Difference between revisions of "Egypt"

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* Another very early pattern, also dating to around 1956, is the "oakleaf" camouflage. This design is unquestionably copied from the [[Germany (Third Reich)|German WW2 Waffen SS]] ''Beringt-Eichenlaubmuster'' (ringed oakleaf), although again the printing is much more crude than the original. It appears the first design (below, left), reversing to the "sand" pattern, was primarily printed on lightweight canvas tents and heavierweight shelters. A second variation (right), also reversible, was also produced on uniforms in addition to shelters.
 
* Another very early pattern, also dating to around 1956, is the "oakleaf" camouflage. This design is unquestionably copied from the [[Germany (Third Reich)|German WW2 Waffen SS]] ''Beringt-Eichenlaubmuster'' (ringed oakleaf), although again the printing is much more crude than the original. It appears the first design (below, left), reversing to the "sand" pattern, was primarily printed on lightweight canvas tents and heavierweight shelters. A second variation (right), also reversible, was also produced on uniforms in addition to shelters.
  
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* The reverse side of both the "rocks" and "oakleaf" patterns is the two-color desert or "sand" camouflage pattern. Incorporating dark brown spots on a sandy background, the pattern is a bit more consistent than the "rocks" design, although there are still variations. Although the specific date of adoption is still unclear, examples have been in use since at least 1961. This camouflage design is also associated primarily with elite units of the Egyptian Army, and modern variations continue in usage to the present day.
 
* The reverse side of both the "rocks" and "oakleaf" patterns is the two-color desert or "sand" camouflage pattern. Incorporating dark brown spots on a sandy background, the pattern is a bit more consistent than the "rocks" design, although there are still variations. Although the specific date of adoption is still unclear, examples have been in use since at least 1961. This camouflage design is also associated primarily with elite units of the Egyptian Army, and modern variations continue in usage to the present day.
  
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[[File:Egypt6.jpg|200px]]

Latest revision as of 19:49, 6 November 2023

Camopedia19.jpg

Egypt.gif

Arab Republic of Egypt

Egyptian Camouflage Patterns

  • One of the earliest camouflage patterns produced in Egypt is frequently called the "rocks" pattern (often to discern it from the "sand" pattern), which is believed to have emerged in 1956. The design can be seen to derive from the German WW2 "Planetree" pattern (hence is sometimes called "Egyptian Plane Tree"), although certainly the Egyptian version is much more crude. Variability within production runs is considerable, even more so when factoring in that the pattern remained in production well into the 1990s period. The "rocks" pattern is nearly always printed on one side of a reversible fabric, with a two-color desert "sand" pattern (see below) on the other side. This practice continued into the later years of its production, but comtemporary uniforms were no longer designed to be worn reversibly; they were either sewn together with the "rocks" or the "desert" side out. This pattern is generally associated only with Airborne and Commando units. Egyptian manufacturers have exported this pattern to Sudan, Somalia, Niger, Libya, and Yemen, among others. Seen below are several variations of the pattern, giving a cross-section of tremendous variability between early and late production.

Egypt4.jpg Egypt20.jpg Egypt5.jpg Egypt7.jpg

  • Another very early pattern, also dating to around 1956, is the "oakleaf" camouflage. This design is unquestionably copied from the German WW2 Waffen SS Beringt-Eichenlaubmuster (ringed oakleaf), although again the printing is much more crude than the original. It appears the first design (below, left), reversing to the "sand" pattern, was primarily printed on lightweight canvas tents and heavierweight shelters. A second variation (right), also reversible, was also produced on uniforms in addition to shelters.

Egypt32.jpg Egypt15.jpg Egypt21.jpg

  • The reverse side of both the "rocks" and "oakleaf" patterns is the two-color desert or "sand" camouflage pattern. Incorporating dark brown spots on a sandy background, the pattern is a bit more consistent than the "rocks" design, although there are still variations. Although the specific date of adoption is still unclear, examples have been in use since at least 1961. This camouflage design is also associated primarily with elite units of the Egyptian Army, and modern variations continue in usage to the present day.

Egypt33.jpg Egypt16.jpg Egypt6.jpg Egypt22.jpg

  • Introduced in the mid-1980s was a completely unique desert pattern, often nicknamed "scrambled eggs." The earliest variation has a much denser concentration of colorful shapes and is therefore generally termed "dense desert" pattern. Due to the limited number of surviving examples, it is theorized this dense version was fairly short-lived.

Egypt9.jpg

  • The Egyptian desert (scrambled eggs) pattern was modified in the later part of the 1990s, giving it a much more sparse concentration of overprinted shapes. For this reason it is generally termed "sparse desert" pattern. As with the previously produced Egyptian camouflage patterns, there seems to be considerable variability both to the dye lots and the basic fabric color (background) employed when printing this design. At least four versions are known, with either sand/tan, pale green, pale blue, or medium grey background colors. Seen below are three of these variations, although it is certainly possible that others exist. Early versions of this camouflage initially appearing during the First Gulf War (Operation Desert Storm), but this continues to be a standard issue pattern for this nation. It has been exported and used by Somalia and Sudan.

Egypt10.jpg Egypt11.jpg Egypt26.jpg Egypt12.jpg

  • Another variation of the above "sparse desert" pattern contains no green elements at all. This version was certainly worn by Egyptian Forces during the First Gulf War, but surviving examples suggest it was a short-lived variation.

