Difference between revisions of "Romania"
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+ | The earliest camouflage uniforms worn by Romanian military personnel were made in Russia and were copied from the WW2 era Soviet ''masksirovochyi kombinezon'' or leaf pattern uniform. A similar style uniform, but printed in a different style of vegetated print, was also produced - both entering service in the 1960s. These remained the only standard issue camouflage uniforms until 1990, when an indigenous design was introduced. This followed four years later by another design, and both of these patterns remained in use - often alongside each other - for the next ten or fifteen years. Probably as part of a bid to enter NATO, in 2002 Romania discarded her old uniforms and adopted versions of the British Disruptive Pattern Material (DPM) for temperate and desert conditions. These remain in common usage. | ||
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+ | == Romanian Camouflage Patterns == | ||
* M1990 "leaf" pattern | * M1990 "leaf" pattern |
Revision as of 18:00, 17 November 2010
The earliest camouflage uniforms worn by Romanian military personnel were made in Russia and were copied from the WW2 era Soviet masksirovochyi kombinezon or leaf pattern uniform. A similar style uniform, but printed in a different style of vegetated print, was also produced - both entering service in the 1960s. These remained the only standard issue camouflage uniforms until 1990, when an indigenous design was introduced. This followed four years later by another design, and both of these patterns remained in use - often alongside each other - for the next ten or fifteen years. Probably as part of a bid to enter NATO, in 2002 Romania discarded her old uniforms and adopted versions of the British Disruptive Pattern Material (DPM) for temperate and desert conditions. These remain in common usage.
Romanian Camouflage Patterns
- M1990 "leaf" pattern
- M1994 "fleck" pattern