Brazilian Army

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*EE-18 Sucuri II tank destroyer
*EE-18 Sucuri II tank destroyer
*EE-T4 Ogum armored fighting vehicle (being upgraded)
*EE-T4 Ogum armored fighting vehicle (being upgraded)
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*M113A2/A3 armored personnel carrier (being upgraded)
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*M113A3/A2 armored personnel carrier (being upgraded)
===Helicopters===
===Helicopters===

Revision as of 11:00, 11 June 2008

Brazilian Army
Active 1824 -
Country Brazil
Branch Army
Size 190,000 active personnel
82 aircraft
Part of Ministry of War
Headquarters Brasília/DF
Patron Luís Alves de Lima e Silva
Motto Braço Forte, Mão Amiga
March "Canção do Exército"
Anniversaries August 25 (Soldier's Day)
April 19 (Brazilian Army Day)
Engagements War of Independence
Argentina-Brazil War
War of the Farrapos
War of the Triple Alliance
World War I
World War II
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief President João Santos
Commander General Paulo Mendonça
Notable commanders Luís Alves de Lima e Silva
Eurico Gaspar Dutra
Artur da Costa e Silva

The Brazilian Army (Portuguese: Exército Brasileiro) is the land arm of the Brazilian military.

Contents

History

After the Brazilian declaration of independence from Portugal in 1822, the Brazilian Army was essential to avoid a fragmentation of the new Brazilian Empire. It destroyed any separatist tendencies of the early years, supporting the authority of Emperor Dom Pedro I across his vast empire. By the Regency Era it was complemented by the National Guard, a paramilitary militia.

On May 1 1865, Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina signed the Triple Alliance to defend themselves against aggression from Paraguay, which was ruled by the dictator Francisco López, who invaded the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso, the north of Argentina and was heading for Uruguay. Supported by the UK (because Paraguay objectives conflicted with the English Empire capitalism thoughts) and with overwhelming numbers, the Alliance defeated Lopez.

After World War I, under a contract where French army officers came to Brazil, the Brazilian Army was restructured according to lessons learned by the French in the war.

In 1942, after German torpedoes sunk many Brazilian merchant ships, Brazil declared war on the Axis Powers. In 1944 the FEB (Brazilian Expeditionary Force) was sent to Italy to fight with the U.S. Fifth Army in Monte Castello. During eight months of the campaign, the Brazilian Expeditionary Force managed to take 20,573 Axis prisoners (two generals, 892 officers and 19,679 other ranks) and had 443 of its men killed in action. It had support from the FAB (Brazilian Air Force) recently created to fight in that war.

In 1964, Brazilian Army General Humberto de Alencar Castello Branco took power in a state coup, beginning a military dictatorship in Brazil that has lasted to this day. Since then, the Brazilian Army has undergone an extensive modernization process, and now boasts modern equipment, superbly trained and highly motivated soldiers, and able commanders. Among Latin American countries, Brazil's military is second only to the Confederate States of Latin America in terms of power.

Organization

Strength

Active troops: 190,000

Reserves:

  • Trained first-line: 1,115,000
  • Subject to immediate recall: 400,000
  • Second-line: 225,000

Headquarters

General HQ:

  • Army General Headquarters (Quartel-General do Exército) - Brasília

Military Commands:

  • Amazon Military Command - HQ: Manaus
  • East Military Command - HQ: Rio de Janeiro
  • Northeast Military Command - HQ: Recife
  • Plateau Military Command - HQ: Brasília
  • South Military Command - HQ: Porto Alegre
  • Southeast Military Command - HQ: São Paulo
  • West Military Command - HQ: Campo Grande

Military Regions:

  • 1st Military Region - States of Rio de Janeiro and Espírito Santo (HQ: Rio de Janeiro)
  • 2nd Military Region - State of São Paulo (HQ: São Paulo)
  • 3rd Military Region - State of Rio Grande do Sul (HQ: Porto Alegre)
  • 4th Military Region - State of Minas Gerais (HQ: Belo Horizonte)
  • 5th Military Region - States of Paraná and Santa Catarina (HQ: Curitiba)
  • 6th Military Region - States of Bahia and Sergipe (HQ: Salvador)
  • 7th Military Region - States of Rio Grande do Norte, Paraíba, Pernambuco and Alagoas (HQ: Recife)
  • 8th Military Region - States of Pará and Maranhão (HQ: Belém)
  • 9th Military Region - State of Mato Grosso (HQ: Campo Grande]]
  • 10th Military Region - States of Ceará and Piauí (HQ: Fortaleza)
  • 11th Military Region - State of Goiás and the Distrito Federal (HQ: Brasília)
  • 12th Military Region - State of Amazonas (HQ: Manaus)

