The following is a list of former equipment used by the Iraqi Ground Forces. For a list of current equipment, please see List of current equipment of the Iraqi Ground Forces.
For a list of Former Iraqi Air Force equipment, please see Former Iraqi Air Force equipment.
Pre-1958 equipment
editSmall arms
editHandguns
editCountry of Name | Country of Origin |
---|---|
Webley Revolver | United Kingdom |
Submachine guns
editCountry of Name | Country of Origin |
---|---|
Sterling L2A3 | United Kingdom |
Rifles
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
Lee–Enfield | United Kingdom |
Light machine guns
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
Bren light machine gun | United Kingdom |
Lewis gun | United Kingdom |
Rocket launchers
editCountry of Name | Country of Origin |
---|---|
M20 Super Bazooka | United States |
Tanks and tankettes
editSPG
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
15 cm sFH 13/1 (Sf) Geschützwagen Lorraine Schlepper (f) | France Nazi Germany |
Аrmored cars
editCars
editCountry of Name | Country of Origin |
---|---|
Land Rover Series I LWB | United Kingdom |
Dodge Power Wagon W100 | United States |
Willys M38 | United States |
DUKW | United States |
Austin Champ | United Kingdom |
Trucks
editCountry of Name | Country of Origin |
---|---|
Chevrolet C15 | United States |
White/ Corbitt Model 666 | United States |
AEC Militant Mk.1 | United Kingdom |
Tractors
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
M4 high-speed tractor | United States |
Ford FGT | United States |
Diamond T-980 | United States |
Thornycroft Antar MK.2 | United Kingdom |
Engineering vehicles
editCountry of Name | Country of Origin |
---|---|
British made folding boat carrier based on unknown truck | United Kingdom |
Howitzers
editAA guns
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
Bofors 40 mm gun | United Kingdom |
Mortars
editCountry of Name | Country of Origin |
---|---|
Ordnance ML 3-inch mortar | United Kingdom |
1958–2003 equipment
editSmall arms
editHandguns
editName | Country of Origin | Caliber | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
TT-33[1][2] | Soviet Union | 7.62×25mm Tokarev | |
Type 51[3] | China | 7.62×25mm Tokarev | Chinese copy of the Tokarev TT. |
Makarov PM[1] | Soviet Union | 9×18mm Makarov | |
Beretta M1951[4] | Italy | 9×19mm Parabellum | |
Tariq pistol[4] | Iraq | 9×19mm Parabellum | Licensed copy of the Beretta M1951. |
Browning Hi-Power[5] | Belgium | 9×19mm Parabellum | |
CZ-75[5] | Czechoslovakia | 9×19mm Parabellum |
Submachine guns
editName | Country of Origin | Caliber | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
M84 | Yugoslavia | .32 ACP | Yugoslav copy of the Škorpion vz. 61 built under license.[6] |
Assault rifles
editName | Country of Origin | Caliber | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
AK-47[2] | Soviet Union | 7.62×39mm | |
AKM[2] | Soviet Union | 7.62×39mm | |
MPi-KMS-72[7][page needed] | East Germany | 7.62×39mm | |
AK-63[7][page needed] | Hungary | 7.62×39mm | |
Type 56 | China | 7.62×39mm | |
vz. 58 | Czechoslovakia | 7.62×39mm | |
PM md. 63/65[8] | Romania | 7.62×39mm | |
Zastava M70 | Yugoslavia | 7.62×39mm | M70AB folding stock variant used.[6] |
Tabuk 7.62mm assault rifle | Iraq | 7.62×39mm | Locally produced copy of the AKM, it can fire rifle grenades.[6][9][10] |
