What's new

Pakistan Army Information

This is bit old news but i guess not reported.

Six lieutenant generals appointed, transferred
Six lieutenant generals appointed, transferred - thenews.com.pk

ISLAMABAD: With the appointment of newly-promoted Lt. Gen. Obaidullah as Commander Army Strategic Force Command (ASFC) on Monday, Pakistan’s entire set-up handling the strategic assets and planning and command got replaced within a month.



The chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee got changed on November 29 this year with the



promotion and appointment of General Rashad Mehmood. This was followed by the last week’s appointment of Lt. Gen. Zubair Mahmood Hayat as Director-General Strategic Plans Division in place of Lt Gen (retd) Khalid Kidwai.



Top circles term these changes as “most significant”, as it never happened in the history since Pakistan conducted the nuclear tests on May 28, 1998 that the entire team handling the strategic programme underwent a change within a month.



General Rashad succeeded General Khalid Shamim Wynne as Chairman JCSC on the retirement of the latter. Lt. Gen. Zubair Hayat succeeded KK as DG SPD and now Lt. Gen. Obaidullah succeeded Lt. Gen. Tariq Gilani as Commander ASFC.



One top source told The News that there were new handlers, planners and commanders of strategic assets and it was a new aspect of national security parameters under the third-time Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif.



With these and other reshuffles at the top level, Army Chief General Raheel Sharif on Monday completed the first cycle of reshuffle with a mixed trend of appointing new corps commanders and principal staff officers (PSOs).



The current PSO – Adjutant General Lt Gen Javed Iqbal – has been appointed as Corps Commander Bahawalpur while Corps Commander Bahawalpur Lt Gen Zubair Hayat has already been shifted to Director-General Strategic Plans Division (DG SPD).In Lt. Gen. Javed Iqbal’s place, Commander Army Air Defence Lt. Gen. Zamirul Hassan has been posted as Adjutant General (AG) as PSO at the General Headquarters.



This trend seems different to former army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani who appointed newly-promoted three-star generals as PSOs instead of sending them in the field as corps commanders. However, General Sharif is showing a mixed trend in such appointments and reshuffles.



Lt. Gen. Obaidullah has been appointed Commander ASFC in place of Lt. Gen. Tariq Gilani. Gilani has been posted as Chief of Logistic Staff (CLS), a position lying vacant since the premature retirement of Lt. Gen. Haroon Aslam on being superseded.



In place of Zamirul Hassan, now AG, Lt. Gen. Zahid Latif has been posted as Commander Army Air Defence. Newly-promoted Lt. Gen. Ikramul Haq has been appointed as Inspector-General Training and Evaluation (ITE&E) at the GHQ, as this position had been lying vacant since General Raheel Sharif assumed the command of Pakistan Army.



It is expected that the next cycle of promotions and reshuffle in the command and staff positions will take place in October next year when around five senior lieutenant generals will retire.
 
. .
Pakistan's National Deterrent Division Gets New Leader


Dec. 20, 2013 - 02:41PM

By USMAN ANSARI


bilde

Foreign visitors look at the Pakistani nuclear-capable ballistic-missile Shaheen on display during a defense show in 2006. Pakistan's Strategic Plans Division, which oversees its nuclear capability, has a new leader. (Asif Hassan / AFP/Getty Images)

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan’s Strategic Plans Division (SPD), which oversees all aspects of its nuclear deterrent, has a new director general after long-serving Lt. Gen.Khalid Ahmed Kidwai retired and was replaced by Lt. Gen. Zubair Mahmood Hayat.

The SPD oversees all aspects of the development and production of warheads and delivery systems that make up the national deterrent as well as Pakistan’s space programs.

It is part of the larger National Command Authority, the civilian-led body that oversees all command-and-control aspects of Pakistan’s strategic nuclear forces and organizations. The SPD functions as the secretariat of the National Command Authority.

Kidwai had been at the head of the organization since 2000.

