Thai army dismisses reports of BTR-3 capture

Key Points
  • Thailand’s army recovered a BTR-3E1 armored vehicle that became immobilized near the Cambodian border, rejecting claims that it was captured by Cambodian forces.
  • Thai officials said the vehicle slid into a roadside ditch during operations and was later retrieved after both sides temporarily held positions in the area.

The Royal Thai Army has recovered a BTR-3E1 armored personnel carrier that became immobilized during recent operations near the Thai-Cambodian border, countering earlier claims circulated by Cambodian sources that the vehicle had been seized.

According to Thai military officials, the incident occurred on December 12 during operations in the Ta Phraya district of Sa Kaeo province, close to the Cambodian border. Cambodian media and social media accounts later released images suggesting that Cambodian forces had captured a Thai wheeled armored vehicle during the clashes.

Thai army sources say those claims were inaccurate.

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Based on images and subsequent assessments, the BTR-3E1 appears to have accidentally slipped into a roadside drainage ditch while maneuvering in reverse. The driver was unable to extract the vehicle under battlefield conditions, and Thai troops were forced to withdraw from the immediate area due to ongoing security concerns, leaving the armored carrier temporarily behind.

Cambodian soldiers were later observed inspecting the abandoned vehicle after Thai forces pulled back. For a period, both sides reportedly maintained standoff positions in the area, with neither force attempting to move the vehicle amid heightened tensions.

In a later update, Thailand’s First Army Region confirmed that recovery teams successfully returned to the site and extracted the BTR-3E1, bringing it back under Thai control. The recovery operation was completed without further escalation, according to Thai military reporting.

The vehicle involved, the BTR-3E1, is a wheeled infantry fighting vehicle developed by Ukraine’s Kharkiv Morozov Machine Building Design Bureau and produced in cooperation with Thailand. It is operated by the Royal Thai Army and used primarily for troop transport, patrol, and border security missions.

The clarification comes after earlier reports, including coverage by Defence Blog, noted unconfirmed claims that Thailand had lost a BTR-3E during clashes with Cambodian forces. Thai officials say the latest recovery confirms that the vehicle was not captured and that no sensitive equipment fell into foreign hands.

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