Sri Lanka Armoured Corps

Sri Lanka Armoured Corps
Active 1955 - present
Country Sri Lanka
Branch Sri Lanka Army
Type Armoured
Role Armoured,
Formation Reconnaissance
Size 6 regular regiments,
1 volunteer regiment
Part of Armoured Brigade
Regimental Headquarters Rock House Army Camp, Colombo 15.
Nickname(s) SLAC
Motto(s) Whither the fates call
March Quick - The Radetski March
Slow - 1st Dragoon Guards and 2nd Dragoon Guards Slow March
Engagements 1971 Insurrection
Insurrection 1987-89
Sri Lankan Civil War
Commanders
Centre Commandant Col G D Sooriyabandara SLAC
Colonel-Commandant Maj Gen S D T Liyanage WWV RWP ndc psc
Notable
commanders
General D. S. Attygalle LVO

The Sri Lanka Armoured Corps (SLAC) provides the armour capability of the Sri Lanka Army, with vehicles such as the T-55, T-55AM2, and Type 69 main battle tanks, the BMP infantry fighting vehicle and the BTR-80, and WZ551 armoured personnel carriers. It comprises six regular armoured regiments and a volunteer (reserve) regiment. It has an independent Armoured Brigade and is headquartered at Rock House Army Camp, Colombo 15.

History

With formation of the Ceylon Army, a cavalry arm was considered and to this end the 1st Reconnaissance Squadron was established on October 10, 1955 under the command of Major (later General) D. S. Attygalle, LVO who would go on to become the commander of the Sri Lankan Army. With its expansion to a formation reconnaissance regiment in 1958, thus becoming the Ceylon Armoured Corps and the first armoured unit of the Ceylon Army. The 1st Reconnaissance Regiment became allied to and inherited the traditions of the Queen's Dragoons Guards of the British Army. The regimental headquarters was moved from Echelon Barracks to Rock House Army Camp in Colombo in 1957, which it still occupies.

The CAC was deployed on several occasions in the 1950s and 1960s on flood relief and internal security operations. It was deployed for combat operations during the 1971 Insurrection against the JVP first in Kurunegala and thereafter in Anuradhapura. When Sri Lanka became a republic in 1972, the CAC became the Sri Lanka Armoured Corps.

Since the 1980s with escalation of the Sri Lankan civil war the SLAC has taken part in almost all the major combat operations in the northern and eastern provinces of the country as well as being stationed in the southern parts of the country. To meet the threat of terrorism the SLAC increased its strength of both personnel and armoured vehicles. This resulted in the Armoured Brigade being raised, in 1988 under the command of Brigadier (later Major General) Y. Balaretnarajah, USP who became the first Armoured Brigade Commander, he would later become Chief of Staff of the Sri Lanka Army. The other components of the armoured Brigade, namely the 3rd Reconnaissance Regiment was raised in 1988 (converted to the 3rd Armoured Regiment in 2009), the first tank regiment, the 4th Armoured Regiment was raised in 1991 followed by the 5th Regiment raised in 1994 and four reinforcement regiments were formed in 1997, 1998 and 2008. The commander of the armoured brigade/director armour is always an officer of armoured corps holding the rank of Brigadier.

The first volunteer (reserve) unit of the SLAC, the 2nd Regiment, Sri Lanka Armoured Corps was formed in 1979 under the command of Lt. Col Eustace Jayasekara with troops from the Ceylon National Guard. It was redesignate in 1989, as the 5th (Volunteer) battalion, Sri Lanka Light Infantry. However a new volunteer unit, the 7th(v) Sri Lanka Armoured Corps has since been reformed.

In recent years the corps has developed its own assault troopers to provide close combat support in the form of mechanized infantry. It operates the army's armoured recovery vehicles and armoured vehicle-launched bridgeing units. In 1998 the SLAC was presented with the President's Standard in recognition of the service it has rendered. At present the SLAC has nine regular regiments, one volunteer regiment and a regimental band.

Units

Regular regiments

SLAC units in a combat operation.

Volunteer regiments

Equipment

At its inception the 1st Recce Squadron was equipped with British Ferret Mk I Scout Cars[1] along with BSA M20 with side cars that were armed with LMGs. By the end of the 1950s BSA M21 motorcycles, Ferret Mk II Scout Cars and Daimler Armoured Cars where added to the Ceylon Armoured Corps.[1]

Following the 1971 Insurrection, British Alvis Saladin armoured cars and Soviet BTR-152 armored personnel carriers (APC) were added. With the start of the norther insurrection in 1980s, British Alvis Saracen APCs and Alvis Stalwarts amphibious vehicles were added.[1]

As the norther insurrection blew out into a full-scale civil war the Sri Lankan Army turned towards new sources of heavier weaponry such as the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, China and the Czech Republic.

In 1991, Sri Lanka Armoured Corps received Chinese T-80 light tanks, Type 85 APCs, command vehicles and Type 84 armoured recovery vehicles. That year the SLAC introduced tanks for the first time in Sri Lankan Military history, deploying T-55 A medium tanks and T 55 ARVs brought down from the Czech Republic. In 1992, SLAC deployed Chinese Type 86 infantry fighting vehicles (IFV).

In 1994, Russian BMP-1 IFVs, followed by Chinese Type 63 II APCs and Czech T 54 AVLB bridge-layers were added in 1995. In 1998, BTR-80 APCs and BTR-80 A IFVs were added to the 'A' vehicle fleet.

In 2000, Russian T-55 AM II MBTs, BMP-2, BMP-3 IFVs were added followed by the BMP-2 command vehicles in 2002. In 2009 Chinese WZ551 APCs were added.

The APCs enabled the Armoured Corps to have their own assault troopers to provide close combat support.

Main battle tanks

Light tanks

Armoured recovery vehicles

  • VT-55 Armoured recovery vehicle
  • BREM-K Armoured recovery vehicle

Infantry fighting vehicles

Armoured cars

Armoured personnel carriers

Notable members

Alliances

Order of precedence

Preceded by
First in Order of Precedence
Order of Precedence Succeeded by
Sri Lanka Artillery
Preceded by
First in Order of
Precedence
Order of Precedence
(with armoured vehicles)
Succeeded by
Mechanized Infantry Regiment

See also

Sri Lanka Army

References

  1. 1 2 3 Michael K. Cecil - Sri Lanka’s Military: The Search For A Mission, .
  2. "Type 63". nation.lk.
  3. Two Security Forces Headquarters established in Mullaitivu, Kilinochchi
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