The change in command is being viewed positively by analysts as it will help increase confidence in the country’s nuclear management under a civilian authority, and the confidence to make critical decisions under trying circumstances.

Brian Cloughley, former Australian defense attache to Islamabad, said Kidwai had been in the position “far too long,” but there was seemingly little appetite to replace him.
He said Hayat seems quite competent and “did well at staff college in the UK.”

“I don’t see any changes happening in SPD because of him, but there’s no doubt it’s in good, steady hands,” he added.

Mansoor Ahmed, from Quaid-e-Azam University’s Department of Defence and Strategic Studies and who specializes in Pakistan’s national deterrent and delivery program, believes the change goes beyond a mere change of the top man.

“It is a sign that the system has matured to the point that it can function independent of personalities who come and go ... the institution itself acquires a self-sustaining momentum that is required of a robust command and control structure.

“It augurs well for the future of institutional growth and is a positive trend in the nuclear learning trajectory of Pakistan,” he added.

He said Kidwai steered the SPD through some tough times.

“Kidwai had the privilege of presiding over the most challenging period post-1998 tests, and uncharted territory had to be covered with no prior experience, especially establishing the command-and-control structure for the nuclear program and the strategic forces, with an emphasis on establishing a safety and security architecture that has earned the respect of the international community; dealing with the 2002 and 2008 crises and India’s cold-start doctrine, managing international nuclear diplomacy while maintaining Pakistan’s strategic interests; dealing with the A.Q. Khan episode of illicit nuclear proliferation; and expansion of the civilian nuclear energy base with Chinese assistance.”

As things stand, however, Ahmed believes Kidwai’s achievements are readily seen in SPD, with steady progress being made to establish a more robust deterrent capability.

“The SPD under Kidwai has come a long way, starting from scratch to operationalizing the deterrent in terms of the doctrine, policy, strategy and security. Pakistan now has nine different types of missile systems, is enhancing its plutonium production capability whose infrastructure was operationalized during Kidwai’s time, and is moving towards a second strike capability,” he said.
The mainstay of Pakistan’s first-strike capability is believed to be based on the Shaheen/Falcon, Nasr, Ghaznavi, and perhaps Abdali range of short- and medium-range ballistic missiles.

An air-launched cruise missile, the Ra’ad/Thunder, is also capable of carrying nuclear warheads.

Pakistan’s fledgling second-strike capability is thought to comprise submarine-launched HATF-VII/Vengeance-VII Babur cruise missiles. ■

  1. KSA & Egypt are the sources of this purchase. based on a german design to replace the BTR's.
  2. Al Fahd Armored Personnel Carrier - Image Results
    More Al Fahd Armored Personnel Carrier images
 
Last edited:
.

Pakistan’s

elite are snapping up armoured vehicles as the number of killings and kidnappings in Karachi escalate at an alarming rate. Armoured vehicle manufacturers are benefitting as a result; Streit Group, the world’s largest private armoured vehicle maker, says its Pakistan business has doubled in the last 12 months.

Although Pakistan’s indigenous market is beginning to gain traction, the highly anticipated

Burraq MRAP being built by state-owned Heavy Industries Taxila is being held back, reportedly due to lack of cash.
 
.
Pakistan MBTs: 350+ AL KHALIDs, 320 T-80UDs, 200 T-85IIAPs, 250 Type 69s, 500 Type 59s/ALZARAR, 100 T-60/63 light
AIFVs and APCs: 800 M-113s, HAMZAs, 140 AL FAHDs, 500+ TALHAs, 120 BTR-70s
Production of AL KHALID MBTs continues towards a stated goal of
600 tanks.

Defence IQ

Figures seem .. incorrect.. :D
 
.
I want to know the height of General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi ... Its very essential regarding Shaheed Abdul Kader mollah death by Awami tribunal .. Please can you confirm me ? I have got the news from other place that he was 6 feet ....Please need it urgent Thanks
 
.
I want to know the height of General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi ... Its very essential regarding Shaheed Abdul Kader mollah death by Awami tribunal .. Please can you confirm me ? I have got the news from other place that he was 6 feet ....Please need it urgent Thanks

Gen. Niazi was 5ft.11. same height as my late father.
 
