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Royal Bahraini Army
Land warfare branch of Bahrain's military forces From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Royal Bahraini Army is the ground force component of the Bahrain Defence Force. The army's current strength is 20,000 personnel. It is headed by Lieutenant General Khalifa bin Abdullah Al-Khalifa.[2]
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History
Bahraini ground troops took part in the Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen in the Yemeni civil war. In September 2015, five Bahraini soldiers guarding the Yemeni–Saudi Arabian border were killed in unspecified circumstances.[3] Another three died in Yemen afterwards.[4]
Formation
The army consists of 3 brigades and 2 battalions:
- 1 Armoured Brigade
- 2 armoured battalions
- 1 recon battalion
- 1 Mechanized Infantry Brigade
- 2 mechanized infantry battalions
- 1 infantry battalion
- 1 Artillery Brigade
- 6 artillery batteries
- 1 air defence battalion
- 1 special forces battalion
Equipment
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The RBA has a mix of equipment purchased in the 1970s and early 1990s. They are currently modernizing some of their equipment. Most purchases in the past have been second hand from the United States or the United Kingdom. In the past few years, Bahrain has begun developing military capabilities, through the purchase of equipment from Turkey, including armoured vehicles such as Otokar Arma and Otokar Akrep (Armoured combat vehicle).
In 2019, the U.S. State Department cleared a $2.5 billion sale of the Patriot missile-defense system to Bahrain. The deal would include 60 Patriot Advanced Capability-3 Missile Segment Enhancement missiles, 36 Patriot MIM-104E Guidance Enhanced Missiles with canisters, nine M903 launchers, two AN/MPQ-65 radar sets, control stations and other associated equipment.[5]
8 M-ATV light armored vehicles in service[6]
Armoured fighting vehicles
Air Defense Systems
Artillery
Anti-tank Weapons
Photo | Name | Origin | Type | Number | Details |
120 mm BAT recoilless rifle | ![]() |
Anti tank rifle | 10+ | ||
![]() |
BGM-71C | ![]() |
Anti-tank missile | Unknown | A total of 2,724 missiles delivered since 1983 |
![]() |
FGM-148 Javelin | ![]() |
Anti-tank missile | 60 | 180+ missiles |
![]() |
Kornet-EM | ![]() |
Unknown[17] |
Weapons
Additional equipment on order by the army include:
Retired equipment were made in the 1950s and 1960s:
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See also
References
Sources
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