doctrine and organisation of the MNA. Taking its cue from the 'brigadisation' reforms of Liothidia's PRA, the MNA embarked upon a decade-long process of root and branch modernisation. Gone are the ponderous infantry divisions or the inflexible command and control doctrine of yesteryears. The modern MNA is a leaner, fully mechanised land force which incorporates many key technological developments indispensible to modern armies in the network-centric age and built around mobile combined arms brigade groups, which subdivide into battalion tactical teams with great latitude for independent action. At the same time, some traditional strengths, such as the use en masse in time and space of artillery and anti-aircraft weapons, remain standard operating procedure. The result is an force structure which, whilst smaller, is many times more lethal and effective than the pre-war force.
Higher organisation
The MNAGF is the largest component of the MNA. It is the regular national army of the Milostian government and its major units answer directly to the MNA General Staff.
In peacetime, the main force of the MNAGF is comprised of three Armies, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd, each comprised of two Corps, plus an independent formation known as the Army Guards Corps. The maneouvre elements of the Corps of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Armies each consist of three Mechanised and two Tank Brigades.
In each corps, two of the five brigades are classified as 'Category A' formations, meaning that they are manned at close to 95% strength in peacetime and capable of immediate offensive operations. Another two brigades are classified as 'Category B', meaning that they are manned at 50% strength and require an infusion of reservists to be capable of operations. The single remaining brigade is classified as a 'Category C' unit, meaning that it is maintained only at cadre strength in peacetime.
A Mechanised Brigade consists of some 4,500 personnel, and possesses three Mechanised Battalions (typically two of wheeled APC's, one of tracked IFV's), a Tank Battalion (with 40 main battle tanks in four companies), two Mobile Artillery Battalions, a Rocket Artillery Battalion, a SAM Battalion, an Air Defence Battalion (equipped with SPAAG), an Anti-tank Battalion, an Engineer Battalion, a Supply Battalion, a Maintenance Battalion, a Reconnaissance Company and an NBC Company.
A Tank Brigade is organised on similar lines, except that its ratio of Tank to Mechanised Battalions is reversed to 3:1 of the former to the latter, and it omits the Anti-Tank Battalion. The Tank Battalions in a Tank Brigade only have three companies instead of four, for a total of 30 MBT's per battalion and 90 in the entire brigade.
Aside from Tank and Mechanised Brigades, a Corps contains a number of support elements, including one to two Artillery Brigades, a Ballistic Missile Battalion, a SAM Brigade, an Engineer Brigade and a Combat Support Brigade.
The Republican Guards Corps provides the MNA garrison for the capital city. It consists of a high proportion of professional, full-time personnel, and typically are the first to receive newly-introduced equipment. It consists of three Tank Brigades, two Mechanised Brigades, and the Air Assault Brigade. The latter is a unique formation which is trained in conducting helicopter-mobile operations and, at least partially, parachute operations. It has two mechanised and two light infantry Air Assault Battalions.
Battalion Tactical Groups
The basis for the MNAGF's tactical maneouvre warfare doctrine is the Battalion Tactical Group. These are ad hoc formations, created around battalion headquarters by the brigade staff, and incorporates tanks, infantry, artillery, engineering and other assets in a combined-arms formation tailor-made to fulfill its tactical mission.
Small unit organisation
A typical Mechanised platoon consists of thirty personnel – a platoon command team consisting of a platoon commander, a platoon sergeant and a radio operator, six vehicle drivers and gunners, and 21 dismounts. The dismounts are divided into three squads of seven, each accompanied by one member of the platoon command team. Each platoon is issued one M76 or M91 marksman rifle.
Each rifle squad consists of a machine gun team of three, equipped with one M72 light machine gun or, in the alternative, one M84 medium machine gun or M53 medium machine gun. It also has four riflemen armed with M70 rifles plus one to two 40mm underbarrel grenade launchers. When fighting in the open, the squad deploys as a blunt wedge formation, with the machine gun team forward, with two pairs of riflemen covering its flanks slightly to the rear, waiting for the enemy to be suppressed before moving forward to assault with automatic fire and bayonets. In close quarters fighting, such as in urban areas, MNA infantry are trained to operate in groups of four.