Tabuk 5.56mm assault rifle | Iraq | 5.56×45mm NATO | Locally produced copy of the AKM or AKMS, presumed to fire the M193 cartridge.[11] |
Rifles
editName | Country of origin | Caliber | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
SKS[5] | Soviet Union | 7.62×39mm | |
Zastava M59/66[12] | Yugoslavia | 7.62×39mm |
Machine guns
editName | Country of origin | Type | Caliber | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
RPD[2] | Soviet Union | Light machine gun | 7.62×39mm | |
RPK[13] | Soviet Union | Light machine gun | 7.62×39mm | |
Zastava M72[14] | Yugoslavia | Light machine gun | 7.62×39mm | |
Al-Quds[13] | Iraq | Light machine gun | 7.62×39mm | Locally produced copy of the Zastava M72.[14] |
SG-43 Goryunov | Soviet Union | Medium machine gun | 7.62×54mmR | SGM variant used.[5] |
PK machine gun[7][page needed][15] | Soviet Union | General-purpose machine gun | 7.62×54mmR | |
FN MAG[5][7][page needed] | Belgium | General-purpose machine gun | 7.62×51mm NATO | |
AA-52[7][page needed] | France | General-purpose machine gun | 7.62×51mm NATO | |
DShK[5] | Soviet Union | Heavy machine gun | 12.7×108mm | DShK 1938 and 38/46 models used.[16] |
KPV[2] | Soviet Union | Heavy machine gun | 14.5×114mm |
Sniper rifles
editName | Country of Origin | Caliber | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Dragunov SVD[5] | Soviet Union | 7.62×54mmR | |
Al-Kadisa[17] | Iraq | 7.62×54mmR | Locally produced copy of the SVD.[5] |
Tabuk[18] | Iraq | 7.62×39mm | Licensed copy of the Zastava M70B1.[14] |
Hand grenades
editName | Country of Origin | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
RG-42[19] | Soviet Union | Fragmentation grenade | |
F1[19] | Soviet Union | Fragmentation grenade | |
RGD-5[19] | Soviet Union | Fragmentation grenade | |
RGO-78[19] | Bulgaria | Fragmentation grenade | Bulgarian copy of the RGD-5. |
RKG-3[19] | Soviet Union | Anti-tank grenade | |
No. 2 Grenade[19] | Egypt | Offensive grenade | Egyptian copy of the Czechoslovak RG-4 grenade. |
Rocket launchers
editName | Country of Origin | Notes |
---|---|---|
RPG-7[2][20] | Soviet Union | |
Al-Nassira | Iraq | Locally produced copy of the RPG-7.[21][22] |
Grenade launchers
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
GP-25 | Soviet Union |
AGS-17 | Soviet Union[5] |
Recoilless guns
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
SPG-9[20] | Soviet Union |
M40A1[20] | United States |
Anti-tank missiles
editName | Country of origin | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
AT-1 Snapper[20] | Soviet Union | MCLOS | |
AT-2 Swatter[20] | Soviet Union | MCLOS | |
AT-3 Sagger[20] | Soviet Union | MCLOS | |
AT-4 Spigot[5] | Soviet Union | SACLOS | |
HOT ATGM[20] | France West Germany |
SACLOS | |
MILAN[20] | France West Germany |
SACLOS | |
SS.11[23] | France | MCLOS | |
M47 Dragon | United States | SACLOS | Captured from Iran.[24] |
Man-portable air-defense systems
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
SA-7 Grail[25] | Soviet Union |
SA-14 Gremlin[25] | Soviet Union |
SA-16 Gimlet[25] | Soviet Union |
HN-5A[25] | China |
Mortars
editName | Country of origin | Caliber | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
M70 commando mortar[26] | Yugoslavia | 60 mm | |
Al-Jaleel 60 mm Commando Mortar | Iraq | 60 mm | Locally produced copy of the M70.[26] |
Al-Jaleel 60 mm[27] | Iraq | 60 mm | |
M-37M[2] | Soviet Union | 82 mm | |