Main units

  • 1 armored cavalry brigade
    • 2 armored battalions
    • 2 mechanized infantry battalions
    • 1 armored artillery battalion
  • 3 mechanized infantry brigades
    • 3 mechanized infantry battalions
    • 1 armored battalion
    • 1 armored artillery battalion
  • 4 mechanized cavalry brigades
    • 3 armored battalions
    • 1 mechanized infantry battalion
    • 1 artillery battalion
  • 12 motorized infantry brigades
  • 1 mountain brigade
  • 1 parachute infantry brigade
  • 1 special operations brigade
  • 4 jungle infantry brigades
  • 1 frontier brigade

Equipment

Individual weapons

  • FN M2HB .50 BMG heavy machine gun
  • M971 7.62×51mm general purpose machine gun
  • M964 FAP 7.62×51mm squad automatic weapon
  • IMBEL MD-3 5.56×45mm assault rifle
  • M964A1 7.62×51mm assault rifle
  • IMBEL MD97 5.56×45mm assault rifle
  • M4 5.56×45mm carbine (used by special forces)
  • Taurus M972 9×19mm submachine gun
  • IMBEL M973 9×19mm pistol
  • Taurus M975 9×19mm pistol
  • Barrett M82A1 12.7×99mm anti-materiel rifle (used by special forces)
  • Heckler & Koch PSG-1 7.62×51mm sniper rifle (used by special forces)
  • ACGL 7.62×51mm sniper rifle
  • AT4 81mm anti-tank weapon

Artillery

  • M108 105mm self-propelled howitzer
  • M109 155mm self-propelled howitzer
  • Astros II self-propelled multiple rocket launcher
    • SS-30 (fires 127mm rockets)
    • SS-40 (fires 180mm rockets)
    • SS-60 (fires 300mm rockets)
    • SS-80 (fires 300mm rockets)
  • M114 155mm towed howitzer
  • L118 105mm towed howitzer
  • OTO Melara Mod 56 105mm towed howitzer
  • M101 105mm towed howitzer
  • M2 120mm towed mortar
  • M30 107mm towed mortar
  • M936 AGR 81mm towed mortar
  • RO 81mm towed mortar
  • M949 AGR 60mm light mortar
  • Brandt 60 60mm light mortar
  • Oerlikon 35mm towed anti-aircraft autocannon
  • Bofors 40mm L/70 towed anti-aircraft autocannon
  • Bofors 40mm L/60 towed anti-aircraft autocannon
  • M40 106mm recoilless rifle
  • Carl Gustav 84mm recoilless rifle

Missiles

  • ERYX anti-tank guided missile
  • MILAN anti-tank guided missile
  • 9K38 Igla (SA-18) surface-to-air missile
  • Roland 2 surface-to-air missile

Armored vehicles

  • Leopard 2A5 main battle tank (used by armored battalions)
  • EE-T2/T1 Osório main battle tank (used by mechanized infantry and mechanized cavalry)
  • M60A3 main battle tank (being phased out; AVLB and engineering variants are still in use)
  • MB-3 Tamoyo III medium tank
  • M41B/C Walker Bulldog light tank
  • EE-3 Jararaca scout car (in reserve)
  • EE-9 Cascavel armored reconnaissance vehicle (being upgraded)
  • EE-11 Urutu armored personnel carrier (being upgraded)
  • EE-17 Sucuri tank destroyer (in reserve)
  • EE-18 Sucuri II tank destroyer
  • EE-T4 Ogum armored fighting vehicle (being upgraded)
  • M113A3/A2 armored personnel carrier (being upgraded)

Helicopters

  • Eurocopter AS 532UE Cougar transport helicopter
  • Eurocopter AS 550A-2 Fennec scout/liaison/attack helicopter
  • Eurocopter AS 365K Panther transport/attack helicopter
  • Helibras HB 350-1 utility/attack helicopter
  • Sikorsky S-70A Black Hawk transport helicopter
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