General Staff Reconnaissance Bureau
The GIB ('Generalstaba Biro Izvrsni'), or 'General Staff Reconnaissance Bureau' is the intelligence arm of the MNA. It serves three primary functions. The first is to operate part of Milostia's foreign HUMINT network by running agents to gather military intelligence, although it adheres to a strict division of labour with the Ecclesia, with the latter having the role of collecting intelligence on political and other non-military matters. The second is to coordinate the activities of the intelligence units of the army's front-line combat formations, most notably those of its three 'frontier' armies. The third and newest is to manage the MNA's increasingly sophisticated media warfare and cyberwarfare operations, the Unit 173, which has become the likely suspect of several major high profile hacking incidents in Belisaria.
General Staff Spesnag
The Spesnag (from "specijalne snage" - special forces) are the special forces of the Milostian People's Army. Its members are trained in special reconnaissance, unconventional warfare, covert operations, parachuting, sabotage and terrorism. It works in close conjunction with the Guard Air Assault Division in its operations, which may be tasked with providing heavy reinforcements to Spesnag operations.
Each of the three 'frontier' field armies of the MNA possesses one battalion-sized Spesnag unit of roughly 500 personnel. They are directly subordinated to the field army's intelligence formation and are tasked with long range infiltration, reconnaissance, sabotage and assassination within the army's operational zone. Two more battalions are held in reserve by the General Staff Reconnaissance Bureau to deal with unexpected contingencies.
MNA Air Force
The MNAAF consists of four main components: the tactical ‘fast jets’ force, the utility and transport force, the helicopter force and the air defence force.
For years, the MNAAF had relied on three main tactical fast jets of Liothidian origin – the Fe-20 interceptor, the Fe-19 strike aircraft and the Fe-26 ground attack aircraft. In the 1990’s, a new multirole fighter of indigenous design, the Novi Avion began to enter service. Due to the latter’s relatively high cost, it is mostly reserved for elite, high readiness squadrons. Also available are a substantial number of J-22 Orao trainers, which would be employed as attack aircraft in times of war. In air operations, these fast jets are supported by Tu-64 AWACS aircraft.
The helicopter force is intended to work in close conjunction with the MNAGF. It consists of medium and heavy lift helicopters, as well as and attack helicopters (DM-20KH).
The air defence force is charged with protecting vital areas of the republic from enemy air attack. It is separate from the MNAGF’s own air defence units, which are responsible for providing protection for mobile ground formations. Accordingly, it is equipped with weapons with greater reach, albeit lesser mobility than those available to the MNAGF, such as the HQ-9 batteries which protect the Capital Garrison District.
The MNAN is the most neglected of the MNA’s three armed services, having been starved of funds in order to enable the modernisation of the MNAGF and MNAAF. Its most modern units are the trio of Ruegen-class submariness imported from Liothidia, supported by frigates, missile boats and older diesel submarines of indigenous design.
The MNAN is also responsible for defending the republic’s ports and coastlines. Its primary means of coastal defence consists of mobile missile batteries armed with Styx missiles, although a few more modern elements use imported Kh-35. Rumours that 3M-54 Klub missiles are deployed in the coastal defence role, hidden in containers, is unconfirmed.
The MNA Naval Infantry, a battalion-sized force trained in amphibious warfare, is a part of the MNAN. It is theoretically equipped with a number of small landing craft. Its true readiness in operating as a marine unit is unknown to most international observers, although it is reputedly one of the more professional and combat-ready of the MNA's ground units.
Strategic Rocket Force
The MNASRF is an independent arm of service directly subordinated to the General Staff. It is the republic’s primary means of strategic deterrence against ‘regime change’ actions from hostile and ‘imperialistic’ foreign powers. It is equipped with a plethora of indigenous and imported ballistic missiles, giving it the means to deliver payloads against the urban centres of Estoni’s strategic adversaries in the area.