.
Thanks for sharing such a great thread . its really impressive and interesting . i m looking forward to see more post like that. Thanks
 
.
Figures seem .. incorrect.. :D

one can never know the exact numbers in service:

here is another estimate.
MBT-2000 (Al Khalid) - MBT - 420 in service
Al Zarrar (Type59/59M) - MBT - 300 in service (original 1,100)
Type 69 - MBT - 250 in service (original 350)
Type 85IIAP - MBT - 300 in service (local assembly of kits,125mm gun)
T-80UD - MBT - 320 in service

M113A1/A2 - APC - 2,800 in service (includes many variants)
Type 531 - APC - 100 in service
BTR-70/BTR-80 - APC - 120 in service
Akrep (Scorpion) - n/a.
 
. .

PAK MIL
Arms imports to Pakistan, 1948-2012


Belarus Pakistan (1920) 9M119/AT-11 Sniper Anti-tank missile 1996 1997 - 1999 (1920) For T-80UD tank; status uncertain

Brazil Pakistan 100 MAR-1 ARM 2008 2010 - 2010 (100) BRL111 m ($100-126 m) deal

China Pakistan (20) HY-2/SY-1A/CSS-N-2 Anti-ship missile 1980 1981 - 1981 (20) For Hegu (Haibat) FAC; SY-1A (CSS-N-2) version

China Pakistan (30) HY-1/SY-1/CSS-N-1 Anti-ship missile 1983 1984 - 1984 (30) For Huangfen (Azmat) FAC

China Pakistan (20) C-802/CSS-N-8 Anti-ship missile 1997 1997 - 1999 (20) For Jalalat FAC

China Pakistan (20) C-802/CSS-N-8 Anti-ship missile 2003 2006 - 2006 (20) For Jurrat FAC

China Pakistan (70) C-802/CSS-N-8 Anti-ship missile 2005 2009 - 2011 (50) For Jiangwei (F-22P) frigates

China Pakistan (50) C-802/CSS-N-8 Anti-ship missile 2008 2012 - 2012 (10) For JF-17 combat aircraft

China Pakistan (30) C-802/CSS-N-8 Anti-ship missile 2010 2012 - 2012 (15) For Azmat FAC

China Pakistan (50) CM-400AKG Anti-ship missile 2010 2012 - 2012 (10) For JF-17 combat aircraft

China Pakistan 0 Red Arrow-8 Anti-tank missile 1989 1990 - 2012 (21350) Yes Pakistani designation Baktar Shikan

China Pakistan (600) PL-12/SD-10 BVRAAM 2006 2010 - 2012 (225) For JF-17 and possiblymodernized Mirage-3/5combat aircraft

China Pakistan (750) LS-3 Guided bomb 2008 2010 - 2012 (250) For JF-17 combat aircraft

China Pakistan (750) LS-6-500 Guided bomb 2008 2010 - 2012 (550) For JF-17 combat aircraft

China Pakistan (750) LT-2 Guided bomb 2008 2010 - 2012 (250) For JF-17 combat aircraft

China Pakistan (100) HN-5A Portable SAM 1984 1987 - 1987 (100)

China Pakistan (1000) HN-5A Portable SAM 1988 1989 - 1998 (1000) Yes Pakistani designation Anza-1

China Pakistan 0 QW-1 Vanguard Portable SAM 1993 1994 - 2012 (1650) Yes Pakistani designation Anza-2

China Pakistan (50) FN-6 Portable SAM 2009 2010 - 2010 (50)

China Pakistan (40) HQ-2/CSA-1 SAM 1983 1983 - 1983 (40)

China Pakistan (36) LY-60 SAM 1994 1996 - 1997 (36) For 3 modernized Tariq (Amazon) Class frigates

China Pakistan (100) R-440 Crotale SAM 2005 2009 - 2012 (80) For Jiangwei (F-22P) frigates; HQ-7 (FM-80) version

