Canadian Forces Land Force Command
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Land Force Command (LFC) is responsible for army operations within the Canadian Forces. LFC maintains bases across Canada and is responsible for the largest component of the Canadian Forces Primary Reserve — the Army Reserve, often referred to as the "militia". The Chief of Land Staff is Lieutenant-General Andrew Leslie.
LFC is the descendant of the Canadian Army which was the name of Canada's land forces from 1940 until February 1, 1968. At the time of unification all army units were placed under Mobile Command (MC), later changed to Force Mobile Command (FMC) in 1975 when tactical air units were assigned to newly-created Air Command. The name was changed from FMC to Land Force Command in a 1997 reorganization of the Canadian Forces.
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Following unification of the three armed services in 1968, Mobile Command became in effect the "Canadian Army" though the term "army" did not find favour until the 1980s when it became once again unofficially used to refer to Canada's land forces, both Regular and Reserve. The early organization of Mobile Command included tactical ground attack fixed and rotary wing aircraft, in addition to ground forces, and was akin to the integrated warfare approach of the United States Marine Corps. In a 1975 reorganization of the Canadian Forces, Air Command was created and all air assets were reassigned to that organization. Mobile Command was renamed Force Mobile Command and became an exclusive ground force. In 1997, Force Mobile Command was officially redesignated Land Force Command of the Canadian Forces.
- CFB Edmonton, Alberta (1 CMBG, CTR Wainwright)
- CFB Suffield, Alberta
- CFB-TC Shilo, Manitoba
- LFWA TC Wainwright, Alberta
- CFB Kingston, Ontario
- CFB Petawawa, Ontario (2 CMBG)
- LFCATC Meaford, Ontario
- CFB Montreal, Quebec
- CFB Valcartier, Quebec (5 CMBG)
- CFB Gagetown, New Brunswick (CTC)
- LFAATC Det Aldershot, Kentville Nova Scotia
- CFB Trenton, Ontario, Canadian Forces Land Advanced Warfare Centre (formerly CPC)
- Four Mile Point Live Firing Range - Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario
Canadian infantry and armoured regimental traditions are strongly rooted in the traditions and history of the British Army. Many regiments were patterned after regiments of the British Army, and a system of official "alliances", or affiliations, was created to perpetuate a sense of shared history. Other regiments developed independently, resulting in a mixture of both colourful and historically familiar names. Other traditions such as Battle Honours and Colours have been maintained by Canadian regiments as well. Approximately two thirds of the Regular Force is comprised of anglophone units, while one third is francophone.
Regular Force units include:
- The Royal Canadian Dragoons - CFB Petawawa, Ontario
- Lord Strathcona's Horse (Royal Canadians) - CFB Edmonton, Alberta
- 12e Régiment blindé du Canada - CFB Valcartier and Trois-Rivières, Quebec
Canada's regular field artillery has traditionally been called the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery. Canada currently has four Regular Force regiments:
- 1st Regiment, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery
- 2nd Regiment, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery
- 5e Régiment d'artillerie légère du Canada
- 4th Air Defence Regiment, Royal Canadian Artillery
- 1 Combat Engineer Regiment - CFB Edmonton, Alberta
- 2 Combat Engineer Regiment - CFB Petawawa, Ontario
- 4 Engineer Support Regiment - CFB Gagetown, New Brunswick
- 5 Combat Engineer Regiment - CFB Valcartier, Quebec
Regular Force infantry regiments and battalions of the Canadian Army are:
- The Royal Canadian Regiment
- 1st Battalion (CFB Petawawa) - Mechanized Infantry
- 2nd Battalion (CFB Gagetown) - Mechanized Infantry
- 3rd Battalion (CFB Petawawa) - Light Infantry + Parachute Company
- Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry
- 1st Battalion (CFB Edmonton) - Mechanized Infantry
- 2nd Battalion (CFB Shilo) - Mechanized Infantry
- 3rd Battalion (CFB Edmonton) - Light Infantry + Parachute Company
- Royal 22e Régiment
- 1er Bataillon (CFB Valcartier) - Mechanized Infantry
- 2e Bataillon (Quebec City) - Mechanized Infantry
- 3e Bataillon (CFB Valcartier) - Light Infantry + Parachute Company
| Model | Type | Number | Dates | Builder | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G-Wagen 4 × 4 | light utility vehicle | 1,159 | 2004- | Mercedes-Benz, Germany | replaced the Iltis light trucks in Afghanistan |
| Mamba/Nyala | landmine-resistant 4×4 armoured personnel carrier | 75 | 2006 | BAE Systems Land Systems, United Kingdom/South Africa | deployment in Afghanistan |
| MLVW | medium logistic vehicle, wheeled | 2,769 | 1982 | General Motors Corporation/Bombardier, United States/Canada | based on M35/M36 series trucks; procured new trucks to replace them |
| LSVW | light support vehicle, wheeled | 2,879 | 1993-1997 | Western Star, United States | based on Iveco model 40.10 |
| HLVW | heavy lift vehicle | 1,212 | 1992 | Urban Transportation Development Corporation, Canada | based on Austrian Steyr Percheron truck chassis |
| ROWPU | reverse-osmosis water purification unit | N/A | 1990s | Zenon Environmental Inc, Canada | |
| Cougar AVGP | 6 × 6 armoured vehicle (general purpose) | 100 | 1976 | General Dynamics Canada/General Motors Diesel Division, United States | Armoured fire support variant armed with 76-mm gun; being retired from reserve units and replaced with G-Wagon |
| Grizzly AVGP | armoured personnel carrier | 274 | 1976 | General Dynamics Canada/General Motors Diesel Division, United States | Life-extended & relegated to support roles after 2000; 100 loaned to African Union troops in Sudan. |
| Husky AVGP | armoured recovery | 27 | 1976 | General Dynamics Canada/General Motors Diesel Division, United States | 5 loaned to African Union troops in Sudan. |
| Lynx reconnaissance vehicle | armoured reconnaissance | 174 | 1968–1993 | FMC, United States | replaced by Coyote Reconnaissance Vehicle |
| Coyote Reconnaissance Vehicle (8×8) | armoured reconnaissance | 203 | 1996 | General Dynamics Canada/General Motors Diesel Division, United States/Canada | replaced the Lynx reconnaissance vehicle |
| Bison (8×8) | armoured personnel carrier | 199 | 1990 | General Dynamics Canada/General Motors Diesel Division, United States/Canada | TRILS (Tactical Radar Identification and Location System) uses Bison chassis; 74 as Ambulances
60 Mortar vehicles, 35 Recovery vehicles, 16 Mobile Repair Team vehicles, 14 Electronic Warfare vehicles (AERIES) |
