Estonia buys 200 Turkish-made armored vehicles

Estonia is bolstering its defense capabilities with the acquisition of approximately 230 armored vehicles from Turkish contractors, according to the Estonian Defense Ministry.

In a press release, the Defense Minister announced that the €200 million ($210 million) acquisition encompasses two types of vehicle, the Otokar 6×6 Arma armored personnel carriers and Nurol Makina’s NMS 4×4 armored vehicles, with an equal number of both variants being purchased.

Deliveries are scheduled to commence in the second half of 2024, with the completion anticipated by 2025. The agreement was formally signed on October 18, 2023, in Estonia.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

The signing ceremony was attended by Estonian Defense Minister Hanno Pevkur and Turkey’s Defense Minister Gen. Yaşar Güler. In addition to the contract, both countries’s Defense Ministers signed a protocol on defense industry cooperation between Turkey and Estonia.

The decision to procure the 6×6 vehicles followed a robust international competition and a thorough commercial and technical evaluation by the Estonian Defence Forces (EDF). The combat-proven ARMA 6×6 stood out for its superior technical capabilities.

Sedef Vehbi, Military Cluster Head of Otokar, expressed their pride in serving Estonian Land Forces with the ARMA 6×6 Armored Personnel Carrier, emphasizing Otokar’s expertise in land systems and related research and development. Otokar’s military vehicles, numbering nearly 33,000, are actively deployed in over 40 countries across various climates and geographies worldwide. The ARMA 6×6, renowned for its combat-proven success, will become part of Estonia’s defense capabilities as the second NATO country to field this vehicle.

This procurement marks an important milestone for Otokar, a listed NATO and UN supplier, and is expected to initiate a long-lasting collaboration between the Estonian Defence Forces and Otokar.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

NATO nations form drone-killing user club

A Latvian-built interceptor drone that has already been purchased by three NATO nations just got its own international user community, as the countries operating...

Estonian startup develops comms module for drone-age warfare

An Estonian defense technology startup is launching a communications module designed to keep military drones and unmanned vehicles connected when adversaries are actively trying...

Ukraine-tested spy drone passes French electromagnetic warfare test

A drone equipped with an airborne signals intelligence system successfully detected, classified, and geolocated every high-priority radio frequency emitter in a French military exercise...

Latvia signs multi-year deal for autonomous drone killers

Latvia has signed a multi-year framework agreement with Origin Robotics to secure a continuous supply of BLAZE autonomous interceptor drones, and structured the deal...

Romanian F-16 shoots down suspected Ukrainian drone over Estonia

A Romanian Air Force F-16 patrolling Baltic skies under NATO's air policing mission shot down a suspected Ukrainian drone over southern Estonia on May...

Lockheed Martin unveils HIMARS FLEX with double firepower

Lockheed Martin announced the HIMARS FLEX on June 16, a modular evolution of the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System that introduces a dual-pod...