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New Camouflage Uniforms From Around The World

Manticore

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Principles

Military camouflage is part of the art of military deception. The main objective of military camouflage is to deceive the enemy as to the presence, position and intentions of military formations. Camouflage techniques include concealment, disguise, and dummies, applied to troops, vehicles, and positions. According to Winston Churchill (First Lord of the Admiralty in WWI and Prime Minister in WWII) deception in war is an indispensable "element of léger de main, an original and sinister touch, which leaves the enemy puzzled as well as beaten."[1]
Vision is the main sense of orientation in humans, and the primary function of camouflage is to deceive the human eye. Camouflage works through concealment (whether by countershading or disruption of outlines), mimicry, or possibly by dazzle.[2][3] In modern warfare some forms of camouflage also offer concealment from radar, infrared, and night vision devices.



While camouflage tricks are in principle limitless, both cost and practical considerations limit the choice of methods and the time and effort devoted to camouflage. Paint and uniforms must also protect vehicles and soldiers from the elements. Units need to move, fire their weapons and perform other tasks to keep functional, some of which run counter to camouflage.[2] Camouflage may be dropped altogether, as in the latter part of the Second World War when the US Air Force abandoned camouflage paint for combat aircraft to reduce drag and weight.
Unlike an animal or a civilian hunter, military units rarely have the option to stick to a single environment. Civilian hunting clothing may have almost photo-realistic depictions of tree bark or leaves, indeed some such patterns are based on photographs.[4] A military unit, on the other hand, may cross several terrain types in a single day.[2] Patterns are therefore generalized to work in several environments, aiming for a general colour match or to disrupt outlines, rather than to mimic a specific terrain directly.

Compromises
Finnish artillery during the Winter War, showing improvised snow camouflage made from bedsheets and whitewash
No single camouflage pattern is effective in all terrains.[5] The effectiveness of a pattern depends not only on colour tones, patterns will play a role too: Strong contrasts are better suited for jungles and forests where the play of light and shade is prominent, while low contrasts are better suited to open terrain with little shading structure.[6] Patterns made to match the local terrain may be more effective in that terrain than more general patterns. An American attempt at a global camouflage pattern (the 2004 UCP) was withdrawn after a few years of service.[7] On the other end of the scale are terrain specific patterns like the "Berlin camo", applied to British vehicles operating in Berlin during the Cold War.[8]
Seasons may play a role in some regions. A dramatic change in colour and texture is created by seasonal snowy conditions in northern latitudes, necessitating repainting of vehicles and separate winter uniforms or oversuits. The Waffen-SS went a step further, developing reversible uniforms with separate schemes for summer and autumn, as well as winter oversuits


Movement
While patterns can provide more effective crypsis than solid colour when the camouflaged object is stationary, any pattern, particularly one with high contrast, stands out when the object is moving.[10][11] Jungle camouflage uniforms were issued during the Second World War, but both the British and American forces found that a simple green uniform provided better camouflage when soldiers were moving. After the war, most nations returned to a unicoloured uniform for their troops.[2] Some nations, notably Austria and Israel continue to use solid colour combat uniforms today.[12][13] Similarly, while larger military aircraft traditionally had a disruptive pattern with a darker top over a lighter lower surface (a form of countershading), modern fast fighter aircraft often wear gray overall

Pattern scale and digitization
The scale of camouflage patterns has an obvious effect on their use. Large structures need larger patterns than smaller vehicles and single soldiers to break up their shape. At the same time, large patterns are more effective from afar, while small scale patterns work better up close.[15]
During the Second World War, Johann Georg Otto Schick[a] designed a number of patterns for the Waffen-SS, combining micro- and macro-patterns in one scheme.[9] The German Army developed the idea further in the 1970s into Flecktarn, which combines smaller shapes with dithering.[16] The dithering softens the edges of the large scale pattern, making the underlying objects harder to discern.
In the 1970s, US army officer Timothy R. O'Neill suggested that patterns consisting of square blocks of colour would provide effective camouflage.[17] This aroused little interest at the time, but by 2000, O'Neill's idea was combined with patterns like the German Flecktarn to create pixelated patterns like CADPAT or MARPAT. Battledress in digital camouflage patterns was first designed by the Canadian Forces. The "digital" refers to the coordinates of the pattern, which are digitally defined.[18] The term does not apply only to pixelated patterns but to all computer generated patterns like the non-pixelated Multicam and the Italian fractal Vegetato pattern.[19]
According to the patent for MARPAT, pixelation does not in itself contribute to the camouflaging effect. The pixelated style however simplifes design and eases printing on fabric, compared to more traditional "splotchy" patterns. While pixelated patterns are becoming widespread, critics maintain that the pixelated look is a question of fashion rather than function

