List of equipment of the Somali Armed Forces
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The following is a list of active equipment of the Somali Armed Forces. Retired equipment is listed at the bottom.
Small arms
Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected
Name | Image | Type | Origin | Quantity | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Casspir | ![]() |
MRAP | ![]() |
9[18] | In Service | |
BMC Kirpi | ![]() |
MRAP | ![]() |
24[19] | In Service | |
BMC Kirpi II | ![]() |
MRAP | ![]() |
N/A[20] | In Service | |
Streit Tornado | MRAP/APC | ![]() |
N/A | In Service | Seen in military convoy.[21] |
Armoured personnel carriers
Name | Image | Type | Origin | Quantity | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AT105 Saxon[18] | ![]() |
Armored personnel carrier | ![]() |
50[citation needed] | In Service | Donated second hand by Djibouti April 2013. |
Iveco VM 90[18] | ![]() |
Armored personnel carrier | ![]() |
N/A | In Service | Donated by Italy. |
RG-31 Nyala[18] | Infantry mobility vehicle | ![]() |
N/A | In Service | ||
Streit Spartan | Armoured personnel carrier | ![]() |
N/A | In Service | Seen in military convoy.[21] |
Utility vehicles
Name | Image | Type | Origin | Quantity | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Toyota 4Runner | ![]() |
Utility vehicle | ![]() |
Unknown | In Service | Used in 2020.
Used by Armed Forces for awareness against COVID-19.[22][23] |
Toyota Land Cruiser | ![]() |
Utility vehicle | ![]() |
10[24] | In Service | Donated by Turkey. |
Mitsubishi Triton | ![]() |
Utility vehicle | ![]() |
26+[25] | In Service | Donated by Turkey. |
Trucks | ||||||
M939[26] | ![]() |
Utility truck | ![]() |
Unknown | In Service | |
BMC 245-16P 4x4 | Utility truck | ![]() |
14[27] | In Service | Donated by Turkey. | |
Iveco 4x4 | Utility truck | ![]() |
3+[28] | In Service | Donated by Turkey. |
Aircraft
In 2024, Italy supplied Somalia with four Bell 412 utility helicopters, "marking the most significant delivery of military equipment since the lifting of the arms embargo imposed on Somalia".[29][30] The United Nations Support Office for Somalia has supported the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia to acquire three helicopters from Burundi.[31]
Name | Image | Type | Origin | Quantity | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unmanned aerial vehicles | ||||||
Serçe-1 | Multi-Rotor Drone System | ![]() |
N/A | In Service | [32] | |
Helicopters | ||||||
Bell 412 | ![]() |
Utility helicopter | ![]() ![]() |
6 | In Service | Donated by Italy, includes 1 Bell-412SP variant[33] |
Bell 205A | ![]() |
Utility helicopter | ![]() |
4 | In Service | Donated by Italy, AB-205 version[34] |
Boats
Name | Image | Type | Origin | Quantity | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ONUK MRTP 16 | ![]() |
Patrol boat | ![]() |
Unknown | In Service | |
Grand RIB | ![]() |
Rigid inflatable boat | ![]() |
Unknown | In Service |
Individual Equipment
Model | Origin | Image | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Helmets | ||||
FAST | ![]() |
![]() |
Combat helmet | Utilised by Commando Brigade, donated from Turkey. |
Camouflage Patterns | ||||
Desert Battle Dress Uniform | ![]() |
![]() |
Camouflage pattern | Bought from the U.S. in the 1980s.[citation needed] |
Retired equipment
Summarize
Perspective

Among firearms associated with the Somali National Army and reported by Jane's Infantry Weapons 2009/10 were Soviet TT pistols, British Sterling submachine guns; German Heckler & Koch G3 and Belgian FN FAL assault rifles, U.S. M14 rifles, Soviet RPD machine guns; Soviet RPK machine guns; Soviet RP-46 machine guns; French AA-52 machine guns; Belgian FN MAG machine guns; Soviet DShK heavy machine guns; U.S. M2 Browning .50 cal heavy machine guns; and U.S. M79 grenade launchers and Soviet RPG-2 grenade launchers.[1]
Previous arms acquisitions included the following equipment, much of which was unserviceable circa June 1989:[35] 293 main battle tanks (30 Centurions; 123 M47 Patton, 30 T-34, 110 T-54/55 from various sources). Christopher F. Foss, writing in the second edition of Jane's Main Battle Tanks said that 'Kuwait was believed to have supplied Somalia with about 35 Centurions.'[36] The Military Balance 1987–88 (p. 112) listed 30 Centurions held by the Somali Army.
Other armoured fighting vehicles included 10 M41 Walker Bulldog light tanks, 30 BRDM-2 and 15 Panhard AML-90 armored cars (formerly owned by Saudi Arabia). The IISS estimated in 1989 that there were 474 armoured personnel carriers, including 64 BTR-40/BTR-50/BTR-60, 100 BTR-152 wheeled armored personnel carriers, 310 Fiat 6614 and 6616s, and that BMR-600s had been reported. SIPRI also reported BTR-70s had been sold to Somalia.[37] The IISS estimated that there were 210 towed artillery pieces (8 M-1944 100 mm, 100 M-56 105 mm, 84 M-1938 122 mm, and 18 M198 155 mm towed howitzers). Other equipment reported by the IISS included 82 mm and 120 mm mortars, 100 Milan and BGM-71 TOW anti-tank guided missiles, rocket launchers, recoilless rifles, and a variety of Soviet air defence guns of 20 mm, 23 mm, 37 mm, 40 mm, 57 mm, and 100 mm calibre. SIPRI also reported that 9K32 Strela-2 air defence missiles had been transferred.[37]
In addition, U.S. M151 trucks had been sold to Somalia by December 1987.[38]
IISS Military Balance 2022 lists only armoured personnel carriers and utility vehicles.
Name | Image | Type | Origin | Quantity | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BRDM-2 | Amphibious armored scout car | ![]() |
Unknown | Retired | ||
ZU-23-2[18] | ![]() |
Autocannon | ![]() |
Unknown | Retired |
Name | Image | Type | Origin | Quantity | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rocket artillery | ||||||
BM-21 Grad[39] | ![]() |
Multiple rocket launcher | ![]() |
Unknown | Retired |
References
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