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Latvia’s defense minister brings 14 British-made combat vehicles to Ukraine’s frontline “from box”

Latvian Defense Minister Raivis Melnis and Third Army Corps commander Brigadier General Andrii Biletsky. Source: UkrInform

Latvian Defense Minister Raivis Melnis has transferred 14 CVR(T) family combat vehicles to Ukraine's Third Army Corps during his visit, per Ukrinform. The British-made vehicles will replace outdated Soviet equipment for defense operations and special tasks in the immediate frontline area at the Borova-Lyman direction. Anti-FPV drone protection systems will be additionally installed on the vehicles.

Latvia has emerged as one of the most consequential per-capita donors of military aid to Ukraine, with sustained deliveries across multiple categories of equipment.

The CVR(T) family is a British-design lightly armored tracked reconnaissance and combat vehicle category that includes the Scimitar, Scorpion, Spartan, Sultan, and Striker variants.

The vehicles' deployment to the Kharkiv-Donetsk Oblast border area places them in one of the most active operational zones along the eastern frontline.

Latvian Defense Minister Mēlnis at Ukrainian frontline

"I hope these vehicles will find the right place to defeat the enemy. If there is a need for training or any other assistance, we are ready," Mēlnis said.

The Latvian defense minister added that this is not the first batch of equipment from Latvia. The previously transferred 42 Patria armored personnel carriers have already been used in combat in Ukrainian operations.

Biletsky: "Latvia competes with large European countries in terms of aid volume"

"In terms of aid volume, Latvia competes with large European countries. This help arrives on time. It has its own price. The previous Patria vehicles have already achieved combat successes and have passed and liberated kilometers of Ukrainian territory," Third Army Corps commander Brigadier General Andrii Biletsky said.

He added that "the Latvian side has always supplied equipment in a fully complete configuration — that is, equipment from the box that can be used here immediately."

Ukrainian forces can deploy their new equipment quickly without waiting for spare parts, training packages, or technical kits to arrive separately.

CVR(T): British-designed tracked light combat vehicles

The CVR(T) family is a series of British-designed light armored fighting vehicles developed by the British Army in the 1970s. The vehicles are lightly armored, tracked, and designed for high-speed reconnaissance and rapid deployment.

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bulgaria's new government plans halt weapons supplies ukraine · post bulgarian defense minister dimitar stoyanov council ministers sofia fakti db news ukrainian reports

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