Tag Archives: Luxembourg

AUG Man! Luxembourg Shows off New HKs, Replacing Steyrs

The Army of the mighty Grand Duchy of Luxembourg has been receiving and issuing its troops a series of new Heckler & Koch rifles, phasing out the venerable Steyr AUG bullpup.

Luxembourg, a constitutional monarchy sandwiched geographically between Belgium, France, and Germany, was inadvertently caught up in both World Wars and was one of the 12 founding members of NATO in 1949 – intending to keep out of a third.

With about 600,000 inhabitants, the country has been taking its defense more seriously in recent years and is increasing outlays for new gear, aiming to double military spending by 2028. This modernization included an April 2023 contract with Heckler & Koch for new HK416A7 5.56 NATO caliber rifles in 11- and 14.5-inch formats, along with HK269 40mm grenade launcher modules and HK417A2 rifles in 7.62 NATO.

The adoption makes sense logistically as both the French and German armies have recently adopted the HK416 as their main service rifle.

Luxembourg’s 1,200-strong army has been keeping a running play-by-play on social media over the past couple of months as it fields its 1,350 assorted new HKs.

Note the short barrel format, Coyote color, and installed angled foregrip. (All photos: Lëtzebuerger Armei/Facebook)

The Luxembourg Army strives to train 200 new recruits every year, allowing a theoretical 5,000 former soldiers under age 45 among the population should they be needed.The nomenclature and manual of arms for the HK rifles are a big change from those used with the AUG over the past 30 years.Especially when it comes to drill.How about these bayonets? Especially on a 14.5-inch barrel. They seem to be the Steyr KCB 77 style, which the country already had on hand rather than the German Eickhorn SG2000 style seen on other HK416s. In the field, the Luxembourger HK417s are running Elcan SpecterDR 1-4x optics, which are a big upgrade from the old 1.5x fixed scopes on the early-gen AUG.

Luxembourg adopted the Steyr AUG in 1995

The AUGs replaced Cold War 9mm UZIs and 7.62 NATO FN FALs– which served back when the country fielded a 4,700-strong brigade on a population of just 300,000.

Before that, the country was armed with FN-49s going back to the 1950s.

Luxembourg may keep their old AUGs on hand for emergency wartime use as, after all, thousands of residents are familiar with the design.

If they don’t, maybe we could see a brief influx of AUG parts kits, which I don’t think anyone on this side of the pond will complain about.

Mighty Luxembourg

The smallest military force in NATO with the possible exception of the Icelandic Coast Guard, Luxembourg actually has a rich military tradition going back to 963. An unwilling participant in both World Wars– the country was the first one that the Kaiser’s troops passed through on the way to Belgium and France– it was one of the original 12 states that created NATO in 1949. After all, “Free Luxembourg” troops (whose rank and file included members of the Duchal family) organized in England in WWII had helped liberate the country while others fought as insurgents in the countryside. They were even given their own slice of Germany to occupy post-war as recognition of this.

By 1954, the country of just 300,000 had expanded its military to a full brigade battle group of some 5,200 men and had sent a combat contingent to fight in Korea as part of a Belgo-Luxemburgish battalion.

The below images of the brigade at its peak in the 1970s and 80s– when it was an all-volunteer, professional standing army– show an interesting mix of U.S. M1 helmets and M151 “Mutt” jeeps (with TOW anti-tank launchers) along with Belgian FN FALs and FN MAGs, in largely Dutch/American-pattern uniforms. Similarly, the Dutch, who were fans of the UZI, seem to have passed on their love of the Israeli SMG for support troops.

Further, the duchy became a staging area for the Western Alliance and in 1967 the joint NATO Maintenance and Supply Agency (NAMSA) was established in Capellen.

As noted by NATO:

In the late 1970s, for example, the Luxembourg government decided to build two gigantic military storage depots, holding 63,000 tons of combat vehicles, machine parts, food, clothing, fuel, and other equipment that the Allies would need in the event of a war. At a public consultation with the local population before construction began, one man wanted to know whether the tanks would make noise at night. He was interrupted by somebody who shouted: ‘”You found the noise of American tanks sweet enough in 1944”.

Today, while the Lëtzebuerger Arméi has dwindled to just 900 or so full-time troops, they are still professional and have gained much international experience in the past 30 years, sending contingents on worldwide deployments. Donating lots of kit to Ukraine since the Russian invasion last year, the Armei has also committed to training Ukrainian troops in Europe.

In further news from the Duchy, the decoration for completing the longstanding Marche Internationale de Diekirch road march, a permanent and wearable foreign award from the Armed Forces of Luxembourg, has been reauthorized by the U.S. Army for American Solders to accept and wear on their dress uniforms, after some controversy.

Currently, Luxembourg is contributing to the NATO multinational battlegroup in Lithuania with a transport and logistics unit, moving supplies and equipment across the country in support of the battlegroup’s mission. The Luxembourgers work alongside troops from Belgium, Czechia, Germany, the Netherlands, and Norway, which are currently part of the battlegroup.

Keeping ’em clean

Here we see an image, taken 8 February 1945 in the woods near Echternach, Luxembourg, showing very muddy Soldiers of 3rd Battalion, 417th Regiment, 75th Infantry Division (“Bulge Busters”), cleaning their M1 Garands and M1918A2 BAR “before moving up to the line.”

L to R: Pvt. Dom Bocci: 379 Boyleston St., Newton Centre, Mass.; Pvt. Russell J. Sacriol, (?) 151 Canterbury St., Worcester, Mass.; Pvt. John Ducharme, Glover Road, Millbury, Mass. Signal Corps image 111-SC-364288 via the LOC

The shot reminds me greatly of a Willie & Joe cartoon from the redoubtable Bill Mauldin, an artist who cut his teeth as a teenager in the 45th Infantry Division in 1940 and knew a thing or three about what he drew.