China Pakistan (900) PL-5E SRAAM 2006 2009 - 2012 (510) For JF-17 combat aircraft; PL-5E-II version

China Pakistan (55) M-11/CSS-7 SSM 1988 1992 - 1994 (55) Yes Incl assembly in Pakistan

France Pakistan (40) AM-39 Exocet Anti-ship missile 1974 1975 - 1975 (40) Incl for SH-3D helicopters

France Pakistan (40) AM-39 Exocet Anti-ship missile 1980 1982 - 1983 (40) For Mirage-5 combat aircraft and SH-3D helicopters

France Pakistan (25) SM-39 Exocet Anti-ship missile 1994 1999 - 2006 (25) $100 m deal; for Agosta-90B (Khalid) submarines

France Pakistan (20) E-14 AS torpedo 1967 1970 - 1970 (20) For 3 Daphne (Hangor) submarines

France Pakistan (20) E-15 AS torpedo 1967 1970 - 1970 (20) For 3 Daphne (Hangor) submarines

© SIPRI 1 February 2014. For terms and conditions of use see


Terms and conditions of use — www.sipri.org





Arms imports to Pakistan, 1948-2012


France Pakistan (6) E-14 AS torpedo 1975 1975 - 1975 (6) For 1 Daphne (Hangor) submarine

France Pakistan (6) E-15 AS torpedo 1975 1975 - 1975 (6) For 1 Daphne (Hangor) Class submarine

France Pakistan (80) F-17P AS torpedo 1978 1979 - 1979 (40) For 2 Agosta (Hashmat) Class submarines; could inclE14, E15 and/or L3 torpedoes

France Pakistan (100) F-17P AS torpedo 1996 1999 - 2006 (100) F-17P Mod-2 version; for Agosta-90B (Khalid)submarines

France Pakistan 100 AS-30L ASM 1985 1986 - 1987 (100)

France Pakistan (20) L-3 ASW torpedo 1967 1970 - 1970 (20) For 3 Daphne (Hangor) submarines

France Pakistan (6) L-3 ASW torpedo 1975 1975 - 1975 (6) For 1 Daphne (Hangor) Class submarine

France Pakistan (40) R-530 BVRAAM 1967 1968 - 1968 (40) For Mirage-3E combat aircraft

France Pakistan (100) Mistral Portable SAM 1991 1994 - 1995 (100)

France Pakistan (300) R-440 Crotale SAM 1974 1977 - 1978 (300)

France Pakistan (192) R-550 Magic-1 SRAAM 1979 1980 - 1983 (192) For Mirage-5 combat aircraft

Germany Pakistan (3500) Cobra Anti-tank missile 1963 1965 - 1979 (3500) Yes Most probablyassembled/produced in Pakistan;Cobra-1600 and Cobra-2000 version

Germany Pakistan (15) SUT AS/ASW torpedo 1989 1990 - 1991 (15) For MG-110 midget submarines

Germany Pakistan 59 DM-2A4 Seehecht AS/ASW torpedo 2005 2007 - 2008 (59) $80 m deal; for Agosta-90B (Khalid) submarines

Italy Pakistan (12) A244 324mm ASW torpedo 1987 1989 - 1989 (12)

Italy Pakistan 200 Aspide-2000 SAM 2007 2010 - 2012 (150) Part of EUR415 m deal for Spada-2000 SAM systems

Korea, North Pakistan (2) Rodong SSM 1993 1996 - 1997 (2) Status uncertain; possibly also produced in Pakistanas Ghauri-1 and Ghauri-2 or Hatf-5

Sweden Pakistan (25) Type-43 ASW torpedo 1994 1999 - 2004 (25) Type-43X2 version; for modernized Amazon (Tariq)frigates

Sweden Pakistan (680) RBS-70 Portable SAM 1984 1986 - 1987 (680) Part of $91 m deal (incl 144 launchers); inclassembly in Pakistan; no. could be 824