Although the current status of the Milostia nuclear program is not known to any degree of exactitude to NATA intelligence apparatuses, Milostia is the acknowledged possessor of significant quantities of nerve agents. These include GA (Tabun), GB (Sarin), VX and the potent ‘Novinara’. The Milostian arsenal also includes blistering agents such as Sulfur Mustard and blood agents such as Cyanogen chloride, the latter being regarded as especially dangerous owing to its ability to degrade the effectiveness of CRBN filters. The Milostian military-scientific establishment is also known to have experimented with biological agents such as Anthrax, Small Pox and various viral hemorrhagic fevers.
The Rocket Guards Regiment is a professional infantry unit directly under the command of the SRF rather than the Ground Force, intended to provide security to the SRF's launch sites and storage facilities for weapons of mass destruction. It is a rapid reaction force of light mechanised infantry, equipped with the BOV family of wheeled armoured vehicles and staffed by some of the most professional and politically-reliable of the MNA's personnel.
Equipment
Small arms
Name | Origin | Type | Ammunition | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
M75 hand grenade | Milostia | Fragmentation grenade | N/A | |
CZ 99 | Milostia | Pistol | 9x19 parabellum | |
M88 | Milostia | Pistol | 9x19 parabellum | |
M57 | Milostia | Pistol | 7.62×25mm Tokarev | |
M56 Submachine gun | Template:Country data Mlostia | Sub-machine gun | 7.62×25mm | |
Master FLG | Milostia | Sub-machine gun | 9x19 parabellum | |
M92 | Milostia | Carbine | 7.62x39 | Widely distributed to rear personnel, pilots and drivers. Suppressed version used by special forces. |
HP9-1 | Mutul | Shotgun | 12 gauge | |
M70 | Milostia | Assault rifle | 7.62x39 | Main service rifle, being upgraded with Kobra reflex sights |
M76 | Milostia | Marksman rifle | 7.92x57 | |
M91 | Milostia | Marksman rifle | 7.62x54mmR | |
M48 | Milostia | Sniper rifle | 7.92x57 | Accurised and fitted with synthetic stock, suppressor, Harris bipod and 3-9x42 variable-zoom scope, used in small quantities by dedicated sniper teams |
M93 Black Arrow | Milostia | Anti-material rifle | 12.7x108 | |
M72 | Milostia | Light machine gun/light support weapon | 7.62x39 | Some 75-rounds drum magazines and 40-rounds extended box magazines are supplied |
M53 Sarac | Milostia | General purpose machine gun | 7.92x57 | |
M84 | Milostia | General purpose machine gun | 7.62×54mmR | |
M02 Coyote | Milostia | Heavy machine gun | 12.7x99 | |
BGP 40 | Milostia | underbarrel grenade launcher | 40mm grenade | |
M93 | Milostia | Automatic grenade launcher | 30mm grenade | |
M80 Zolja | Milostia | Disposable AT launcher | ||
M79 Osa | Milostia | Reloadable AT launcher | ||
PzF-07 | Liothidia | AT launcher | ||
M90 Stršljen | Milostia | AT launcher | Elite units | |
RPO-A | Liothidia | Thermobaric launcher |
Mines
Name | Origin | Type | Ammunition | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
PROM-1 | Milostia | Bouncing anti-personnel mine | N/A | |
PMA-2 mine | Milostia | Anti-personnel mine | N/A | |
TMM-1 mine | Milostia | Anti-tank mine | N/A | |
MRUD | Milostia | Directional anti-personnel mine | N/A |
Anti-tank weapons (crew-served)
Name | Origin | Type | Ammunition | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bumbar | Milostia | Light man-portable ATGM | Special forces | |
AT-3D Sagger | Milostia | Man-portable ATGM | Main anti-tank missile. Mostly modernised to 2T5 standard with radio-mediated SACLOS guidance and tandem warhead capable of defeating ERA and penetrating 1,000mm+ of RHA. | |
AT-14 Kornet | Liothidia | Man-portable ATGM | Elite units only | |
AT-13 Saxhorn 2 | Liothidia | Man-portable ATGM | Equips the Guard Air Assault Brigade | |
T-12 antitank gun | Liothidia | Mostly employed by reserve formations | ||
Sprut anti-tank gun | Liothidia | |||
M60 recoilless gun | Milostia | Mostly employed by reserve formations |
Anti-air systems
Name | Origin | Type | Ammunition | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
FlaRak-2 | Liothidia | MANPAD | Battalion-level AA weapon | |
M55 | Milostia | Towed triple 20mm AA gun | Reserve formations, mostly in storage | |
BOV-3 | Milostia | SPAAG/SAM combination system | Regimental mobile AA system, mainly the HS M09 BOV-3 version equipped with eight Strela-2 missiles and three 20mm autocannons. | |
SA-8 Gecko | Rhynovia/ Milostia | Short range SAM system | Main division-level air defence weapon of the MNAGF, production license purchased from Communist Rhynovia. | |
SA-3 Goa | Liothidia | Medium range SAM system | Employed as static defence of strategic locales | |
SA-6 Gainful | Liothidia | Medium-range SAM system | Employed as semi-static defence of strategic locales | |
FlaRak-16 | Liothidia | Medium-range mobile SAM system | Employed by Army-level air defence units of the MNAGF | |
FlaRak-9 | Liothidia | Long-range area-defence SAM | One regiment employed to protect the Capital Garrison District. | |
AZP S-60 | Liothidia | 57mm anti-aircraft gun | Used by local AA gun units |
Artillery
Name | Origin | Type | Ammunition | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
M57 mortar | Milostia | Commando mortar | 60mm | Company-level weapon for infantry units |
Mortar 120mm M95 Long Range | Milostia | Heavy mortar | 120mm | Battalion-level weapon for infantry units |
Universal Mortar UB M52 | Milostia | Heavy mortar | 120mm | Mainly used by reserve units at the battalion level |
M-56 Howitzer | Milostia | Field gun | 105mm | Mainly in reserve |
Gun-howitzer M84 NORA | Milostia | Towed gun | 152mm | Formerly used as a divisional-level piece. Largely relegated to reserve formations as a brigade-level weapon. |
D-30 | Liothidia | Towed gun | 122mm | Mostly in reserve |
M-46 | Liothidia | Towed gun | 130mm | Two battalions per Independent Artillery Brigade |
PzH 12.2 | Liothidia | Self-propelled gun | 122mm | Formerly used as a regimental-level piece. Largely relegated to reserve formations as a brigade-level weapon. |
Sora 122mm | Milostia | Self-propelled gun | 122mm | Primarily used as a brigade-level artillery piece |
Nora B-52 | Milostia | Self-propelled gun | 155mm | Primarily used as a brigade-level artillery piece |
M-77 Oganj | Milostia | Self-propelled MLRS | 122mm/128mm rockets | Brigade-level weapon |
Kosava Rocket-Assisted Aerial Bombs System | Milostia | Self-propelled rocket-assisted aerial bombs projector | 100, 250 or 500kg aerial bombs | Equips some independent battalions |
M-87 Orkan | Milostia | MLRS | 262mm rockets | Two battalions per Independent Artillery Brigade |
M-1978 | Milostia | Heavy artillery | 170mm gun | One battalion per Independent Artillery Brigade |
FrW-01 | Liothidia | Thermobaric rocket artillery | 220mm | Equips some independent battalions |
2S4 | Liothidia | Heavy self-propelled mortar | 240mm | Equips some independent battalions |
Armoured fighting vehicles
Name | Origin | Type | Variants | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
IMV 0.75 | Milostia | Light general purpose vehicle | ||
Spähwagen-2 | Liothidia | Wheeled armoured reconnaissance vehicle | ||
9P148 tank destroyer | Liothidia | Wheeled tank destroyer | BRDM-2 fitted with AT-5 missiles | |
OT M-60 | Milostia | Tracked APC | All variants | Mostly in reserve |
TPZ-70 | Liothidia | Wheeled APC | Reserves | |