Al-Jaleel 82 mm[28] | Iraq | 82 mm | |
120-PM-43 mortar[2] | Soviet Union | 120 mm | |
Al-Jaleel 120mm[29] | Iraq | 120 mm | |
M1943[2] | Soviet Union | 160 mm | |
M-240[23] | Soviet Union | 240 mm |
Towed artillery
editName | Country of origin | Number | Caliber | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
M116 howitzer[30] | United States | 75 mm | Mountain gun | ||
D-44[31] | Soviet Union | 85 mm | Field gun | ||
Ordnance QF 25-pounder[32] | United Kingdom | 88 mm | Gun-howitzer | ||
OTO Melara Mod 56[33] | Italy | 105 mm | Mountain gun | ||
M-56 Howitzer[34] | Yugoslavia | 105 mm | Howitzer | ||
D-74[33] | Soviet Union | 122 mm | Field gun | ||
D-30[33] | Soviet Union | 861[23] | 122 mm | Howitzer | |
M-30[33] | Soviet Union | 30[23] | 122 mm | Field gun | |
M-46[33] | Soviet Union | 772[23] | 130 mm | Field gun | |
Type 56-I[33] | China | 130 mm | Field gun | Chinese copy of the M-46. | |
M1937[33] | Soviet Union | 50[23] | 152 mm | Gun-howitzer | |
D-1[33] | Soviet Union | 250[23] | 152 mm | Howitzer | |
2A36 Giatsint-B | Soviet Union | 180[23] | 152 mm | Field gun | |
Type 83 | China | 50[23] | 152 mm | Howitzer | |
G5 | South Africa | 100[33] | 155 mm | Howitzer | |
GHN-45 | Canada | 200[33] | 155 mm | Howitzer | Illegally transferred to Iraq via Jordan.[23] |
M114[33] | United States | 155 mm | Howitzer | Captured from Iran.[35] | |
Type 63 | China | 100[23] | 107 mm | Multiple rocket launcher |
Anti-tank guns
editName | Country of origin | Caliber | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
D-48[36] | Soviet Union | 85 mm | |
MT-12[36] | Soviet Union | 100 mm | 100 delivered by the Soviet Union.[23] |
M1977[37] | Romania | 100 mm |
Anti-aircraft artillery
editName | Country of origin | Number | Caliber | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ZPU | Soviet Union | 14.5×114mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | ZPU-1, ZPU-2, and ZPU-4 variants used.[25] | |
Zastava M55 | Yugoslavia | 20 mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | M75 variant also used.[38] | |
ZU-23-2 | Soviet Union | 23 mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | [25] | |
Oerlikon GDF | Switzerland | 35 mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | Captured from Kuwait, used with the Skyguard fire control system.[39] | |
61-K | Soviet Union China |
250[25] | 37 mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | Chinese Type 55 also used.[40] |
AZP S-60 | Soviet Union China |
500[25] | 57 mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | Chinese Type 59 also used.[40] |
52-K | Soviet Union | 200 | 85 mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | Used with the Fire Can radar.[25] |
KS-19 | Soviet Union | 200[25] | 100 mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | |
KS-30 | Soviet Union | 200[25] | 130 mm | Towed anti-aircraft gun | |
ZSU-23-4 | Soviet Union | 200+[25] | 23 mm | Self-propelled anti-aircraft gun | |
M53/59 Praga[38] | Czechoslovakia | 30 mm | Self-propelled anti-aircraft gun | ||
ZSU-57-2 | Soviet Union | 100+[25] | 57 mm | Self-propelled anti-aircraft gun |
Tanks
editName | Country of origin | Type | Number | Variant | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PT-76 | Soviet Union | Light tank | 100[33] | ||
T-34 | Soviet Union | Medium tank | 175 | T-34/85 | [23] |
T-54 | Soviet Union | Main battle tank | 300[23] | ||
