Leopardo C2

Leopard C2

PaísAlemania
TipoTanque de batalla principal
En servicioMain1979-presente

el Leopardo 2 es un tanque de batalla principal desarrollado por Krauss-Maffei en la década de 1970 para el ejército de Alemania Occidental. El tanque entró en servicio por primera vez en 1979 y sucedió al anterior Leopard 1 como el tanque de batalla principal del ejército alemán. Varias versiones han servido en las fuerzas armadas de Alemania y otros 12 países europeos, así como varias naciones no europeas, incluyendo Canadá (Leopard 2A4M CAN), Chile, Indonesia, Singapur y Turquía. El Leopard 2 fue utilizado en Kosovo con el Ejército alemán y también ha visto acción en Afganistán con las contribuciones danesas y canadienses a la Fuerza Internacional de Asistencia a la Seguridad, además de ver acción en Siria con las Fuerzas Armadas turcas contra el EI y el YPJ

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Ver también:

Segunda Guerra Mundial: La historia visual definitiva de la guerra relámpago a la bomba atómica (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Segunda Guerra Mundial Mapa por Mapa (DK History Mapa por Mapa) - Amazon

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A Cold War Warrior in the Afghan Heat

el Leopardo C2 was Canada’s definitive upgrade of the German Leopard 1. By the late 1990s, the original Canadian Leopard C1s were aging, so the Canadian Forces purchased surplus Leopard 1A5 turrets from Germany and mated them to existing Canadian hulls. The result was the C2. However, it earned its place in history during the war in Afghanistan, where it was fitted with the MEXAS (Modular Expandable Armor System). This gave the sleek, lightly armored scout tank a bulky, muscular look and the protection needed to survive modern IEDs and RPGs, making it the only NATO Leopard 1 variant to see intense 21st-century tank combat.

Attribute Technical Specification (Leopard C2 MEXAS)
Papel Main Battle Tank (MBT)
Equipo 4 (Commander, Gunner, Loader, Driver)
Motor MTU MB 838 Ca M-500 10-cylinder multi-fuel (830 hp)
Velocidad máxima 65 km/h (40 mph)
Armamento principal 105 mm L7A3 rifled gun
Fire Control EMES-18 (Laser rangefinder & thermal imaging)
Armadura Steel base + MEXAS ceramic/composite add-on blocks
Peso 42.5 tonnes (Basic) / ~46 tonnes (with MEXAS)

Design Engineering: Precision and Protection

  • The L7 Gun: The 105mm L7 is one of the most successful tank guns ever made. While smaller than the 120mm on the Leopard 2, it is incredibly accurate. Canadian crews in Afghanistan used it with “sniper” precision to eliminate insurgent positions from kilometers away.
  • MEXAS Armor: The Leopard 1 was originally designed with thin armor on the assumption that modern shells would pierce anything anyway. The MEXAS kit changed that—it consists of ceramic composite blocks that break up the “jet” of a shaped charge (like an RPG), allowing the old tank to survive hits that would have previously destroyed it.
  • EMES-18 Sights: Moving to the 1A5 turret gave Canada the EMES-18 fire control system. This included a high-quality thermal sight, allowing the Leopard C2 to “see” heat signatures of hidden enemies through dust, smoke, and total darkness.
  • Hydraulic Cooling: Because the Leopard was operating in the 50°C heat of Kandahar, Canadian engineers had to add external cooling units and thermal covers to the turret to prevent the crew and the electronics from “cooking” in the desert sun.

Operational History: The Hammer of Kandahar

  • Operation Medusa (2006): After years of assuming tanks were obsolete for modern “peacekeeping,” Canada rushed the Leopard C2 to Afghanistan. In Operation Medusa, the tanks provided vital mobile firepower that saved countless infantry lives during heavy fighting in the Panjwaii district.
  • Psychological Impact: The Taliban reportedly nicknamed the Leopard “The Black Beast.” The mere sound of its 10-cylinder engine or the sight of its massive profile often caused insurgents to retreat without a fight.
  • Mine Plows and Rollers: Many C2s were fitted with heavy front-mounted mine rollers. They led convoys through IED-infested routes, “clearing the way” for the lighter LAV III vehicles.
  • Retirement: The C2 proved so useful that Canada realized they couldn’t give up tanks entirely, leading to the purchase of the much heavier Leopard 2. The C2 was officially retired in 2017, marking the end of the Leopard 1 era in Canadian service.

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