Non-visual
With the birth of radar and sonar and other means of detecting military hardware not depending on the human eye, came means of camouflaging against them. Collectively these are known as stealth technology.[21] Aircraft and ships can be shaped to reflect radar impulses away from the sender, and covered with radar-absorbing materials, to reduce their radar signature.[21][22] The use of heat-seeking missiles has also lead to ways of hiding the heat signature from vehicles, particularly jet fighters. Methods include exhaust ports shaped to facilitate mixing of hot gases with cold surrounding air before it leaves the exhaust ports.[23]
Unlike in animal camouflage, auditory and olfactory camouflage is rare.[24] The rubberized hull of military submarines dampens their sonar profile and can be seen as a form of auditory camouflage.[25] Some modern helicopters are built to be quiet.[26] Combat uniforms are usually equipped with traditional buttons rather than snaps fasteners or velcro to reduce noise.[2] Ghillie suits, special garments for military snipers made from stripes of hessian cloth, are sometimes treated with mud and even manure to give it an "earthy" smell, hiding even the smell of the snipe
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_camouflage


Examples

turkey
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Slovakia
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Croacia
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u.s
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21st Century Camo Uniforms – the rest of the world
21st Century Camo Uniforms – the rest of the world | Strike – Hold!


Armed forces spend billions on camouflage uniforms
http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20121005/NEWS02/710059916

Why camouflage uniforms aren’t uniform
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...4d6c-0ccc-11e2-a310-2363842b7057_story_1.html
 
. . .
The ongoing American and British camouflage programmes have been getting lots of attention, but many other countries have been also changing / upgrading their camouflage uniforms in the early part of the 21st Century.

The first big new development was when the Canadians introduced the world to the CADPAT pixelated camouflage pattern, and in effect re-wrote the rule book of camouflage pattern design. Then the US Marine Corps adopted a completely new style of Combat and Utility Uniform that started an irreversible fashion trend – especially once the US Army adopted a broadly similar style in the ACU, which was then copied around the rest of the world as well.

Interestingly, although Crye Precision really stirred things up with their radically re-styled combat clothing designs and multi-terrain “MultiCam” camouflage pattern, they’ve not had the wide-ranging impact on the uniform designs of the rest of the world that CADPAT / MARPAT and the MCCUU have had.

Other big influences on the introduction of new camo uniforms have been the ongoing operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. As a result, there have been a whole lot of new desert camouflage patterns put in to service by European countries that don’t have any deserts on their home turf.

Worthy of a special note are the Russians. Their military and para-military forces have been seen wearing a very wide range of new uniforms and camouflage patterns in recent years – this has led a lot of people to debate about what is “authentic issue” and what’s simply commercial. The answer is that there is not such a clear line between the two – especially for special operations units, who can augment their “official issue” kit and clothing with privately (or unit purchased) items; particularly camouflage uniforms better suited to the types of operations they perform and the terrain where they operate.What’s also especially interesting about the new Russian camo patterns is that several of them are based on revamped versions of WWII camouflage patterns – and in the case of the reversible “Chimera” uniform, even of the Waffen SS! Looking at all the developments around the world there are some other interesting points to note as well though: First of all, the sheer scale of activity in this field over the past few years is quite interesting. I’ve been a student of camouflage combat uniforms for probably something like 30 years now, and have never seen so much activity or as many new developments as have been happening in the last few years. But its not just about “pretty new uniforms”, what’s really cool is how the individual soldier is now more and more being rightfully treated as an integrated, multi-purpose, system and is being given a full range of modernised, focussed, mission-adaptable kit accordingly. Its nice to see the “cannon fodder” and “bullet catcher” days of the “poor bloody infantry” being consigned to the pages of history at last. Secondly, “digital” has clearly become a global craze – and whilst there are many patterns that are simply re-coloured copies of CADPAT, there are also quite a few that are more interesting and innovative. And some which don’t even merit the term. In the cases of Kazahkstan and Lebanon, they’ve already adopted patterns that are very similar to the US Army’s UCP-Delta pattern now being tested in Afghanistan.Thirdly, its interesting to note that only the Latvian Army has followed the US Army’s lead and adopted a single “universal” camouflage pattern – but the Saab-Barracuda designed Latvian “Legoflage” is probably a more effective pattern than UCP. In every other case, countries have chosen the more traditional route of different colourations for different environments.On the other hand, the French have completely updated the style and features of their combat uniform – but retained the standard CCE camouflage pattern.

AFGHANISTAN

Army

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Border Patrol

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AUSTRALIA

Army / Air Force


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NAVY

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AUSTRIA Kampanzug 03 (official Austrian Bundesheer photos)

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trial camouflage patterns (woodland pattern photo courtesy of Philip Thum)

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CHILE

Air Force Special Operations Forces


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Army Special Operations Forces

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Marine Infantry

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