| M113A3/MTVL | tracked armoured personnel carrier | 289 | 2001-2006 | FMC, United States | 289 of original 1,143 M113's delivered mid-1960s to early 1990s upgraded to A3/MTVL; remainder declared surplus; used Taurus ARV tank tow vehicle |
| LAV III | 8 × 8 light armoured vehicle | 651 | 1999- | General Motors Diesel Division, United States/Canada | 313 LAV Infantry Section Carriers, 181 LAV Command Post variants, 33 LAV TOW Under Armour (TUA) variants (Turret equipped with 2 TOW launchers), 47 LAV Forward Observation Officer (FOO) variants, 44 LAV Engineer variants, 33 Multi-Mission Effects Vehicle (MMEV) |
| ADATS | air-defence, antitank system | 34 | 1989 | Rheinmetall Defence (formerly Oerlikon Contraves), Canada | on M113 Armored Personnel Carrier platform |
| Leopard C2 | main battle tank | 66 | 1978– | Krauss-Maffei/ Rheinmetall Defence, Germany | 114 Leopard C1 tanks were upgraded to Leopard C2 in 2000–2001; deployment in Afghanistan |
| Leopard 2A6M | main battle tank | 20 (40) | 2007– | Krauss-Maffei/ Rheinmetall Defence, Germany | A squadron of 20 Leopard 2A6M tanks "for deployed operations" were borrowed from the German Bundeswehr for use in Afghanistan for interim use (starting August 2007)[1] until they are replaced by 40 to be purchased from the Netherlands.[2] |
| Leopard 2A4 | main battle tank | (40) | 2007– | Krauss-Maffei/ Rheinmetall Defence, Germany | 40 Leopard 2A4 tanks "for collective and individual training" are planned to be purchased from the Netherlands in the summer of 2007.[2] |
| ARV 3 M Buffalo "Büffel" | key support vehicles | 2 (20) | 2007– | Rheinmetall Defence, Germany | 2 Leopard 2-based ARVs were borrowed from Germany and delivered to Afghanistan in August 2007. 20 Leopard 2 support variants (armoured recovery vehicles, armoured bridge-laying vehicles and armoured engineering vehicles) are planned to be purchased from the Netherlands in the summer of 2007.[2] |
| AEV Badger "Dachs" | armoured engineering vehicle | 9 | 1990 | Rheinmetall Defence (formerly MAK), Germany | uses Leopard 1 chassis; armed with 7.62-mm machine gun (coax) C6 – 7.62-mm machine gun (external mount) 76-mm grenade launcher |
| AVLB Beaver "Biber" | armoured bridge-laying vehicle | 9 | 1978– | Rheinmetall Defence (formerly MAK), Germany | uses Leopard 1 chassis |
| ARV Taurus | armoured recovery vehicle | 8 | 1978- | Rheinmetall Defence (formerly MAK), Germany | uses Leopard 1 chassis |
| M109 | self-propelled howitzer | 76 | 1960s-1980s | United Defense Limited Partnership, United States | Retired mid-2000s |
| Bv206 | tracked vehicle | 78 | 1983 | BAE Systems Land Systems, United Kingdom | |
| CH-146 Griffon | tactical utility helicopter | 98 | 1995-1997 | Bell Helicopter Textron, United States/Canada | |
| M151A2 | light truck | 935 | 1974-1975 | Ford, United States | replaced by the Volkswagen Iltis truck in 1984 |
| KMK 2025 | crane | N/A | N/A | Krupp, Germany | |
| Solar 220LC-III | Track Excavator | N/A | N/A | Daewoo, South Korea | |
| TRILS | Tactical Radar Identification and Location System | 4 | 1997 | General Dynamics Canada/General Motors Diesel Division, United States | based on Bison (8×8) |
| M109A4 | Self Propelled Howitzer | 76 | N/A | Bowen McLaughlin-York, United States | all retired |
| Galion 850 series | Road grader | N/A | N/A | Galion, Ohio, United States | |
| JSFU | Mine clearing system | 1? | 2000 | Aardvark, United Kingdom | deployment in Afghanistan |
| M-Gator ATV | transport and support | N/A | N/A | Deere & Company, United States | deployment in Afghanistan |