T-55 | Soviet Union Poland Czechoslovakia |
Main battle tank | 1,400[23] | ||
T-55 Enigma | Iraq | Main battle tank | Local upgrade of the T-55. Designated as the Al-Najm or Al-Faw.[41] | ||
TR-580 | Romania | Main battle tank | 150 | Transferred by Egypt.[23] | |
Type 59 tank | China | Main battle tank | 1,000[23] | ||
Type 69 tank | China | Main battle tank | 1,500 | Type 69-I Type 69-II |
[23] |
Type 69-II Enigma | Iraq | Main battle tank | Local upgrade of the Type 69-II. Designated as the Al-Najm or Al-Faw[41] | ||
T-62 | Soviet Union Czechoslovakia |
Main battle tank | 2,850[23] | ||
T-72 | Soviet Union Poland Czechoslovakia |
Main battle tank | 550[23] - 1,038[42] | T-72B T-72M T-72M1 |
|
Lion of Babylon (tank) | Iraq | Main battle tank | Locally assembled T-72M1 using Polish knock-down kits, none were built according to Polish officials.[42] | ||
Chieftain | United Kingdom | Main battle tank | 30[33] | Mk 3 Mk 5 |
Captured from Iran, most were given to Jordan.[23] |
M47 Patton[33] | United States | Main battle tank | M47M | Captured from Iran, most were given to Jordan.[23] | |
M60 tank[33] | United States | Main battle tank | M60A1 | Captured from Iran, some were given to Jordan.[23] |
Tank destroyers
editName | Country of origin | Number | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
SU-100 | Soviet Union | 250[23] | |
9P133 | Soviet Union | 100[23] | Armed with Sagger missiles. |
9P148 | Soviet Union | Armed with Konkurs missiles. | |
VCR/TH | France | 100[33] | Armed with HOT missiles.[43] |
Reconnaissance vehicles
editName | Country of origin | Type | Number | Variant | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BRDM-2 | Soviet Union | Scout car | 250[23] | ||
D-442 FUG[33] | Hungary | Scout car | 200 | D-944 PSzH | [23] |
MOWAG Roland[33] | Switzerland | Scout car | |||
EE-3 Jararaca | Brazil | Scout car | 300[33] | ||
Panhard AML | France | Armored car | 300[33] | AML-60 AML-90 |
|
Panhard ERC | France | Armored car | 50 | ERC-90 Sagaie | [23] |
EE-9 Cascavel | Brazil | Armored car | 200[23] |
Armoured fighting vehicles
editName | Country of origin | Type | Number | Variant | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BMP-1[23] | Soviet Union Czechoslovakia |
Infantry fighting vehicle | 1,000[33] | BVP-1 | |
Saddam II | Iraq | Infantry fighting vehicle | Locally upgraded BMP-1, used by Republican Guard units.[44] | ||
BMP-2 | Soviet Union Czechoslovakia |
Infantry fighting vehicle | 200[23] | BVP-2 | |
BMD-1 | Soviet Union | Infantry fighting vehicle | 25[23] | ||
AMX-10P | France | Infantry fighting vehicle | 45 | Includes AMX-10 VLA and AMX-10 VFA command post versions.[23] | |
BTR-152[33] | Soviet Union | Armoured personnel carrier | 200[23] | ||
BTR-50[33] | Soviet Union | Armoured personnel carrier | 250[23] | ||
BTR-60[33] | Soviet Union | Armoured personnel carrier | 250[23] | BTR-60PB | |
MT-LB | Soviet Union Poland |
Armoured personnel carrier | 750 | Some were modified into mortar carriers.[23] | |
OT-62 TOPAS[33] | Czechoslovakia Poland |
Armoured personnel carrier | 100[23] | OT-62A | |
OT-64 SKOT[33] | Czechoslovakia Poland |
Armoured personnel carrier | 200[23] | OT-64A | |
M113 | United States | Armoured personnel carrier | M113A1[33] | Captured from Iran, some were given to Jordan.[23] | |
Panhard M3 | France | Armoured personnel carrier | 200 | M3 VTT M3 VAT |
