U.S. Woodland
Template:Short description Template:Infobox military gear U.S. Woodland was the former standard issue camouflage pattern of the United States Armed Forces from 1981 to 2005 in the cut of the Battle Dress Uniform and a dozen other pieces of clothing that were issued, until its replacement in the early 2010s.[1] It is a four color, high contrast disruptive pattern with irregular markings in green, brown, sand and black. It is also known unofficially by its colloquial moniker of "M81" after the year of its adoption,[2] however this term was never officially used by the U.S. military.
Although BDUs have been long phased out of frontline use in the U.S. Armed Forces, U.S. Woodland is still used on some limited level since MOPP suits, vests, and other equipment were printed in it and never fully replaced. Some modernized uniforms such as modified BDUs and FROG gear were used by special forces such as the USMC Forces Special Operations Command and United States Navy SEALs.
Development and history
The woodland pattern is similar to the Vietnam War version of brown-dominant ERDL pattern, only differing in that it is enlarged by 60 percent and the shades adjusted for contrast. The changes were made in order to extend the effectiveness of the camouflage pattern to as close to 350 meters as possible.[3]
The enlargement of the pattern was made as part of a shift of tactical focus of the United States military from the close-range fighting of Vietnam to planning for potential longer-range fighting across European woodlands.[4]
The US Woodland pattern was printed slightly darker than ERDL for two key reasons. First, the chosen colors complemented the pattern sizing, preventing the visual blending of colors at greater distances and enhancing the effectiveness of the pattern. Also, by starting with slightly darker colors, the eventual fading of the fabric through use and washing would result in colors moving closer to the desired target, thereby prolonging the garment's useful life.[5]
It is not labeled as NIR compliant however testing done on the material and dyes used in the creation process found it to be effective in camouflaging under infrared light.[5][6]
Usage
U.S. Army
In the U.S. Army, the woodland-patterned Battle Dress Uniform was replaced by the digital Universal Camouflage Pattern (UCP) found on the Army Combat Uniform, introduced in 2004. UCP itself was replaced by the Operational Camouflage Pattern (OCP) in 2019. The pattern is still used on MOPP suits and some older models of body armor yet to be retired, such as PASGT vests and Interceptor Body Armor.
The U.S. Navy no longer uses the Woodland pattern. Most of the Navy has transitioned to the Navy Working Uniform, which uses digital patterns in either a woodland colorway (NWU Type III) or, for some deployed tactical units only, a desert version (Type II).
U.S. Marines
The Woodland Pattern BDU was phased out by the Marine Corps with the introduction of the digital MARPAT Marine Corps Combat Utility Uniform in 2002, although it was reintroduced for the United States Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command in 2011[7] and was also worn by MARSOC forces in the War in Afghanistan.
U.S. Air Force
The Air Force phased out the woodland pattern battle dress uniform in 2011 when they went to the Airman Battle Uniform (ABU) which used a pixelated version of the tiger stripe pattern. It was in turn replaced by the Army's OCP by 2021.[8] The Civil Air Patrol, the U.S. Air Force's civilian auxiliary, also used woodland patterned BDUs until being discontinued 15 June 2021.[9]
State defense forces
Several state defense forces use the Woodland Pattern on their BDUs.[10] Members of the Virginia Defense Force wear a Woodland version of the Army Combat Uniform (ACU).[11][12]
Law enforcement
The pattern also sees use among police departments, such as the Rhode Island State Police.[13]
Users
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- File:Flag of the Taliban.svg Afghanistan: Taliban used copies and US made uniforms circa 1996 to 2001 before the invasion of Afghanistan. Uniform copies and US uniforms used by Taliban during insurgency period. After 2021 takeover woodlands continued to use by Islamic National Army.
- File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina: Clones made for Argentine military.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Armenia.svg Armenia: Adopted an Armenian-made Woodland pattern.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Azerbaijan.svg Azerbaijan: Used by State Border Service of Azerbaijan.
- File:Flag of Bangladesh.svg Bangladesh: Used Woodland uniforms with bright yellow patterns.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Bhutan.svg BhutanTemplate:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Bolivia.svg Bolivia
- File:Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Template:Flagcountry: Used by the RS' Special Anti-Terrorist Unit.[14]
- File:Flag of Cambodia.svg Cambodia: Used Cambodian-made Woodland uniforms.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Chad.svg Chad
- File:Flag of Chile.svg Chile[15]
- File:Flag of Colombia.svg Colombia[15]
- Template:Country data Congo-Brazzaville
- File:Flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.svg Congo-Kinshasa
- Template:Country data Côte d'Ivoire
- File:Flag of Croatia.svg Croatia[16][17]
- File:Flag of Cyprus.svg Cyprus: Used by Cypriot special forces.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Egypt.svg Egypt
- File:Flag of El Salvador.svg El Salvador[15]
- File:Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia[18]
- File:Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji: Woodland camo used by some Fijian military units.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of The Gambia.svg Gambia
- File:Flag of Greece.svg Greece: Used by Underwater Demolition Command.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Guatemala.svg Guatemala
- File:Flag of Haiti.svg Haiti: Used by the Armed Forces of Haiti, as of January 2024
- File:Flag of Honduras (2022-).svg Honduras
- File:Flag of Hong Kong.svg Hong Kong – Used by the Hong Kong Police tactical unit (SDU)
- File:Flag of Israel.svg Israel: Used by Israeli military in unofficial capacity.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Kyrgyzstan.svg Kyrgyzstan: Asian-made Woodland patterns used in the Kyrgyz military.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Kuwait.svg Kuwait – Used by the Kuwait National Guard.