| Cougar (vehicle) | armoured fighting vehicle | 6 | on order | Force Protection Inc, United States | deployment in Afghanistan |
| Buffalo (mine protected vehicle) | mine removal system | 5 | deployed in Afghanistan | Force Protection Inc, United States / South Africa | deployment in Afghanistan |
| Chubby (mine detection system) | mine removal system | 5 | on order | DCD Dorbyl, South Africa | deployment in Afghanistan; 1 damaged by mine |
| Actros Armoured Heavy Support Vehicle Systems (AHSVS) | 8 x8 armoured heavy support vehicle | 86; option for additional 26 | on order | Mercedes-Benz, |
deployment in Afghanistan 2007 |
| Model/Type | Number | Dates | Manufacturer | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C9 machine-gun | N/A | N/A | FN Minimi, |
|
| C7A1 rifle/C8A1 carbine/C-7A2 rifle | N/A | N/A | Diemaco/Colt Canada, |
|
| C6 machine-gun | N/A | N/A | FN Minimi, |
|
| Browning .50 calibre heavy machine-gun | N/A | N/A | John M. Browning, |
|
| Browning-HP 9 mm pistol | N/A | 1944 | John M. Browning, Template:Canadian made in WW2 | |
| Long Range Sniper Weapon (LRSW) | N/A | 2000 | McMillian Brothers, |
|
| C3A1 sniper rifle | N/A | N/A | Parker Hale, |
being phased out and replaced with the C14 sniper rifle |
| C14 Timberwolf .338 Lapua sniper rifle | N/A | 2005 | PGW Defence Technologies Inc., |
Just entering service as the standard sniper rifle of the Canadian Forces |
| C13 fragmentation grenade | N/A | N/A | ||
| M203A1 grenade launcher | N/A | N/A | ||
| TOW anti-tank missile | N/A | N/A | ||
| M3 Carl Gustav 84mm SRAAW(M) anti-armour platoon gun | N/A | N/A | Bofors, |
|
| M72 anti-tank weapon | N/A | N/A | Nammo, |
|
| 81 mm mortar | N/A | N/A | ||
| 60 mm mortar | N/A | N/A | ||
| ERYX short-range anti-armour weapon (heavy) | N/A | N/A | MBDA, |
|
| Javelin short-range air defence missile | N/A | N/A | ||
| LG1 Mark II 105 mm towed howitzer | N/A | N/A | Giat Industries, |
|
| M777 lightweight 155mm howitzer | N/A | N/A | British Vickers, |
|
| Skyguard / 35 mm twin-gun low-level air defence | N/A | N/A | Oerlikon, |
|
| C1 close support howitzer | N/A | N/A | ||
| C3 close support howitzer | N/A | N/A | ||
| P225, 226 pistol | N/A | N/A | SIGARMS, |
|
| Remington 870 shotgun c. 1950 | N/A | N/A | Remington Arms, |
| Model/Type | Number | Dates | Manufacturer | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CG634 Helmet | N/A | 1997 | CGF Gallet, |
replaced M1 Helmet |
| CADPAT (Canadian Disruptive Pattern) - Arid Regions uniform | N/A | 2002 | ||
| CADPAT (Canadian Disruptive Pattern) - Temperate Woodland uniform | N/A | 2002 | ||
| Improved Landmine Detection System (ILDS) | N/A | 2000s | N/A | |
| Ferret Anti Sniper System | 13 | 2005 | MacDonald Dettwiler Corp Richmond, BC |
a microphone system mounted on the Coyote APC |
| QuikClot | N/A | 2007 | chemical clotting agent to help clot wounds | |
| hypertonic fluid | N/A | 2007 | Defence Research and Development Canada (DRDC), |
concentrated blood clotting agent |
| Xaver 800 | N/A | 2007 | Camero Incorporated of Vienna, Virigina |
microwave radar system - uses radio waves and converter to capture images |
| Medium Floating Bridge (MFB) | N/A | N/A | N/A | floating bridge |
| Medium Girder Bridge {MGB} | N/A | N/A | N/A | light modular bridge |
| Minelab F1A4 | N/A | N/A | N/A | hand held mine detector |
