List of equipment of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Uzbekistan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of equipment used by the Armed Forces of the Republic of Uzbekistan.

Ground forces[]

Reportedly, Uzbek armed forces small arms include the AK-47, AK-74, Dragunov sniper rifle, Makarov pistol and PK machine gun.

Current equipment
Name Photo Origin Type Quantity
Tanks
T-72
Verkhnyaya Pyshma Tank Museum 2011 194.jpg
 Soviet Union Main battle tank 70[1]
T-64
T-64AK at the T-34 Tank History Museum.jpg
 Soviet Union Main battle tank 100[1]
T-62
T62.jpg
 Soviet Union Main battle tank 170[1]
T-54
T-55 4.jpg
 Soviet Union Main battle tank 80[1]
Infantry fighting vehicles
BMP-1
Bmp-1-DMSC9112086 JPG.jpg
 Soviet Union Infantry fighting vehicle 180[1]
BMP-2
BMP-2 (2).jpg
 Soviet Union Infantry fighting vehicle 270[1]
BMD-1
Madel BMD.jpg
 Soviet Union Infantry fighting vehicle 120[1]
BMD-2
VDVHistorymuseum-17.jpg
 Russia Infantry fighting vehicle 9[1]
Oshkosh M-ATV
M153 CROWS mounted on a U.S. Army M-ATV.jpg
 United States Infantry fighting vehicle 308[2][3]
Personnel carriers
BTR-60
Btr-60.jpg
 Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 24[1]
BTR-70
Victory park (Kazan) (262-6).jpg
 Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 25[1]
BTR-80
2011 Moscow Victory Day Parade (360-05).jpg
 Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 210[1]
BTR-D
137 AirborneRegiment - BTR-D, MANPADS.jpg
 Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 50[1]
BRM-1K
BRM-1K (1).jpg
 Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 6[1]
BRDM-2
BRDM-2 (1964) owned by James Stewart pic5.JPG
 Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 13[1]
Rocket artillery
BM-21 Grad
BM-21.JPG
 Soviet Union 122mm multiple rocket launcher 50[1]
BM-27 Uragan
9K57 Uragan 3.jpg
 Soviet Union 220mm multiple rocket launcher 48[1]
Tactical ballistic missile systems
OTR-21 Tochka
Azeri Tochka-U, parad in Baku, 2013.JPG
 Soviet Union Tactical ballistic missile 5[1]
HQ-9
Chinese HQ-9 launcher.jpg
 China Surface-to-air missile 1[4]
Self-propelled artillery
2S1 Gvozdika
2S1 VS.jpg
 Soviet Union 122mm self-propelled howitzer 18[1]
2S9 Nona
2S9 Nona-S.png
 Soviet Union Self-propelled 120 mm mortar 54[1]
2A18 (D-30)
122- мм гаубица Д-30 (1).jpg
 Soviet Union 122mm howitzer 60[5]
2S5 Giatsint-S
2S5 Giatsint-S.jpg
 Soviet Union 152mm self-propelled howitzer 17[1]
2S7 Pion
2s7 pion.jpg
 Soviet Union 203mm self-propelled howitzer 48[1]

Air force[]

Aircraft Origin Type In service Notes
MiG-29  Soviet Union Multi role fighter 60[6]
Sukhoi Su-27  Soviet Union Multi role fighter 25
Sukhoi Su-25  Soviet Union Ground attack 25 Active
Sukhoi Su-24  Soviet Union Long-range bomber 32 Stored
Sukhoi Su-17  Soviet Union Ground attack 38 Stored
Aero L-39 Albatros Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia Light attack/Trainer 14
Ilyushin Il-76  Soviet Union Heavy transport 6
Antonov An-12  Soviet Union Medium transport 5
Antonov An-24  Soviet Union Medium transport 1
Antonov An-26  Soviet Union Medium transport 15
Boeing 767-300  United States VIP transport 1 UK-67000, governmental plane
Mi-8 Hip/Mi-17 Hip  Soviet Union Medium transport helicopter 64
Mil Mi-6  Soviet Union Heavy transport helicopter 27
Mil Mi-26  Soviet Union Heavy transport helicopter 1

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u [↑ The International Institute For Strategic Studies IISS The Military Balance 2010. — Nuffield Press, 2010. — С. 373. — ISBN 978-1-85743-557-3.]
  2. ^ [1] Archived 2016-06-14 at the Wayback Machine the-military-balance-2016 —
  3. ^ Пентагон завершит поставки Узбекистану бронетехники в ближайшее время Archived 2015-07-19 at the Wayback Machine — 12news.uz, 15.06.2015
  4. ^ [2] Archived 2016-01-16 at the Wayback Machine thediplomat.com
  5. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies (2020). "Chapter Five: Russia and Eurasia". The Military Balance. 120 (1): 216. doi:10.1080/04597222.2020.1707966.
  6. ^ "World Military Aircraft Inventory". 2011 Aerospace: Aviation Week and Space Technology, January 2011.
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