Sweden Pakistan 0 RBS-70 Portable SAM 1985 1988 - 2012 (700) Yes Incl RBS-70 Mk-3 version

UnitedKingdomPakistan (25) Sea Cat SAM 1981 1982 - 1982 (25) Ex-UK; for County destroyer

UnitedKingdomPakistan (40) Sea Cat SAM 1988 1988 - 1988 (40) Ex-UK; for 2 Leander (Zulfiquar) frigates

UnitedKingdomPakistan (40) Sea Cat SAM 1993 1993 - 1993 (40) Ex-UK; for 2 Leander (Zulfiquar) frigates

United States Pakistan (50) RGM-84L Harpoon-2 Anti-ship MI/SSM 2005 2006 - 2007 (50) $63 m deal; incl 40 AGM-84L version

United States Pakistan 10 RGM-84L Harpoon-2 Anti-ship MI/SSM 2007 2009 - 2009 (10) $16 m deal; AGM-84L version; for P-3C ASW aircraft

United States Pakistan (20) RGM-84 Harpoon Anti-ship missile 1987 1987 - 1988 20 For modernized Gearing destroyer

United States Pakistan 44 RGM-84 Harpoon Anti-ship missile 1988 1990 - 1991 (44) For modernized Gearing (Alamgir) destroyers

United States Pakistan 28 RGM-84 Harpoon Anti-ship missile 1990 1996 - 1996 (28) $31 m deal; AGM-84A version for P-3C ASW aircraft;delivery embargoed between 1992 and 1995

United States Pakistan 1005 BGM-71 TOW Anti-tank missile 1981 1983 - 1986 (1005) For M-901 tank destroyers and Bell-209/AH-1Shelicopters

United States Pakistan 2030 BGM-71 TOW Anti-tank missile 1986 1987 - 1990 (2030) $20 m deal; BGM-71C ITOW version

United States Pakistan (2014) BGM-71 TOW Anti-tank missile 2004 2006 - 2008 (2014) $82 m deal; TOW-2A version; for AH-1 combathelicopters

United States Pakistan 3198 BGM-71 TOW Anti-tank missile 2007 2008 - 2011 (3198) $185 m deal; incl 2776 TOW-2A and 422 TOW-2RF

© SIPRI 1 February 2014. For terms and conditions of use see

Terms and conditions of use — www.sipri.org




Arms imports to Pakistan, 1948-2012


United States Pakistan (100) AGM-65 Maverick ASM 1985 1986 - 1987 (100) AGM-65B version

United States Pakistan (50) Mk-44 ASW torpedo 1964 1965 - 1966 (50)

United States Pakistan 100 Mk-46 ASW torpedo 1977 1978 - 1980 (100)

United States Pakistan (80) Mk-46 ASW torpedo 1988 1989 - 1989 (80) Probably ex-US; for Brooke (Badr) frigates

United States Pakistan (500) AIM-120C AMRAAM BVRAAM 2007 2010 - 2012 (224) $265 m deal; AIM-120C-5 version; for F-16 combataircraft

United States Pakistan (100) Paveway Guided bomb 2001 2002 - 2002 (100) Paveway-2 version

United States Pakistan 500 JDAM Guided bomb 2006 2010 - 2011 (500)

United States Pakistan 1600 Paveway Guided bomb 2006 2010 - 2010 (1600) Incl 700 GBU-12 and 300 GBU-10 version

United States Pakistan (100) FIM-92 Stinger Portable SAM 1985 1985 - 1985 (100) Taken by Pakistan from US aid destined forAfghanMujahideen

United States Pakistan (50) FIM-92 Stinger Portable SAM 1987 1987 - 1987 (50) Taken by Pakistan from US aid destined forAfghanMujahideen

United States Pakistan (75) RIM-66B Standard-1MR SAM 1988 1989 - 1989 (75) Probably ex-US; for Brooke (Badr) frigates

United States Pakistan (500) AIM-9B Sidewinder-1A SRAAM 1958 1959 - 1963 (500) For F-86, F-104 and F-6 combat aircraft