- File:Flag of Lithuania.svg Lithuania[19]
- File:Flag of Luxembourg.svg Luxembourg[20][21]
- File:Flag of Malaysia.svg Malaysia: Clones used by PASKAL commandos.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Mexico.svg Mexico[15]
- File:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova – Worn by Army of the Republic of Moldova.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- File:Flag of Montenegro.svg Montenegro: Used by the Montenegrin Special Anti-Terrorist Unit.[22]
- File:Flag of North Korea.svg North Korea: Reported to be used by North Korean soldiers stationed in the DMZ from 2010.[23]
- File:Flag of the Philippines.svg Philippines: Woodland uniforms and gear is commonly used but also universally superseded by their locally produced DPM patterns.
- File:Flag of Russia.svg Russia: Russia uses near-copies (Komplekt kamuflirovannogo obmundirovannogo [KKO] and Лес or Les [forest]) and true copies (HATO), English NATO, worn by MVD Agencies such as the Internal Troops and Spetsnaz GRU units.[24]Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Saint Kitts and Nevis.svg Saint Kitts and Nevis: Used by Saint Kitts and Nevis Defence Force
- File:Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Saudi Arabia: Used by the Royal Saudi Air Force.
- File:Flag of Somalia.svg Somalia
- File:Flag of South Korea.svg South Korea: Initially in the early to mid-1980s several local variations were produced in limited amounts and used by certain units in the ROKA and the ROKMC. In 1990 the Republic of Korea Armed Forces introduced a locally produced version based on US woodland (Tonghab Template:Langx) across all branches, which was the standard issue pattern for uniforms, vests, webbing and helmet covers until 2010 when it began to be replaced by digital patterns Granite B for ROKA and ROKN, digital "tiger stripe" style camouflage pattern, known as 물결무늬 (Wave pattern) - aka WAVEPAT - or 해병 디지털 (Marine digital) for ROKMC and Doksa (독사 or "venomous snake") for ROK-SWC due to reports of North Korea issuing copies of Woodland, however the woodland pattern still continues to see limited use.[25]
- File:Flag of Sri Lanka.svg Sri Lanka
- File:Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga[15]
- File:Flag of Thailand.svg Thailand[15]
- File:Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey[15]
- File:Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine: Blue Woodland camos used by MVS units.Template:Sfnp State Border Guard personnel use green woodland clones.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of the United States.svg United States: Still used by MARSOC, Marine Raiders and Navy SEALs. At the state-level, several state defense forces use it.[26]
- File:Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam[27]
Former users
- Template:Country data Islamic Republic of Afghanistan: Formerly used by Afghan National Army and ANA Commandos as standard issue uniforms both locally produced and sourcing US surplus uniforms and foreign clones before switching to Spec4ce Camouflage[28]
- File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia: Formerly used by OPFOR in training during the 1990s and 2000s.
- File:Flag of Azerbaijan.svg Azerbaijan: Obtained Turkish-made Woodland uniforms and used from around 2000–12.Template:Sfnp
- File:Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada: Formerly used by the Canadian Forces as the pattern of helmet covers for the M1 Helmet (both regular and paratrooper variants), the PASGT Helmet and the Spectra Helmet otherwise known as the 'Barrday Helmet'.[29] The Woodland pattern had originally entered service around the same time as the US and had become the standard issue cover by the late 1980s, replacing the older Mitchell Pattern covers.[29] The cover pattern was fully phased out and replaced by CADPAT by the mid-2000s.[29] Helmet covers as well as uniforms (like former US BDUs) and webbing equipment are still seen in Woodland pattern for OPFOR training.
- File:Flag of Colombia.svg Colombia: Formerly used by the National Army of Colombia, used until 1991 and replaced in 2006.
- File:Flag of Costa Rica.svg Costa Rica: Formerly used by the Costa Rican Civil Guard.[30]
- File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany: Used by Kommando Spezialkräfte Marine in 1990s.
- Template:Country data Georgia: Former standard issue camouflage pattern of the Georgian Armed Forces, replaced in 2007.[15]
- File:Flag of Iraq.svg Iraq: Formerly used by reformed post-2003 Iraqi military.[31][32]
- File:Flag of Latvia.svg Latvia – Worn by the Latvian Land Forces from 1992 to 2007 when the M07 LATPAT camo was issued.[35][36]
- File:Flag of Lebanon.svg Lebanon - Replaced in 2017 by the Operational Camouflage PatternScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands: Worn by the Royal Netherlands Marine Corps, most of the Woodland camos being replaced by Dutch-made fractal camo.[37]
- File:Flag of Nigeria.svg Nigeria: Used by the Nigerian military until they were replaced by the M14 pattern.[38]
- Template:Country data Ba'athist Syria: Copies made for the Syrian military.[39]
- File:Flag of the United States.svg United States: Former standard issue camouflage uniform pattern for all branches of the U.S. Armed Forces.
See also
References
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Bibliography
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