| NODLR | N/A | N/A | N/A | night vision camera |
| Track Way | N/A | N/A | N/A | portable road for soft ground conditions |
| E-One Cyclone | N/A | N/A | N/A | fire pumper |
| Oshkosk | N/A | N/A | N/A | airport fire tender |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CG634 Helmet | 1997 | CGF Gallet, |
|
| Willys Jeep | |||
| Morris C8 | |||
| AEC Matador | |||
| Diamond T | 4-Ton lorry | ||
| Ford F-8 | |||
| Ford F-15 | |||
| Ford F-15 | |||
| Ford F-30 | |||
| Ford F-60S, F-60L, F-60H, F-60T | |||
| Ford F-GT | |||
| General Motors Canada (CHEVROLET) C-8, C-8A | |||
| General Motors Canada (CHEVROLET) C-15, C-15A | |||
| General Motors Canada (CHEVROLET) C15TA Armoured Truck | |||
| General Motors Canada (CHEVROLET) C-30, C-60S, C-60L, C-60X | |||
| General Motors Canada (CHEVROLET) C-GT | |||
| General Motors Canada (CHEVROLET) | Field Artillery Tractor | ||
| Daimler Dingo | |||
| Daimler Mk. I Armoured Car | |||
| Humber Mk. I Scout Car | |||
| Humber Mk. IV Armoured Car | |||
| M3 Scout Car | |||
| Otter Light Reconnaissance Car | |||
| Staghound Armoured Car | |||
| Fox Armoured Car | |||
| Otter Light Reconnaissance Car | |||
| Lynx Scout Car | Template:UK/CAN | ||
| M5 Reconnaissance Vehicle | (A turretless variant of the M5 light tank) |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Kangaroo (armoured personnel carrier) | ||
| M7 Priest Kangaroo (Converted from M7 Priest SP howitzer) | ||
| Ram Kangaroo (Converted from Ram I and II tanks) | ||
| Sherman Kangaroo (Converted from Sherman tanks) | ||
| Loyd Carrier | ||
| Universal Carrier | ||
| Wasp - A Universal Carrier with flame-thrower equipment | ||
| T-16 Carrier | ||
| Windsor Carrier | ||
| M3A1 Half-track | ||
| International Harvester Truck,15-cwt, Half-track | ||
| International Harvester M5 Half-track | ||
| International Harvester M9A1 Half-track | ||
| International Harvester M14 Half-track |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Stuart tank | ||
| Churchill infantry tank MkI-IV | ||
| Churchill Oke flame tank | ||
| Sherman Tank | ||
| Grizzly (Canadian built M4A1) | ||
| Sherman III (M4A2 with a 75 mm gun) | ||
| Sherman V (M4A4 with a 75 mm gun) | ||
| Sherman Ib (M4 with a 105 mm howitzer) | ||
| Sherman IC (Firefly) (M4 with a 17 pounder gun) | ||
| Sherman VC (Firefly) (M4A4 with a 17 pounder gun) | ||
| Sherman V Duplex Drive tank (M4A4 {75mm} with Duplex Drive system and flotation screen) | ||
| Sherman Badger flame tank | ||
| Ram Badger flame tank | Early WW2 | |
| M10 Wolverine tank destroyer | WW2 | |
| Achilles tank destroyers (M10 equipped with a 17 pounder gun) | WW2 | |
| Archer Tank Destroyer | WW2, Suez Crisis |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Carden Loyd Mk IV tankette | ||
| Light Tank Mk VIA | ||
| Six Ton Tank Model 1917 | ||
| Ram tank I and II | ||
| Vickers Valentine Mark VI | ||
| Matilda II infantry tank | ||
| Lee/Grant |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| M3 75mm Gun Motor Carriage (M3 Half-track equipped with the M1A1 75 mm gun) | ||
| Sexton | ||
| M7 Priest | ||
| Centaur IV | ||
| Centaur, AA Mk II | ||
| Skink anti-aircraft tank |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Ram ARV Mk I and II | ||
| Valentine Bridgelayer | ||
| M4A4 Sherman V Armoured Recovery vehicle |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| QF 25 pounder | ||
| BL 4.5 inch Medium Field Gun | ||