Egypt13.jpg

  • Possibly influenced by similar patterns worn in Libya and Syria, the Egyptians introduced a "vertical stripe" camouflage design in the early 1990s. The pattern incorporates dense vertical brown and dark green stripes on a pale green background, although several variations have been documented. Photographic evidence suggests it has only been used by the Republican Guard (قوات الحرس الجمهوري). The pattern would be phased out by early 2000s, replaced by a woodland design.

Egypt3.jpg Egypt8.jpg Egypt19.jpg

  • Appearing at some point after 1992 was an Egyptian copy of the USA m81 woodland pattern. The Egyptian version features considerably darker coloration overall, and less definition between the colors employed. Apparently not a general purpose pattern, its use has been documented on Egyptian military personnel serving abroad in temperate regions (as with UN missions) or with visiting foreign students, and in limited service with some personnel (such as the Republican Guard) at home.

Egypt14.jpg

  • Another pattern produced by Egypt is a variation of the American-designed six-color desert ("chocolate chip") camouflage pattern. The locally-produced version features rather a different color scheme than the original, incorporating orange, dark khaki & russet waves over a sandy background, with black & light tan "spots." Uniforms in this pattern have been worn by Egyptian military personnel serving in Afghanistan and the Western Sahara, as well as elsewhere.

Egypt17.jpg

  • Another variation of the m81 woodland camouflage design has appeared in more recent years, and is employed locally. Featuring much brighter colors than the previous design, this pattern appears to be printed on lighter-weight, ripstop fabric.

Egypt18.jpg

  • A "true" copy of the US-designed m81 woodland camouflage pattern is currently worn by airborne and special operations personnel of the Egyptian Army and Navy. Modern uniform styles predominate.

Usa34.jpg

  • Issued concurrently with the above copy of US m81 woodland camouflage is this variant, utilizing a similar color palette but completely unique set of shapes. Although having similarities to the Chinese PLA Type 87 Woodland design, the two do not seem to be identical, despite the fact that contemporary Egyptian uniforms all seem to be sourced in China.

Egypt29.jpg

  • Circa 2011-12 some Egyptian units began appearing in a locally-produced copy of the US tricolor desert camouflage pattern. As with the locally-made six-color desert, the design seems to be only based on the US pattern, with both specific shapes and coloration differing from the American model.

Egypt23.jpg

  • Some Egyptian Navy personnel wear a woodland-style camouflage pattern with a blue colorway, seen here. This pattern appears very similar to commercially-produced "colorful" designs available in the USA and elsewhere, and may have been copied or influenced by such patterns.

Egyptnavy.jpg

  • Another camouflage design, using a more leaf pattern type set of drawings with a pale-blue/lavender colorway, has also been adopted by the Egyptian Navy. The two designs may be used interchangeably.

Egypt30.jpg

  • Starting in 2014 special police units were observed wearing a dark four-colored pixelated uniform. This uniform seems to be short lived and has possibly already been replaced.

Egypt Special Police Pixelated.jpg

  • Circa 2015, the Egyptian Air Force, or Al-Qūwāt al-Gawwīyä al-Miṣrīyä (القوات الجوية المصرية), adopted a copy of the US Air Force's "grey digital tiger stripe" camouflage pattern. Produced either locally, or from imported sources, the design seems to be a faithful copy of the American version.

Egypt31.jpg

  • Special Police units of the Ministry of the Interior have been observed wearing a DPM pattern camouflage helmet cover, seen here. These items are of undetermined origins.

Egyptpolice.jpg

  • Members of the 412th Airborne Brigade (and possibly the 117th Special Forces Regiment) have been documented wearing a copy of the Italian Army vegetato camouflage pattern for some operations.

Italy12.jpg

  • Officers of the Egyptian Army have been documented on several occasions wearing field jackets made from French CE Woodland pattern camouflage fabric. These jackets have been in circulation since at least 2016.

Egyptcewoodland.jpg

  • The same two-tone black/grey camouflage pattern worn by Iraqi SWAT Team personnel is worn by the Egyptian Central Security Forces (قوات الأمن المركزي). It is believed the pattern was developed in China for export, and quite possible the Egyptian uniforms are also made in China given recent trends.

Iraq49.jpg

  • Elements of the Egyptian police uses this unique two-color camouflage uniform which started to appear in 2018.

Egypt Police 2-color.jpg

  • Several Egyptian special operations units utilize Multicam pattern camouflage, including some units of the Army Airborne Corps, units of the 153rd Naval Commando Group, and the "Black Cobra" counter-terrorist unit of the Egyptian Ministry of the Interior.

Multicam.jpg

  • The Egyptian Navy replaced its earlier leaf-woodland hybrid designs in 2019 with a pixelated pattern having a very dark color palette of primarily midnight blue. Similar to the US Navy's original NWU-1 pattern, the pattern is much darker from a distance, with only sparse patches of lighter hues.

Egypt-navyblue.jpg

  • Egyptian Police personnel serving with FPUs (Formed Police Units) on a UN mission to the Central African Republic were observed wearing a copy of USMC MARPAT in 2021.

Egypt-carfpu.jpg

Export Camouflage Patterns

Although Egypt has historically been known to export its own camouflage designs to many other countries (some examples include the Yemen Arab Republic, militias in Lebanon, Somalia and Sudan), evidence also suggests that some camouflage not used by Egyptian military or paramilitary units but produced in country has also been exported. In particular, a line of vertical lizard camouflage designs of Egyptian origin can be linked to various paramilitary units in Lebanon and South West Africa. As there is no documentation supporting the use of these patterns by Egyptian forces, we must presently conclude the patterns were only produced for export. Some examples are marked "UAR," suggesting these were produced prior to 1971.

Egypt28.jpg Egypt24.jpg Egypt25.jpg Egypt27.jpg