Skip to main content

30 ex-Belgian Army Leopard 1A5 MBTs purchased from OIP for Ukraine sent to Germany for upgrading.


| 2023

On Monday, August 7, as reported by the Belgian Dutch-speaking newspaper De Standaard, the Dutch-speaking radio VRT and French-speaking radio RTBF, then confirmed by Belga news agency on August 8, 30 ex-Belgian army Leopard 1A5 were shipped from the Belgian firm OIP Land Systems, in Tournai, to Germany (Rheinmetall) before heading to Italy (what company?) to be refurbished and upgraded before being sent to Ukraine in several weeks, if not months. The 30 tanks concerned by the contract, bought at the “advantageously” low price of 37,000 € each (scrap metal price) some fifteen years ago, would have been sold for around 500,000€/piece, the price asked by OIP after refurbishment. The price actually paid and the identity of the buyer are unknown.
Follow Army Recognition on Google News at this link


Army Recognition Global Defense and Security news
OIP Land Systems' hangar shelters (among 500 decommissioned armored vehicles) 112 former Austrian army SK-105 Kürassier light tanks (left), 50 ex-Belgian Leopard 1A5(BE) tanks, among which 17 are turretless (right), and Gepard anti-aircraft tanks (Picture source: screenshot)


In 2014, the Belgian army – regrettably and mistakenly – decommissioned and got rid of its Leopard 1A5 tanks, as the then-Defense Minister André Flahant decided the army should no longer have tracked vehicles of any kind. The Belgian company OIP Land Systems bought 50 of them at EUR 37,000 each, among which 17 were turretless, along with a big stock of spare parts including cannons and engines. All these tanks, as well as 70 ex-Belgian M113A1(B) APCs and 38 Gepard anti-aircraft tanks, have since been stored dry in a huge hangar located in Tours, near Tournai, Belgium, that has become one of the largest private armament depots in Europe. The hangar also shelters 112 former Austrian army SK-105 Kürassier light tanks and 100 former Italian army VCC-2 (Italian version of the M113). In total, OIP Land Systems has got about 500 armored vehicles in stock.

On February 6, 2023, Army Recognition called Freddy Versluys, CEO of the Belgian company OIP Land Systems (formerly Sabiex International, founded in 1967), to enquire about his claim that his company could restore 20 former Belgian army Leopard 1A5 tanks in combat condition for Ukraine, should a buyer pay for.

As for the Leopard 2 tanks that several countries already sent to Ukraine, Germany’s approval was mandatory for OPI Land Systems to export its Leopard 1A5(BE)s. Berlin having given its green light, selling these tanks became possible. The financial risk taken several years ago seems to pay, at last. But the Belgian government refused to pay the high price demanded by Freddy Versluys for his Leopards, considering the nearly ‘’scrap-metal’’ price he had paid to buy them. Belgian Defense Minister Ludivine Dedonder stated she would not pay EUR 500,000 for a tank purchased at EUR 37,000 and that is (very) far from combat condition. Freddy Versluys stressed that it would take months and up to 1 million euros to repair each tank to prepare them for use in Ukraine. "These tanks need a new engine, shock absorbers, fire control system, new radars (for the Gepard anti-aircraft tanks). The list can be continued."

On February 6, 2023, Freddy Versluys told Army Recognition he would need four months to get 20 of his Leopards ready for delivery in combat condition, as they are already in good condition, at the opposite of what is currently spread in the press, he says. OIP Land Systems has got an impressive stock of spare parts but not radars for its Gepards, as OIP (Optique et Instruments de Précision) – the mother company founded in 1919 but controlled by Elbit Systems since 2013 – is not involved in this activity.

Besides the Leopards, Freddy Versluys already sold 46 of his 70 ex-Belgian army M113A1Bs to the United Kingdom which offered them to Ukraine in 2022. Some pictures that appeared in January 2023 from the battlefield in Donbas proved they were already in action. The UK also bought ex-Belgian army M109A4(BE) self-propelled howitzers from OIP and offered them to Ukraine.

Unfortunately for Freddy Versluys, OIP Land Systems is still unable to sell its 112 ex-Austrian SK-105 light tanks because Vienna has not (yet) approved their export. "It's a big shame because they are in good condition and easy to prepare," Versluis told The Guardian.

