A Bit of an update on the same article by DID
Tanks for the Lesson: Leopards, too, for Canada
10-Mar-2009 13:50 EDT
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The front part of the article gives the background and information and is interesting, but this seems to added
In the aftermath of their sales to Norway, Denmark, and now Canada, The Dutch will be left with 110 Leopard 2A6-NL tanks in their arsenal [DID: dropping again to 73 if the proposed December 2007 sale to Portugal goes through].
Canada’s 100-tank buy includes 20 Leopard 2A6-NL, and 80 Leopard 2A4s. Why 100? Because Canada’s Department of National Defence believes this is the minimum fleet size to support a deployed tank squadron:
Badger AEV
(click for full photo)40 for deployed operations. The Canadian Forces need 2 combat-ready squadrons of approximately 20 tanks each: one for deployment and a second for rotation into theater to allow for depot repair and overhaul of the first.
40 for training. An additional two squadrons of 20 tanks each are required for collective and individual training in Canada: individual training at the Combat Training Centre at CFB Gagetown, New Brunswick and squadron training at CFB Wainwright at the Canadian Manoeuvre Training Centre in Alberta. These tanks do not need the same up-armoring conversion as the 2A6Ms, but they do need the same guns ad electronics if training is to be faithful.
20 specialists. The final 20 vehicles will consist of key support vehicles such as armored recovery vehicles (Canada’s Leopard 1 version: Taurus ARV, one was deployed to Afghanistan), armored bridge-laying vehicles (Canada’s Leopard 1 version: Beaver bridge-launcher), and armored engineering vehicles (Canada’s Leopard 1 version: Badger AEV, also deployed to Afghanistan and used in preference to LAV-III engineering vehicles). See DID’s coverage of the Swiss “Geniepanzer” purchase for the Leopard 2 “Kodiak AEV” variant. The 20 Leopard 2A4s would make good Kodiak conversion stock. On the other hand, without turrets that drive a 2015 expiration date, it may be practical for Canada to simply keep many of their existing Badger and Taurus vehicles for this role.
In the end, the 20 specialist vehicles were reduced to 8 ARV-3 Armored Recovery Vehicles, and 12 vehicles used for spare parts.
Next Steps and Updates
Leopard 2A6-PSO
(click to view full)March 10/09: Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper reports that 80 of the 100 new Leopard 2 tanks [the Leopard 2A4s] remain in storage, over a year after the formal contract with the Netherlands, 18 months after the first Leopard 2A6s were shipped to Afghanistan, and over 2 years after the initial agreement in principle. Without even a contract to get them ready for service:
“Lieutenant-General Andrew Leslie, Chief of the Land Staff, said he can not explain why he is still waiting for the badly needed tanks. ...[He] told the Senate committee on national security and defence. “They bought 100 Leopard 2s. Forty are still in Europe and 40 are currently in Montreal and they’ve been in Montreal since I believe November of last year. And I do not yet have my hands on those Leopard 2s with which to train our soldiers.”
Gen. Leslie told senators the government has yet to contract a private firm to do the upgrades required to get the vehicles into service. As a result, soldiers training in Canada must use nearly 40-year-old Leopard 1 tanks, which he said have a breakdown rate of 71 per cent.”
Oct 2/08: Leopard manufacturer Krauss-Maffei Wegman issues a release that discusses Canada’s field experiences in Afghanistan:
”[The 2A6 model’s extra mine-protection] proved its worth in November, 2007, when the Taliban attacked a Canadian Leopard 2A6M-CAN with a large booby trap. The tank did sustain damage, but the entire crew survived. The Canadians had purchased the tank from the German federal army’s inventory. The Canadian commander wrote a letter of thanks to the German ministry of defence, emphasising that survivors would have been highly unlikely in any other vehicle. Canadian Chief of Staff General Rick Hillier also pointed out that the Leopard 2A6M had not been destroyed, but was indeed back in operation after repairs.
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