Armed Forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina
![]() Coat of Arms of Bosnia-Herzegovina | ||
Military manpower | ||
---|---|---|
Total Personal | 14,200 + 1000 civilian staff | |
Active troops | 9,200 ranked 127th[1] | |
Reserve troops | 5,000 | |
Fit for military service | males age 18-49: 831,554 (2007 est.) | |
Military expenditures | ||
USD figure | $ 450 Million (2007 est.)[2] | |
Percent of GDP | 4.5% (2007 est.)[3] | |
Components | ||
Land Force | ||
Mechanized Forces | ||
History | ||
Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina | ||
War in Bosnia and Herzegovina | ||
Military ranks and Insignia of OSBIH |
Armed Forces of Bosnia-Herzegovina (OSBiH; Oružane snage BiH; Оружане снаге БиХ) is the official military force of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Bosnian Armed forces were founded in 2005 and are composed of two founding armies: Bosniak-Croat Army of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Bosnian Serb Army of Republika Srpska. The Ministry of Defense of Bosnia and Herzegovina, founded in 2004, is in charge of the Armed Forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Conscription was completely abolished in Bosnia and Herzegovina effective on and from 1 January 2006.[1]
Structure
- Chairman of the Joint Staff - Lt. General Safet Podžić
- Commander of the Operational Command - General Vlado Džoić
- Minister of Defense - Selmo Cikotić
Structure of Military Forces
- 29,200 professional soldiers
- 12,000 civilian staff
- 15,000 Reserve forces
- 56,200 soldiers total
Location's of Military Forces
- Joint Command and Operational Command - Sarajevo
- Support Command - Banja Luka
- 3 Infantry Brigades - Tuzla, Banja Luka, and Čapljina
- Air Forces Brigade - Banja Luka, Sarajevo and Tuzla
- Tactical Brigade - Sarajevo
- Infantry Battalions - Banja Luka, Bihać, Bijeljina, Bileća, Čapljina, Kiseljak, Livno, Orašje, Prijedor, Tuzla ,Ustikolin and Zenica
- Helicopter Battalion - Sarajevo and Banja Luka
- Air Defense Battalion - Sarajevo
- Air Reconnaissance Battalion - Banja Luka
- Air Support Battalion - Sarajevo and Banja Luka
- Artillery Battalion - Doboj, Mostar and Žepče
- Military Intelligence Battalion and Military Police Battalion - Butilama
- Armored Battalion - Tuzla
- De mining Battalion - Bugojno
- Logistics Bases - Doboj and Sarajevo
Defense Law
BiH Defense Law Defines the Following areas:
- Military of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Government Institutions
- Entity jurisdictions and structure
- Budget and Financing
- Composition of Armed Forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- War declaration
- Natural disasters
- Conflict of interests and professionalism
- Oath to Bosnia-Herzegovina
- Flags, Anthem and Military Insignia
- Transitional and end orders
Units
Equipment
The Armed Forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina use:
Infantry weapons
- 46,017 M-16A1
United States
- 7,980 HK33A2
Germany
- ~ MP-5A5
Germany
- ~ M-70
Yugoslavia
- 210 CZ 999
Yugoslavia
- 984 M60 machine guns
United States
- 45 M240 machine guns
United States
- ~500 M2 .50 caliber machine guns
United States
- ~ Zolja
Yugoslavia
- ~ M79 rocket launcher 90 mm "Osa"
Yugoslavia
- According to the Wienna agreement Bosnia may have only 100,000 long barrel guns such as M16, AK, etc.