| BL 5.5 inch Medium Gun | ||
| Land Mattress |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Ordnance QF 6 pounder | ||
| Ordnance QF 17 pounder |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Bofors 40 mm gun | ||
| QF 3.75 inch AA | ||
| Polsten-Oerlikon gun |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Charleville 1717 | ||
| Charleville 1728 | ||
| Charleville 1746 | ||
| Fusil de Grenadier Tulle | ||
| Fusil de Chasse Tulle | ||
| Queen Ann Musket | 1702-1714 | |
| William III Carbine | ||
| Nock Carbine | 1780-1790s | |
| Elliot Carbine | 1770s | |
| Brown Bess Long Land, Short Land, India Patterns | ||
| Lovells Pattern 1838 musket and Double Barrel Carbine | ||
| Pattern 1842 Musket | ||
| Pattern 1851 Rifle | ||
| Pattern 1853 Enfield | ||
| Lancaster Rifle | ||
| Baker rifle | ||
| Brunswick rifle |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Starr Carbine | US Civil War 1860s | |
| Spencer rifle and carbine | US Civil War 1860s | |
| Westley Richards Rifle | ||
| Peabody Rifle | ||
| Snider Enfield | 1860s-1901 | |
| Martini Henry | 1870s-end of WWI | |
| Winchester rifle | 1870s-end of WWI |
.303 rifles
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Martini-Metford - 1894-? | ||
| Martini-Enfield | ||
| Lee-Metford - 1895-? | ||
| Lee-Enfield | ||
| Lee Enfield Mk I - 1896-1905 | ||
| Lee Enfield (SMLE) Mark III - 1916-1943 | ||
| Lee Enfield Number 4 Mk I - 1943-1955, Still in use with the Canadian Rangers | ||
| Ross rifle | ||
| Ross Mark I and Ross Mark II - 1905-1913 | ||
| Ross Mark III - 1913-1916 | ||
| FN C1 and FN C1A1 -1955-1985 | ||
| C7, C7A1 and C7A2- 1985-present | ||
| C8 Carbine, C8A1 (Carbine version of the C7 issued to mostly to AFV crews), C8A2 - ? -present | ||
| C3A1 sniper rifle - 1970s-present | ||
| .338 Cal Medium Range Sniper Rifle - ? - present | ||
| 12.7mm McMillan Tac-50 Sniper Rifle - ? - present |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Colt Model 1878 Revolver - 1885-1902 | ||
| Colt "New Service" Revolver - 1900-1928 (also used by the NWMP and RCMP from 1905-1954) | ||
| Colt Model 1911 Pistol - 1914-1945 | ||
| Smith & Wesson 2nd Model "Hand Ejector" Revolver - 1915-1951 | ||
| Smith & Wesson "Military & Police" Revolver - 1939-1964 | ||
| Inglis "High Power" Pistol - 1944-present (Canadian re-engineering of the Browning Hi-Power) | ||
| Browning Hi-Power - 1970-present | ||
| SIG-Sauer P225(Close Protection Teams, Military Police and Naval Boarding Parties) - 1991-present | ||
| SIG-Sauer P226 (JTF-2) - ?-present |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Webley Mark VI Revolver | ||
| Enfield No. 2 MkI Revolver | ||
| Colt Police Positive - 1941-present | ||
| Colt Model 1911A1 - 1942-1945 |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Thompson Submachine Gun - 1940-1945 | ||
| Sten Gun - 1942-1958 | ||
| C1 Submachine Gun - 1958-1988 | ||
| Heckler & Koch MP5 JTF2 and naval boarding parties - |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Colt Machine Gun 1914-1916 | ||
| Vickers Machine Gun 1914-1919 | ||
| Lewis Machine Gun - 1916-1939 | ||
| C5 General Purpose Machine Gun - 1939?-1980s | ||
| Bren Light Machine Gun - 1939-1955 | ||
| Bangalore torpedo | ||
| FN C2 Light Machine Gun - 1955-1985 | ||
| C6 General Purpose Machine Gun 1978-present | ||
| C9 Light Machine Gun - 1985-present | ||
| M2 Heavy Machine Gun - WWII-present | ||