United States Pakistan (500) AIM-9J/P Sidewinder SRAAM 1974 1974 - 1974 (500) Ex-US AIM-9B version modernized after delivery toAIM-9J in Pakistan with US-supplied compoments

United States Pakistan 500 AIM-9L/M Sidewinder SRAAM 1985 1985 - 1987 (500) $50 m deal; AIM-9L version; incl for F-16A combataircraft; delivered after Soviet aircraft fromAfghanistan violated Pakistani airspace
United States Pakistan (360) AIM-9L/M Sidewinder SRAAM 1988 1996 - 1996 (360) $20 m deal; AIM-9L version; delivery embargoedbetween 1992 and 1995

United States Pakistan 300 AIM-9L/M Sidewinder SRAAM 2005 2007 - 2007 (300) $29 m deal; AIM-9M1/2 version

United States Pakistan 200 AIM-9L/M Sidewinder SRAAM 2007 2010 - 2010 (200) AIM-9M8 and AIM-9M9 version; for F-16 combataircraft

Source:
SIPRI Arms Transfers Database, retrieved 1 February 2014

© SIPRI 1 February 2014. For terms and conditions of use see
Terms and conditions of use — www.sipri.org
 
.

PAK MIL
Arms imports to Pakistan, 1948-2012


China Pakistan 2 Type-76 37mm Naval gun 1995 1997 - 1999 2 For 2 Jalalat FAC produced in Pakistan

China Pakistan (45) Type-83 122mm Self-propelled MRL 1981 1982 - 1983 (45) Yes Pakistani designation Azar; designation and supplieruncertain; could be BM-11 from North Korea

China Pakistan (36) A-100 300mm Self-propelled MRL 2008 2010 - 2012 (36) Yes

China Pakistan (400) M-30 122mm Towed gun 1965 1965 - 1974 (400) Type-54-1 version

China Pakistan (50) ML-20 152mm Towed gun 1968 1968 - 1968 (50) Supplier uncertain; probably ex-Chinese

China Pakistan 200 D-74 122mm Towed gun 1971 1971 - 1973 (200) Type-60 version

China Pakistan (173) Type-59-1 130mm Towed gun 1974 1976 - 1980 (173)

China Pakistan (87) Type-59-1 130mm Towed gun 1992 1998 - 2000 87

China Pakistan (143) D-30 122mm Towed gun 2003 2003 - 2004 143

France Pakistan (225) AM-50 120mm Mortar 1965 1966 - 1970 (225)

Italy Pakistan (50) Model-56 105mm Towed gun 1975 1975 - 1978 (50)

Soviet Union Pakistan (100) M-46 130mm Towed gun 1968 1968 - 1968 (100) Ex-Soviet

Turkey Pakistan 12 Panter 155mm Towed gun 2007 2008 - 2009 (12)

Turkey Pakistan 0 Panter 155mm Towed gun 2009 2011 - 2012 (40) Yes

UnitedKingdomPakistan 2 102mm Mk-19 Naval gun 1957 1958 - 1958 (2) Probably ex-UK guns modernized before delivery; formodernization of 2 O Class destroyers

United States Pakistan (150) M-7 105mm Self-propelled gun 1954 1955 - 1956 (150) Ex-US

United States Pakistan 64 M-109A1 155mm Self-propelled gun 1981 1983 - 1984 (64) M-109A2 version

United States Pakistan 40 M-110A2 203mm Self-propelled gun 1981 1984 - 1985 (40)

United States Pakistan 36 M-109A1 155mm Self-propelled gun 1982 1984 - 1985 (36) $30 m deal; M-109A2 version

United States Pakistan (52) M-109A1 155mm Self-propelled gun 1985 1988 - 1989 (52) M-109A2 version

United States Pakistan 115 M-109A5 155mm Self-propelled gun 2006 2007 - 2010 (115) Ex-US; $87 m deal (incl $57 m 'FMF' aid)