Other equipment
- Hughes/Magnavox AN/PRC-126 hand held radios
- NAPCO AN/PRC-77 man pack radios
- tactical telephones
- binoculars
- 10kW generators
Logistic
- ~20 Mercedes-Benz G-270 Puch (Military Police/Officers)
- ~40 Mercedes-Benz Unimog (Donated by Germany)
Germany
- ~10 Iveco LMV
Italy ( 4 Purchased and up to 5 on loan from Italy for evaluation)
- 100 TAM-110
Yugoslavia
- 90 TAM-130
Yugoslavia
- 68 TAM-5000
Yugoslavia
- ~400 US Army trucks
United States
MBT
- 50 AMX-30S
France
- 45 M-60A3
United States{donated by US Armed Forces}
- 89 M-84
Yugoslavia
- Only 60 M84 tanks will stay in the service
APC and IFV
- 26 AMX-10P
France (1 is AMX-10RC)
- 80 M-113A2
United States (donation by US Army)
- 27 Panhard AML
France
- 60 BVP M-80A
Yugoslavia
- 3 HMMWV
United States
Towed artillery
- 101 M114A2 Howitzer
United States
- 159 M-56 howitzer
Yugoslavia
- 110 D-30
Soviet Union
- 79 M-46
Soviet Union
- 92 D-20
Soviet Union
SP Artillery
MRL
- 40 BM-21
Soviet Union
- 25 M-63 "Plamen"
Yugoslavia
- 7 M-77 "Oganj"
Yugoslavia (and 10 will be added by the HVO)
- 6 M-87 "Orkan"
Yugoslavia
ATGW:
- 1,260 AT-3 Sagger
Soviet Union
- 5,128 AT-4 Spigot
Soviet Union
- 1,450 MILAN
France
- 38 TF8
United States
- 12 BOV-VP
Yugoslavia
Anti-tank guns:
- 77 T-12 / MT-12
Soviet Union
AAA GUNS 20mm:
- 35 BOV-3
Yugoslavia
- 60 M1955
Yugoslavia
- 29 ZU-23 23mm
Soviet Union
Helicopters
- 16 Mil Mi-8 Hip
Soviet Union (+ 10 Mi-17 still in Turkey, slight chance that they will ever get in Bosnia)
- 14 Bell UH-1H Iroquois
United States
- 1 Mil Mi-34 Hermit
Russia
- 5 Mil Mi-24
Russia (still in Turkey, slight chance that they will ever get in Bosnia)
Airplanes
- 1 G-4 Super Galeb
Yugoslavia (used as a statue for the fallen VRS pilots and mechanics during the war)
- 9 J-21 Jastreb
Yugoslavia {added from Republika Srpska}
- 7 J-22 Orao
Yugoslavia {added from Republika Srpska}
- Bosnia will not havejet aviation due to its expensivness
History
Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina
The Army of the Republic of Bosnia And Herzegovina, was created on April 15 1992 during the early days of the Bosnian War
Before, the ARB&H was formally created, there existed a number of paramilitary groups such as the Green Berets, Patriotic League, , Bosnia's Territorial Defence forces and civil defense groups, as well as many criminal gangs and collections of police and military professionals. The army was formed under poor circumstances, with a very low number of tanks, APCs and no military aviation assets.
The army was divided into Corps, each Corp was stationed in a territory. First commander was Sefer Halilović.
Army of Repubika Srpska
The Army of Republika Srpska, was created on May 12, 1992.
Before, the VRS was formally created, there were a number of paramilitary groups such as the Srpska Dobrovoljačka Garda, Beli Orlovi, as well as some Russian, Greek and other volunteers. Most of the paramilitary groups were not under the command of General Ratko Mladić. The army was equipped with ex-JNA inventory. It had about 200 tanks, mostly T-55s and 85 M-84s, and 150 APCs with several heavy artillery pieces. The Air Defense of VRS has shot down several aircraft, like F-16, Mirage 2000, F-18 and Croatian Air Force MiG-21. The VRS had support of Yugoslav Army and FRY until 1994, when Slobodan Milošević stopped military relations with Republika Srpska.
Croatian Defence Council
The Croatian Council of Defence was the main military formation of the Croatian Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia during the Bosnian War and it was first organized military force to with the aim to control the Croat populated areas. It is not to be confused with the Croatian Defence Forces (HOS) which was a separate Croatian military unit
Foreign armies
In 1995-96, a NATO-led international peacekeeping force (IFOR) of 60,000 troops served in Bosnia, beginning on December 21st 1995 to implement and monitor the military aspects of the agreement.
IFOR was succeeded by a smaller, NATO-led Stabilization Force or SFOR. The number of SFOR troops was reduced first to 12,000 and then to 7,000.
SFOR was in turn succeeded by an even smaller, EU-led European Union Force or EUFOR (Althea). As of 2004, EUFOR numbers ca. 7,000 troops.
Statistical indicators
(Information from CIA World Fact Book) Military service age and obligation: 18 years of age for compulsory military service in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina; 16 years of age in times of war; 18 years of age for Republika Srpska; 17 years of age for voluntary military service in the Federation and in the Republika Srpska; by law, military obligations cover all healthy men between the ages of 18 and 60, and all women between the ages of 18 and 55; service obligation is 4 months (July 2004)

Manpower available for military service:
males age 18-49:
1,034,367 (2005 est.)
- Military Branches: All branches are combined in to the OSBiH; Air, Land, and Mechanized Forces.Manpower fit for military service:
males age 18-49:
829,530 (2005 est.)
Manpower reaching military service age annually:
males:
31,264 (2005 est.)
Military expenditures - dollar figure: $450 million (FY06)
Military expenditures - percent of GDP: 4.5% (FY06)
Army Patches
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Bosnia and Herzegovina
Operations outside Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnia and Herzegovina deployed a unit of 37 men to destroy munitions and clear mines, in addition to 6 command personnel as part of the Multinational force in Iraq. The unit was first deployed to Fallujah, then Talil Air Base, and is now located at Camp Echo. In December 2006, the Bosnian government formerly extended its mandate through June 2007.