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M1117-ICV production
pre-Colombian ICVs
(click to view larger)

Dec 3/09: Textron Marine and Land Systems in New Orleans, LA received a $20.9 million firm-fixed-price contract from Colombia for 39 of its M1117 ICV extended personnel carriers, including necessary weapons, spare parts, manuals, and training support. Textron places the total value at $45.6 million, which means the Pentagon contract announcement is a partial payment. Work will be performed in New Orleans, LA, with an estimated completion date of Nov 24/10. The Colombians evidently knew what they wanted; just one bid was solicited, with one bid received by U.S. Army Contracting Command TACOM in Warren, MI (W56HZV-10-C-0044). As the accompanying graphic shows, these vehicles are already in production. Textron release.

Textron’s M1117 ASV is a modern-day armored car, with armor, weapons, and mine protection that are superior to a Humvee jeep, but blast-resistance that falls short of existing MRAP vehicles. It is widely used by the US Army as a Military Police vehicle, and has limited carrying capacity. The M117 ASV Infantry Carrier Vehicle (ICV) variant…

ORD_AT4-M136_Swedish.jpg
M1117 ICV
(click to view larger)

Compared to the original M1117 ASV, the ICV variant has been stretched 24 inches between the wheel base, and its head room and volume has been increased by adding a 6-inch extension over the base roof line. These changes turn it into a full armored personnel carrier that can fit 2 crew members, 8 dismounts, and 1 additional gunner, though exact seating is set up per customer specifications. Weaponry appears to change, as the M1117’s distinctive twin-weapon full turret is replaced by an armored cupola that can hold either a .50 caliber/ 12.7mm machine gun, or a 40mm grenade machine gun. The M1117 ICV variant is available in 3 different protection levels, depending on which applique armor system is added to the vehicle.

The net is effect is a smaller, lighter wheeled APC that works well in urban scenarios, and in countries whose infrastructure or climate/terrain combination may create problems for larger 22-35 ton vehicles. A January 2009 report included about 30 armored vehicles as part of a wider $4 billion modernization package being financed by a special tax. There were reports that more BTR-80s would be built locally, if negotiations with Russia were successful. The M1117 ICV is similar enough that it could be an effective substitute.

Colombia becomes the 2nd country to order the M1117 ICV, after Iraq. The tan vehicle in the above photo is a good example – in the enlarged version, you can see the Arabic writing painted on it.

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Basic M1117, Tikrit
(click to view full)

The Colombian Army’s armor is almost exclusively wheeled, comprising a large number of Brazilian EE-9 Cascavel 4×4 fire support vehicles and Russian-designed BTR-80 8×8 wheeled APCs, mixed with a handful of EE-11 Urutu 6×6 APCs, ancient M8 Greyhound 6×6 wheeled armored cars, and blast-resistant RG-31 Nyala 4×4 MRAPs. Ancient M3 half-tracks appear to be the lone exception.

Under President Uribe, Colombia has waged a successful campaign that has removed many of the gains enjoyed by both the left-wing narco-terrorists of FARC, ELN et. al., and right-wing narco-paramilitaries like the AUC. The conflict continues, however, and in late 2008, AT4 anti-tank rockets that Sweden had sold to the Venezuelan government were found in FARC bases.

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