United States Pakistan (26) M-115 203mm Towed gun 1954 1955 - 1958 (26) Ex-US

United States Pakistan (30) M-59 155mm Towed gun 1954 1954 - 1956 (30) Ex-US

United States Pakistan (300) M-101A1 105mm Towed gun 1955 1955 - 1957 (300) Ex-US; aid

United States Pakistan (60) M-114A1 155mm Towed gun 1960 1960 - 1963 (60) Ex-US

United States Pakistan 75 M-198 155mm Towed gun 1981 1984 - 1986 (75)

United States Pakistan (25) M-198 155mm Towed gun 1988 1989 - 1989 (25) Part of $40 m deal

United States Pakistan 24 M-198 155mm Towed gun 1988 1996 - 1996 24 $19 m deal; delivery embargoed between 1992 and1995

© SIPRI 1 February 2014. For terms and conditions of use see
Terms and conditions of use — www.sipri.org


Tanks
Arms imports to Pakistan, 1948-2012


China Pakistan (65) W-653/Type-653 ARV 1994 1995 - 2000 (65) Yes Incl assembly/production in Pakistan; Pakistanidesignation ARV-W653

China Pakistan (50) Type-63 Light tank 1969 1970 - 1971 (50)

China Pakistan (50) Type-60 Light tank 1970 1971 - 1972 (50)

China Pakistan (200) WZ-120/Type-59 Tank 1965 1965 - 1966 (200)

China Pakistan (550) WZ-120/Type-59 Tank 1966 1967 - 1970 (550)

China Pakistan 159 WZ-120/Type-59 Tank 1973 1974 - 1974 159

China Pakistan (825) WZ-120/Type-59 Tank 1975 1978 - 1988 (825)

China Pakistan (268) Type-85-IIM Tank 1990 1992 - 1996 268 Yes Type-85-IIAP version; incl assembly from kits andproduction in Pakistan

China Pakistan (250) WZ-121/Type-69 Tank 1990 1993 - 1999 (250) Type-69-IIP or Type-69-IIMP version; incl assemblyand probably production in Pakistan

China Pakistan (500) Type-90-2/MBT-2000 Tank 1998 2001 - 2012 (298) Yes MBT-2000 (Al Khalid or P-90) version

Germany Pakistan (100) UR-416 APC 1972 1973 - 1976 (100) Incl for border guard; incl version with 20mm gun

Germany Pakistan (10) Dingo-2 APC 2009 2010 - 2010 10

Indonesia Pakistan (32) PT-76 Light tank 1968 1969 - 1970 (32) Supplier uncertain; second-hand

Italy Pakistan (45) M-65E LMV APV 2009 2010 - 2010 45

Slovakia Pakistan 6 OT-64C APC 1993 1993 - 1993 6 Ex-Slovak; designation uncertain

Soviet Union Pakistan (2) SPK-5 ARV 1966 1966 - 1966 (2) Ex-Soviet

Soviet Union Pakistan (25) T-34/85 Tank 1966 1966 - 1966 (25) Ex-Soviet

Soviet Union Pakistan (100) T-54 Tank 1968 1969 - 1969 (100) Ex-Soviet

Soviet Union Pakistan (100) T-55 Tank 1968 1968 - 1968 (100)

Turkey Pakistan (50) Shorland APV 1994 1995 - 1996 (50) Shorland S-55 version; incl for police

Ukraine Pakistan 320 T-80U Tank 1996 1997 - 1999 320 $580-650 m deal; incl 50 ex-Ukrainian (but
probably not much used); T-80UD version

UnitedKingdomPakistan (10) Hussar APC 1987 1988 - 1988 (10) For police

UnitedKingdomPakistan (10) Ferret APV 1953 1954 - 1954 (10)

UnitedKingdomPakistan 20 Transac GS APV 1987 1988 - 1988 20

UnitedKingdomPakistan 24 Shorland APV 1990 1990 - 1991 (24) Shorland S-55 version; for police

United States Pakistan 109 M-113 APC 1962 1963 - 1964 (109)