Includes 5 M3 VAT armoured recovery vehicles.[23] |
EE-11 Urutu[33] | Brazil | Armoured personnel carrier | 200[23] | ||
Type 63 | China | Armoured personnel carrier | 650 | Type YW701 | Includes some command post vehicles.[23] |
Walid | Egypt | Armoured personnel carrier | 100 | Status uncertain.[23] |
Self-propelled artillery
editName | Country of origin | Type | Number | Caliber | Variant | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2S1 Gvozdika[33] | Soviet Union | Self-propelled gun | 150[23] | 122 mm | ||
2S3 Akatsiya[33] | Soviet Union | Self-propelled gun | 150[23] | 152 mm | ||
AMX 30 AuF1 | France | Self-propelled gun | 85[33] | 155 mm | CGT | |
M109 howitzer[33] | United States | Self-propelled gun | 155 mm | M109A1 M109A2 |
Captured from Iran and Kuwait.[45] | |
M-1978 Koksan | North Korea | Self-propelled gun | 170 mm | Captured from Iran.[46] | ||
BM-21 Grad[33] | Soviet Union Egypt |
Multiple rocket launcher | 1,060[23] | 122 mm | BM-21 RL-21 |
|
Katyusha | Soviet Union | Multiple rocket launcher | 132 mm | BM-13-16[33] | ||
ASTROS II[33] | Brazil Iraq |
Multiple rocket launcher | 67-260 | 127 mm 180 mm 300 mm |
SS-40 SS-60 Sajeel |
Produced under license as the Sajeel.[23] |
M-87 Orkan | Yugoslavia | Multiple rocket launcher | 2[23] | 262 mm |
Engineering vehicles
editGround surveillance radars
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
SNAR-2 | China |
SNAR-10 | Soviet Union |
Tactical ballistic missiles based on SCUD and Luna
editCountry of Name | Country of Origin |
---|---|
FROG-7 | Soviet Union |
Al-Raad (mod. 9M21 rocket) | Ba'athist Iraq |
Scud-B | Soviet Union |
Al-Hussein | Ba'athist Iraq |
Al Hijarah | Ba'athist Iraq |
Al Abbas | Ba'athist Iraq |
Al-Tammuz | Ba'athist Iraq |
Al-Abid | Ba'athist Iraq |
Conversion rocket 5Я23, 5В27Д, 2К12, Р-15/HY-2 to surface to surface missiles
editName | Country of origin | Description |
---|---|---|
Al Fahd 300 | Ba'athist Iraq | Conversions of the S-75 |
Al Fahd 500 | Ba'athist Iraq | Conversions of the S-75, did not go operational |
Al-Barq | Ba'athist Iraq | Modification of S-125 |
Al-Kasir | Ba'athist Iraq | Modification of 2K12 |
Modified Р-15/HY-2 | Ba'athist Iraq | for use as surface to surface missiles |
Iraqi liquid-propellant ballistic missiles
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
Ababeel-100 | Ba'athist Iraq |
Al-Samoud | Ba'athist Iraq |
Al-Samoud 2 | Ba'athist Iraq |
Iraqi solid-propellant ballistic missiles
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
BADR-2000 | Ba'athist Iraq |
Ababil-100 | Ba'athist Iraq |
Anti-ship missile
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
HY-2 | China |
P-15 | Soviet Union |
Radar systems
editLight utility vehicles
editName | Country of origin |
---|---|
Land Rover[47] | United Kingdom |
GAZ-69[51] | Soviet Union |
UAZ-469B[47] | Soviet Union |
Trucks
editBibliography
edit- Cullen, Tony; Foss, Christopher F., eds. (1 March 1992). Jane's Land-based Air Defence 1992-93 (5 ed.). Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0-7106-0979-3.
- Gander, Terry J.; Cutshaw, Charles Q., eds. (1 February 2002). Jane's Infantry Weapons, 2002-2003 (28th ed.). Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0-7106-2434-5.
- Foss, Christopher F., ed. (1991). Jane's Military Vehicles and Logistics 1991-92. Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0-7106-0950-2.