| Remington 870 Tactical Shotgun -????-???? | ||
| Flamethrower, Portable, No 2 "Ack-Pack" | ||
| Javelin surface-to-air missile |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Boys Anti-Tank Rifle | ||
| PIAT-1943-1950s | ||
| 3.5" Rocket Launcher (in Reserve Force inventory as late as 1977) | ||
| Carl Gustav-1965-present | ||
| M72 SRAAW | ||
| TOW | ||
| ERYX |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Mills bomb | ||
| No 68 AT Grenade | ||
| No 69 Bakelite Percussion Grenade | ||
| No 73 Grenade | ||
| No. 74 Sticky bomb | ||
| No. 75 AT Hawkins Mine | ||
| No. 82 Gammon | ||
| Clam Magnetic Mine | ||
| GS.MV Anti-tank Mine | ||
| GS.MkII Anti-tank Mine | ||
| M61 grenade | ||
| M67 grenade | ||
| V40 Mini Fragmentation Grenade |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| 2 inch Mortar-WWII-????-???? (WWII) | ||
| 3 inch Mortar-????-???? (WWII) | ||
| 4.2 inch Mortar-????-???? (WWII) | ||
| 60 mm M19 CAN Light Mortar - WWII-present | ||
| 81 mm C3 Medium Mortar - 1967-present |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Pattern 1888 Bayonet | ||
| Pattern 1907 Bayonet | ||
| Pattern 1913 Bayonet | ||
| Ross Bayonet | ||
| No. 4 Rifle Bayonets | ||
| Mk I Spike Bayonet | ||
| Mk II Spike Bayone | ||
| Mk III Spike Bayonet | ||
| No. 5 Mk II Knife Bayonet | ||
| No. 7 Knife Bayonet | ||
| No. 9 Socket Knife Bayonet | ||
| C1 Bayonet | ||
| Nella C7 Bayonet |
Combat knives
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fairbairn-Sykes fighting knife | Grohmann #3 CAF Knife | 1967-present |
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| .303 British | ||
| .455 Webley | ||
| 7.62 × 51 mm NATO | ||
| 5.56 x 45 mm NATO |
Uniforms
See also: Battledress, Uniforms of the Canadian Forces
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign Service Dress 1900-1903 | 1900-1903 | |
| Service Dress | 1907-1940 | |
| Canadian Pattern and British Pattern | ||
| Khaki Drill | 1900-1949 | |
| Battle Dress | 1939-1967 | |
| Denison smock Used by the Airborne | ||
| Bush Dress | 1950-1960 | |
| Combat Dress | 1968-2002 | |
| CADPAT camouflage Combat Dress 2002-present |
Load bearing equipment
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Oliver Pattern Equipment 1898-19?? | ||
| 1903 Pattern Bandolier Equipment | ||
| 1937 Pattern Web Equipment | ||
| 1942 Battle Jerkin | ||
| 1951 Pattern Web Equipment | ||
| 1964 Pattern Web Equipment | ||
| 1982 Pattern Web Equipment | ||
| Tactical Vest (or just known as Tac Vest). 2003- Present |
Head dress
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Wolseley" helmets | ||
| Glengarry | ||
| Tam o'shanter | ||
| Field Service Cap | ||
| Beret | 19th Century-present | |
| Brodie helmet | WWI | |
| Kettle hat | WWII |
Protective equipment
| Model/Type | Period or Years in Use | Manufacturer/Origins |
|---|---|---|
| Fragmentation Protection Vest |
Comparison of ranking structure available at Ranks and insignia of NATO. Not shown are the various appointment badges for specialist positions such as master gunner, drum major, etc. Many ranks are associated with specific appointments; for example a regimental sergeant major is usually a chief warrant officer. The title of master corporal also, technically, refers to an appointment and not a rank. Some ranks may have different names depending on the customary tradition of certain army corps, and may not appear here.