United States Pakistan 300 M-113 APC 1973 1973 - 1975 (300) M-113A1 version

© SIPRI 1 February 2014. For terms and conditions of use see

Terms and conditions of use — www.sipri.org




Arms imports to Pakistan, 1948-2012


United States Pakistan 230 M-113 APC 1977 1979 - 1980 (230) M-113A1 version

United States Pakistan 110 M-113 APC 1985 1986 - 1987 (110) $25 m deal; M-113A2 version

United States Pakistan 775 M-113 APC 1989 1989 - 1999 (775) Yes M-113A2 version; most assembled from kits(delivered between 1989-1991/1995) in Pakistan

United States Pakistan 20 Cougar APC 2010 2010 - 2010 (20) Buffalo EOD version; aid

United States Pakistan (10) M-32 ARV 1949 1950 - 1950 (10) Probably ex-US

United States Pakistan (52) M-88A1 ARV 1981 1984 - 1986 (52)

United States Pakistan (150) M-24 Chaffee Light tank 1953 1954 - 1955 (150) Ex-US

United States Pakistan (50) M-41 Walker Bulldog Light tank 1953 1954 - 1955 (50)

United States Pakistan (100) M-4 Sherman Tank 1948 1950 - 1950 (100) Ex-US

United States Pakistan (345) M-47 Patton Tank 1954 1955 - 1960 (345) Ex-US

United States Pakistan (25) M-36 Jackson Tank 1956 1958 - 1958 (25) Ex-US

United States Pakistan (200) M-48 Patton Tank 1960 1961 - 1964 (200) Ex-US

United States Pakistan 100 M-48A5 Patton Tank 1981 1982 - 1983 (100) Ex-US

United States Pakistan 24 M-901 ITV Tank destroyer 1981 1984 - 1985 (24)

Source:
SIPRI Arms Transfers Database, retrieved 1 February 2014

© SIPRI 1 February 2014. For terms and conditions of use see
Terms and conditions of use — www.sipri.org
 
.
Jordan's Nash-Shab rocket launcher attracts export interest

Author:Mohammed Najib, Amman
Section:
Last posted:2014-02-07
Images:1 image

complete Nash-Shab system weighs around 10 kg. (Mohammed Najib)

The 105 mm Nash-Shab (RPG-32) rocket launcher is attracting interest from potential customers less than a year after the start of production, according to Shadi Majali, the CEO of the King Abdullah II Design and Development Bureau (KAADB).

Majali stated that two Arab Gulf states and some North African countries had expressed interest in purchasing the Nash-Shab, while the Pakistani military has tested the system in Jordan pending a procurement decision.

The Nash-Shab project is a joint venture by KAADB and Russia's state arms export agency, Rosoboronexport. The Jadara Equipment & Defence Systems Company (JRESCO), a KADDB subsidiary, began producing the system from parts supplied by Rosoboronexport in May 2013. The first consignment was delivered to the Jordanian Armed Forces in the second half of 2013 and a second is expected in mid-2014.

The Nash-Shab is available with tandem anti-tank or thermobaric warheads, as well as with the sub-calibre IRG-32V training round. The system consists of a disposable tube containing the unguided rocket, which is fitted to a reusable sighting unit for firing. Brigadier General Bassam Issa, the director general of JRESCO, said that the sighting unit could be used to fire 200 rounds.

It can be fitted with either the standard 1P81 day sight, the new LRF GS-2R sight that is manufactured in Belarus or the NV/A-1 night vision sight made by Aselsan Middle East.

The system's modularity is being promoted as a useful feature for states facing internal security threats, as the sighting units can be stored separately from the rockets, thereby significantly reducing the risk of militants capturing complete systems if they raid military stockpiles. "This is a safe generation of rockets that could not fall in the hands of terrorists," Issa said.

JDW
 
. .
how can one estimate how much army is mechanized like by looking at numbers of armored vehicles and personnel.... like on wikipedia they have stated Chinese army is 40% mechanized.... similarly how much pak army is mechanized?
 
.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom