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2B9 Vasilek

2B9 Vasilek

FieldValue
name2B9 Vasilek
image2B9 Vasilek mortar-4058.JPG
image_size300px
caption82 mm 2B9 Vasilek Gun-mortar
originSoviet Union
typeAutomatic gun-mortar
is_artilleryyes
is_UK
service1970–present
warsSoviet–Afghan War
Syrian Civil War
War in Donbas
Second Nagorno-Karabakh War
Russo-Ukrainian War
manufacturerBolshevik Plant, Norinco,
variants
weight632 kg
crew
cartridge3.23 kg bomb
caliber82 mm
rate100–120 rpm
velocity270 m/s
max_range4,270 m
feedmanually loaded individual bomb or 4-round bomb cassette
sightsPAM-1 2.5× or 3×
<!-- Artillery specifications -->breechmuzzle loaded or breech loaded
elevation−1° to 85°
traverse60°
haft_type
yield

Syrian Civil War War in Donbas Second Nagorno-Karabakh War Russo-Ukrainian War The 2B9 Vasilek (2Б9 "Василёк" - Cornflower) also known as Vasilyek, AM 289 Vasilyek or AM 2B9 Vasilyek, is an automatic 82 mm gun-mortar developed in the Soviet Union in 1967 and fielded with the Soviet Army in 1970.

Description

It was based on the F-82 automatic mortar. The 2B9 is a semiautomatic breechloader that makes use of four-round clips or is loaded with individual rounds. Rounds can be loaded from either the muzzle or the breech. Because of its wheeled carriage, the 2B9 resembles a light artillery piece more than a conventional mortar.

The 2B9 was used in Afghanistan by Soviet units and is still found in Russian airmobile infantry units. In the fighting in Afghanistan, Soviet units found the 2B9 to be a versatile and useful weapon. The 2B9 can fire high-explosive, armor-piercing, smoke, and illumination rounds. The armor-piercing projectile, which weighs 3.1 kg, has a 75 g warhead that can penetrate 100 mm of armor. The high-explosive shell produces 400 to 600 fragments.

The 2B9 can be towed but is usually carried on a modified GAZ-66 military truck. By 1988, the 2B9 was also deployed as a self-propelled weapon by mounting the gun-mortar in the rear of an MT-LB armored personnel carrier.

During the Syrian Civil War, the 2B9M Vasilek was used by the Syrian Armed Forces, Kurdish People's Protection Units, and the Islamist group Ansar al-Sham. The latter used a 2B9M automatic mortar near Mount Chalma, Kesab district.

Variants

  • 2B9 Vasilek – Basic model
    • 2B9M Vasilek – Modernised version introduced in 1982, and adopted in 1983.
  • DE-82 − upgraded Hungarian version developed in 1987.
  • Type W99 – 2B9 Vasilek produced in the People's Republic of China by Norinco.
  • Scorpion 2004, the US Army with the assistance of Picatinny Arsenal engineers, fitted a Hungarian-supplied 2B9 Vasilek into the rear of a Humvee chassis as a proof of concept for the Army and Marine Corps. It can carry 191 rounds and the armoured cab provides ballistic and blast overpressure protection for the crew. Ultimately, it wasn't adopted by the Army.
  • MT-LB − During Russo-Ukrainian War a MT-LB chassis was spotted fitted with 2B9 mortar and a UB-32 rocket pod.

Operators

Map with 2B9 operators in blue with former operators in red

Current

  • – Used by both government and rebel forces in the Syrian Civil War
  • – Used by both government and Donetsk People's Republic, Luhansk People's Republic forces in the war in Donbas

Former

  • − Also used by Army of Republika Srpska
  • − Also used by the HVO
  • Afghanistan Northern Alliance − Reported
  • Poland
  • – Passed down to successor states.

Evaluation-only

  • − A HMMWV fitted with a 2B9 Vasilek entered trials in 2004 for the US Army and Marine Corps, but it wasn't accepted for service

Notes

Citations

References

References

  1. Kinard (2007), p. 481.
  2. "ODIN - OE Data Integration Network".
  3. Jalali, Ali Ahmad. (January 20, 2010). "The Other Side of the Mountain: Mujahideen Tactics in the Soviet-Afghan War". Military Bookshop.
  4. Kinard (2007), p. 306.
  5. Campbell, David. (30 Nov 2017). "Soviet Paratrooper vs Mujahideen Fighter: Afghanistan 1979–89". [[Osprey Publishing]].
  6. "fmso.leavenworth.army.mil".
  7. Leland Ness (ed.), ''Jane's Infantry Weapons 2007–2008'', pp. 556–557, Surrey: Jane's Information Group, 2007
  8. (September 3, 2018). "Soviet 2B9M Vasilek self-loading mortar".
  9. "sill-www.army.mil".
  10. (June 18, 2014). "2B9M Vasilek automatic mortar in service with Ansar al-Sham in Syria".
  11. Blasko, Dennis J.. (2013). "The Chinese Army Today: Tradition and Transformation for the 21st Century". Routledge.
  12. Axe, David. "The Russians Stuck Rockets and A Mortar on the Same Old Tractor".
  13. "The Fight For Nagorno-Karabakh: Documenting Losses On The Sides Of Armenia And Azerbaijan".
  14. (17 July 2023). "It Became Known What the belarusian Territorial Defense is Armed With, Which the Wagnerians Will Train".
  15. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LwyFCWmpiUk How the "Cornflower" fires 13/11/14.] ''Novorossia TV''. 13 November 2014. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  16. "Vídeo of DPR militia using 2B9 Vasilek".
  17. "Niecodzienne historie - Ostre strzelanie".
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