BOV | Milostia | Wheeled APC | All variants | Mostly in service with the Strategic Rocket Force Regiment, border guards, and the armed forces of various internal security apparatuses. |
BOV-1 | Milostia | Tank destroyer | Armed with six AT-3D Sagger missiles in two launch baskets. | |
BOV M11 | Milostia | Armoured reconnaissance vehicle | To be introduced with the Guards Corps | |
BVP M-80 | Milostia | Infantry fighting vehicle | ||
M-84 | Milostia | Main battle tank | ||
M-84AS | Milostia | Main battle tank | Roughly 800 in service, equips elite units | |
Pz-55 | Liothidia | Main battle tank | Reserves | |
Lufsturmpanzer-125 | Liothidia | Airborne light tank | One company in service with the Guards Airborne Brigade | |
Lufsturmpanzer-1 | Liothidia | Airborne infantry fighting vehicle | In service with the Guards Airborne Brigade | |
VIU-55 Munja | Milostia | Heavy engineering vehicle | ||
PP-64 | Liothidia | Pontoon bridge | ||
MT-55 | Liothidia | Armoured bridgelayer | ||
Tpz-152 | Liothidia | Wheeled-APC | Mainly reserve/paramilitary use |
Rotary-wing aviation
Name | Origin | Type | Variants | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dem-20KH | Liothidia | Attack/utlity helicopter | 60 | |
Dem-11H | Liothidia | Medium lift helicopter | ||
Dem-80HK | Liothidia | Heavy lift helicopter |
Drones
Description! style="text-align: left; background: #aaccab;"| Name | Origin | Type | Variants | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Vrabac Mini UAV | Milostia | Light drone | ||
Pegaz 011 | Milostia | Medium drone |
Fixed-wing aviation
Name | Origin | Type | Variants | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fe-20 | Liothidia | Fighter-bomber | Built under license until 1997. Being upgraded en masse to the Bison configuration | 150 (120 in reserve) |
Fe-19 | Liothidia | Strike aircraft | 60 (48 in reserve) | |
Fe-26 | Liothidia | Ground attack aircraft | 48 | |
Novi Avion | Milostia | Multirole fighter | 96 | |
J-22 Orao | Milostia | Trainer/light attack aircraft | 84 | |
Tu-62 | Liothidia | STOL AEW&C aircraft | 9 | |
Tu-64 | Liothidia | STOL medium transport | 15 | |
Ze-75 | Liothidia | Medium transport | 12 | |
Name | Origin | Type | Variants | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kotor-class frigate | Milostia | Coastal frigate | 4 in service, re-armed with 16x Kh-35 in lieu of Styx missiles | |
Končar-class missile boat | Milostia | Missile boat | 5 in service, equipped with Kh-35 | |
Kralj-class missile boat | Milostia | Missile boat | 4 in service, equipped with Kh-35 | |
Ruegen-class submarine | Liothidia | Diesel-electric submarine | 3 in service, rumoured to be upgraded with 3M-54 Klub missiles in 2015-2016. | |
Sava-class submarine | Milostia | Diesel-electric submarine | 2 | |
Heroj-class submarine | Milostia | Diesel-electric submarine | 2 | |
Gersfeld-class landing craft | Liothidia | Small landing craft/coastal mine-layer | 4 in service | |
Mirna-class patrol boat | Milostia | Patrol boat | 9 in service | |
SS-N-2 Styx | Liothidia | Anti-ship missile | Equips most coastal defence batteries | |
Kh-35 | Liothidia | Anti-ship missile | Equips a number of modernised coastal defence batteries |
Ballistic missiles
Name | Origin | Type | Variants | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
OTR-21 Tochka | Liothidia | Short-range ballistic missile | Standard battlefield ballistic missile employed by the MNAGF, 70-185km | |
BM-4 SCUD-B | Liothidia | Theatre ballistic missile | 300km | |
BM-6 SCUD-E | Milostia | Theatre ballistic missile | 500km | |
BM-7 SCUD-F | Milostia | Medim range ballistic missile | 1,200km | |
BM-25 | Milostia | Mobile IRBM | 4,000km |