| NATO Code | OF-10 | OF-9 | OF-8 | OF-7 | OF-6 | OF-5 | OF-4 | OF-3 | OF-2 | OF-1 | OF-D- | Student Officer | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Equivalent | No Equivalent | ||||||||||||
| General | Lieutenant General | Major General | Brigadier General | Colonel | Lieutenant Colonel | Major | Captain | Lieutenant | Second Lieutenant | Officer Cadet | |||
| Général | Lieutenant-général | Major-général | Brigadier-général | Colonel | Lieutenant-colonel | Major | Capitaine | Lieutenant | Sous-lieutenant | Eleve-Officier | |||
|
|||||||||||||
| NATO Code | OR-9 | OR-8 | OR-7 | OR-6 | OR-5 | OR-4 | OR-3 | OR-2 | OR-1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No insignia | No insignia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chief Warrant Officer Adjudant-chef |
Master Warrant Officer Adjudant-maître |
Warrant Officer Adjudant |
Sergeant Sergent |
Master Corporal Caporal-chef |
Corporal Caporal |
Trained Private Soldat |
Private Basic | Private (Recruit) Soldat (recrue) |
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The Canadian Army has participated in the following campaigns as a combatant:
- Second Boer War
- First World War
- Vimy Ridge
- Passchendaele
- Second Battle of Ypres
- Western Front
- Siberian Expedition
- Canadian Military Journal: http://www.journal.forces.gc.ca
- Canadian Army Journal: http://www.army.forces.gc.ca/caj/
- ^ Background — CF Leased & Purchased Leopard 2A6M/2A4 Tanks, at CASR
- ^ a b c DND backgrounder, Renewing the Canadian Forces' Tank Capability, April 12, 2007
- Faces of War: The Canadian Army at Library and Archives Canada
- AHSVS
- History of the Canadian Army
- Canadian Forces
- Regimental nicknames of the Canadian Forces
- army.ca
- Intelligence Branch (Canadian Forces)
- Permanent Active Militia
- Non-Permanent Active Militia
- Canadian Army Website - Official website of the Canadian Army
- Land Force Command (Defence page)
- army.ca - Army.ca a web forum and interactive wiki dealing with both current and historical issues related to the Canadian Army.
- Battle Honours in the Canadian Army by J.R. Grodzinski
- Battle Honours of the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps
- Battle Honours of the Royal Canadian Infantry Corps
- Canadiansoldiers.com
- Canadian Soldier Training Blog
- Battle Honours in the Canadian Army
- Amid ancient Afghan rubble strides the bionic Canuck
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Land Force Areas: LFAA • LFQA • LFCA • LFWA • LFNA Canadian Mechanized Brigade Groups: 1 CMBG • 2 CMBG • 5 CMBG Canadian Brigade Groups: 31 CBG • 32 CBG • 33 CBG • 34 CBG • 35 CBG • 36 CBG • 37 CBG • 38 CBG • 39 CBG • 41 CBG Soldier Weapons: • C9 machine-gun • C7A1 rifle/C8A1 carbine/C-7A2 rifle • C6 machine-gun • Browning .50 calibre heavy machine-gun • Browning-HP 9 mm pistol •P225, 226 •Long Range Sniper Weapon (LRSW) • C3A1 sniper rifle • C13 fragmentation grenade •M203 grenade launcher • M72 SRAAW(L) Crewed Weapons: • Carl Gustav SRAAW(M) •ERYX SRAAW(H) • TOW LRAAW(H) • 81 mm mortar • 60 mm mortar • Javelin short-range air defence missile •Skyguard • C1 close support howitzer • C3 close support howitzer • LG1 Mark II 105 mm towed howitzer • M777 lightweight 155mm howitzer Armoured Fighting Vehicles: LAV III • Coyote Reconnaissance Vehicle • ADATS • Leopard C2 • Leopard 2 • Bison APC • M113A3 and MTVL • RG-31 Schools: Canadian Forces Land Advanced Warfare Centre • Canadian Land Force Command and Staff College • |