- Hogg, Ian V., ed. (1 January 1988). Jane's Infantry Weapons, 1988-89. Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0-7106-0857-4.
- International Institute for Strategic Studies (1989). The military balance, 1989-1990. London: Brassey's. ISBN 978-0080375694.
- McNab, Chris (20 January 2022). Armies of the Iran–Iraq War 1980–88. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4728-4558-0.
- National Training Center (1 January 1991). The Iraqi Army: Organization and Tactics. Paladin Press. ISBN 978-0-87364-632-1.
- Tucker, Spencer C. (20 August 2014). Persian Gulf War Encyclopedia: A Political, Social, and Military History. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-61069-416-2.
- U.S. Army Intelligence and Threat Analysis Center (1991). How They Fight Desert Shield: Order of Battle Handbook : Friendly Forces. U.S. Army Intelligence and Threat Analysis Center. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
- Marine Corps Intelligence Activity (1998). Iraq Country Handbook (PDF). U.S. Government Printing Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 May 2005. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
- Zaloga, Steven J. (15 March 2011). M1 Abrams vs T-72 Ural: Operation Desert Storm 1991. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-84908-091-0.
- Zaloga, Steven J. (26 October 2023). Tanks at the Iron Curtain 1975–90: The ultimate generation of Cold War heavy armor. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 84–85. ISBN 978-1-4728-5382-0.
References
edit- ^ a b National Training Center 1991, p. 5.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Hogg 1988, p. 769.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-1.
- ^ a b Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-3.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Gander & Cutshaw 2002, p. 2570.
- ^ a b c McNab 2022, p. 50.
- ^ a b c d e Ezell, Edward Clinton (1 November 1988). Small Arms Today - 2nd Edition (2nd ed.). Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-2280-3.
- ^ "AKM, Romanian". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-7.
- ^ Gander & Cutshaw 2002, pp. 2568−2569.
- ^ Gander & Cutshaw 2002, pp. 2566−2567.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-5.
- ^ a b Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-12.
- ^ a b c McNab 2022, p. 57.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-14.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-15.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-11.
- ^ Gander & Cutshaw 2002, pp. 2562−2563.
- ^ a b c d e f Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-18.
- ^ a b c d e f g h National Training Center 1991, p. 126.
- ^ Gander & Cutshaw 2002, pp. 2558–2559.
- ^ "al Nasirah & RPG7". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw "Trade Registers". SIPRI Arms Transfers Database. Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- ^ Tucker 2014, p. 29.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cullen & Foss 1992, p. 300.
- ^ a b Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-17.
- ^ Gander & Cutshaw 2002, pp. 2556−2557.
- ^ Gander & Cutshaw 2002, pp. 2554−2555.
- ^ Gander & Cutshaw 2002, pp. 2552−2553.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-61.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-62.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-63.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai IISS 1989, p. 101.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-65.
- ^ U.S. Army Intelligence and Threat Analysis Center 1991, p. 81.
- ^ a b Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-51.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-52.
- ^ a b National Training Center 1991, p. 132.
- ^ National Training Center 1991, p. 133.
- ^ a b National Training Center 1991, pp. 132–133.
- ^ a b Zaloga 2023, pp. 84–85.
- ^ a b Zaloga 2011, p. 24.
- ^ Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. A-60.
- ^ Tucker 2014, p. 61.
- ^ U.S. Army Intelligence and Threat Analysis Center 1991, p. 82.
- ^ Foss, Christopher F., ed. (2002). Jane's Armour and Artillery. Jane's Information Group. p. 638. ISBN 978-0-7106-2425-3.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Foss 1991, p. 647.
- ^ a b c d National Training Center 1991, p. 149.
- ^ a b c National Training Center 1991, p. 151.
- ^ a b c d e f g National Training Center 1991, p. 150.
- ^ a b National Training Center 1991, p. 7.
- ^ a b c d Marine Corps Intelligence Activity 1998, p. 155.
- ^ National Training Center 1991, p. 178.