Commenting about his business, Freddy Versluys said: "We bought these tanks when no one needed them. Now I would really like to see them in Ukraine." His wish is getting true. At present, only Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands donated Leopard 1s to Ukraine, purchased especially for the occasion.

A large number of former Belgian vehicles are still stored at OIP, including anti-aircraft Gepard tanks that are in high demand in Ukraine, where they have proven effective in shooting down Russian drones. 38 Gepards are stored at OIP, but according to a source within the Defense, they are considered too old to be restored to operational condition. However, another source indicates that they can be refurbished, but not at the price Belgium would accept to pay: around 2,000,000 euros per unit, the same price that the United States paid to repurchase some of their vehicles from Jordan to offer them to Ukraine after refurbishment.


Army Recognition Global Defense and Security news
Belgian army Leopard 1A5 Main Battle Tank before decommissioning in 2014 (Picture source: Army Recognition)


Belgian army Leopard 1A5(BE) tank (decommissioned in 2014)

After evaluating a number of tanks, Belgium placed its first order of Leopard 1 tanks in 1967, becoming the first NATO country (apart from Germany) to order this tank. The first production Leopard 1 for Belgium was completed in February 1968. The Belgian vehicles had their German-made 7.62mm MG3 machine guns replaced by FN MAG 7.62mm, and other minor stowage changes were made. From 1975, the tanks were fitted with stowage boxes similar to those on the Dutch Leopards, a thermal sleeve and the HR Textron Incorporated stabilization system for the main gun. The tanks were also fitted with the SABCA FCS (fire control system) which was later adopted by Australia and Canada.

The SABCA FCS basically consists of an optical sight with an integrated laser range finder, seven sensors and an analog computer. The computer determines the angles between the line of sight and the gun axis from the information it receives about the range of the target and other variables. The output of the computer is transformed, through a 2º of freedom gimballed mirror system, with torque DC motor drives and a compensated resolver feedback network, into a displacement of cross-hairs in the gunner's sight and to the gun via the gun stabilization. The cross-hairs are brought back onto the target when the gun is automatically laid with the correct target elevation (or superelevation) and azimuth. The sensors measure ambient temperature, air pressure, the temperature in the ammunition stowage area, gun wear, crosswind, and rate of turret traverse.

Following trials with a prototype Leopard 1 fitted with the German Blohm&Voss add-on armor, as already installed on German and Dutch Leopard 1 MBTs, the Belgian Army refitted 132 tanks with this system. Conversion work was carried out at the Rocourt Arsenal in Belgium.

Early in 1987, the Belgian MoD awarded SABCA and OIP a BEF 177 million (approx. EUR 4.4 Mn) contract for the development of a modification kit for the fire-control system, incorporating a thermal imaging system, which was then installed in the 132 Leopard 1 MBTs of the Belgian Army originally delivered by Krauss-Maffei from 1968. SABCA and OIP were jointly responsible for the integration and factory test of the new sight (under the leadership of OIP) and the integration and factory test of the new complete TFCS (under the leadership of SABCA).

The installation of the new fire-control system provides the Leopard 1 with a high-performance thermal imaging device in a day/night sight with an integrated laser range finder. The programme was divided into four phases. Phase 1 covered the system definition and was completed in mid-1986. Phase 2 covered development and evaluation, Phase 3 covered industrialization and preseries production and Phase 4 covered series production.

Under Phase 2, the integration and factory test of the sight was carried out in October 1987 with the integrated and factory-tested TFCS being handed over to the Belgian MoD at the end of April 1988 and the final MoD review taking place in late July 1988. The first prototype of a modernized Leopard 1 was delivered to the Belgian army on 6 October 1988.

The Phase 3 industrialization phase was completed by mid-1989 with five preproduction systems completed by the end of 1990 and production systems being delivered through to 1997.

OIP-Instrubel was created by Oldelft of the Netherlands in order to take over the former OIP-Optics which went bankrupt in 1987.

The Belgian Army decided to upgrade 132 Leopard 1 MBTs to the Leopard 1A5(BE) standard. The remaining 202 tanks were disposed of by sale. Of these, 87 were sold to Brazil with the first deliveries taking place late in 1997.

One of the Leopard 1A5(BE)s was fitted with additional armor on the turret and gun shield, becoming became known as the Leopard 1A6(BE). This "prototype" did not lead to serial modification of the other tanks.


Defense News August 2023

Copyright © 2019 - 2024 Army Recognition | Webdesign by Zzam