Re-loadable, fires a variety of ammunition. M2 variant used by the National Guard.[11] 800 Carl Gustaf M2 were donated by Norway.[12] Improved M4 variant on order.[13]
Modern tripod-mounted launcher, programmable attack, fire-and-forget. Fires several missile types, varying in weight and size as they fly from shorter to longer ranges.[2][3][14]
In 2024, Latvian Ministry of Defense made a decision to acquire ASCOD to replace the CVR(T).[15] In January 2025, Latvia signed €373 million contract for 42 vehicles.[16]
Over 200 vehicles on order, to be delivered 2021–2029.[19][20] The first 4 vehicles received on 29 October 2021. The vehicles are partially produced in Latvia since 2021.[21][22] In November 2024, 56 additional command vehicles were ordered.[23]
Ten vehicles donated by the United States in 2005.[24] Possibly 28 more purchased later.[25] Some equipped with HK GMG, M2 Browning and Spike anti-tank guided missile.[citation needed]
Latvian Armed Forces tested 1 VR FOX prototype and in November 2024 Latvian Ministry of Defense made a decision to acquire more than 30 VR FOX vehicles[29]
35 howitzers, 10 command and control vehicles and 2 driver training vehicles purchased from Austria in 2017.[42] Additional 18 howitzers received in 2021.[43] 6 howizers were donated to Ukraine.[44]
In May 2023, Estonia and Latvia made a decision to jointly procure medium-range IRIS-T SLM.[52] The contract was signed in November 2023 and the systems are planned to be operational in 2026.[53]
In the 1990s, the Latvian Army and National Guard troops were equipped with leftover Soviet, Romanian and Czechoslovak[57] weapons like the AKM, AK-74, SKS rifles and TT and Makarov pistols, alongside early procurements of CZ 82 pistols from the Czech Republic and Slovakia. In the late 1990s, a gradual switch to the Swedish-made Automatkarbin 4 began, but AK-pattern rifles remained. Today Ak4 rifles are mostly kept in storage.[58] In 1995, the Czechs donated 20 120mm mortars (possibly the vz. 82 PRAM-L) and 24 100 mm vz. 53 field guns.[57]
Retired/obsolete vehicles include:
2 BRDM-2 armored cars (donated by Poland by 1992, mostly used by the Suži Airborne Reconnaissance Battalion of the Land Forces, later used as target practice);[59][60]
5 T-55AM2 Mérida tanks (donated by Poland in 1999).[61] Three remaining tanks, still used for training purposes as of 2024, were reported to have come from the Czech Republic in 2000, not Poland;[62][63]