Vetokite Army

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Vetokite Imperial Army
British Army crest.svg
Founded12 July 1421; 602 years ago (1421-07-12)
CountryVetok
AllegianceEmperor of the United Dominion of Vetok
TypeArmy
RoleLand warfare
Size53,392 active personnel (October 2023) 14,436 Territorial Reserve personnel (October 2023)
Part ofMinistryofDefence.svg Vetokite Armed Forces
EquipmentList of equipment of the Vetokite Army
Commanders
Commander-in-ChiefEmperor Súrvan Jaansma
Chief of the General Imperial StaffMarshal Patrick Delana, Lord Delana
Deputy Chief of the General Imperial StaffLieutenant General Carole Bester
Sergeant Major of the LancersWarrant Officer Class 1 Himán Carnassi
Insignia
War flag
Non-ceremonial flag
Flag of the British Army.svg
Logo


The Vetokite Army is the principal land warfare force of Vetok, and one of the four key warfighting parts of the Vetokite Armed Forces along with the Vetokite Imperial Navy, Vetokite Imperial Air Force and Vetokite Strategic Weapons Command.

19th Century to the dawn of the new millenium

At its height in the 1920's and throughout the Eastern Marches campaigns of the 1930's, the Army numbered fifty divisions. Half of these were infantry divisions, with a further eight armoured divisions, nine paraborne divisions and eight lancer divisions, for a total of 620,219 active personnel.

Modern Army

The Vetokite Army has been a volunteer force since 1997, following the abolition of national service by the hand of Emperor Vetok XII. Although there has been a standing reservists force since the late 1940's, only since the ending of conscription has it adopted a more formal and important role, with a sixth of the Army's combat brigades composed of Territorial personnel following Force Update 2020. With a stripped down composition, the Army of today has moved away from the hidebound ways of old

Equipment

main:List of equipment of the Vetokite Army

Infantry

The standard weapon of the Vetokite Army for full-time members since the early 2010's is the 7.62mm L16 assault rifle, which also serves as the basis of a widespread weapons family. Some of these variants include the G16C, a shortened carbine version of the standard G16 intended for use with Paraborne troops, aircrew, and vehicle crew. Both weapons are traditionally equipped with iron sights, though they can use various forms of other sights through the Picatinny rail atop the weapon. The G16 is also often equipped with the L90 under-barrel grenade launcher. Previous to this, the main service rifle was the indigenous L14 battle rifle, which still serves in the hands of training commands and also for the use of SOPECC detachments, and this weapon is still manufactured for foreign export as well.

Some soldiers are equipped with the 7.62mm L162 light support weapon which was also adopted in the early 2010's, though plans exist for a replacement with greater magazine capacity and ability for sustained fire. Support fire is otherwise provided by the L20 autocannon within dedicated fire-support teams, and indirect fire is provided by L90 57mm and L91 90mm mortars. Sniper rifles include the L118A1 7.62 mm, L115A3 and the AW50F, all manufactured by Accuracy International.[150] The British Army utilises the Glock 17 as its side arm.[146]

Anti tank guided weapons include the Javelin, the medium range anti-tank guided weapon replacement for Milan, with overfly and direct attack modes of operation, and the NLAW. The Next-generation Light Anti-tank Weapon (NLAW) is the first, non-expert, short-range, anti-tank missile that rapidly knocks out any main battle tank in just one shot by striking it from above.[151]

Armour

Artillery

Protected mobility

Engineers, utility and signals

Aviation

Current Deployments

Public Criticism

The Army has seen much criticism throughout its centuries of service. (Talk about the discomfort when one of the dynasty first implemented it, the involvement in the Tarro Affair of the late 1700's, the failings of the Eastern Marches war of the early 1900's)