Development Throughout the early 1960s, Brazil's bilateral defence agreements with the United States ensured easy access to a post-war surplus of American military equipment, including a number of
World War II-vintage
M8 Greyhound armoured cars. The Brazilian arms industry limited itself to restoring and maintaining this obsolete hardware until 1964 when American involvement in the
Vietnam War placed restrictions on the amount of defence technology available for export. Brazil responded by creating an indigenous import substitution programme in 1968 aimed at reproducing US equipment already in service. Already in 1966 an article in the military periodical
A Defesa Nacional had argued that the state of national
automotive industry,
highways and
Petrobras fuel production made it viable to locally produce an 8–10 ton, 6x6 armoured vehicle, and by 1970 the
Brazilian Army was developing an updated Greyhound known simply by its Portuguese initials, CRR (
Carro de Reconhecimento sobre Rodas). Engesa, then an obscure civilian engineering firm, took over the project and by November 1970 a prototype of an entirely new vehicle using the Greyhound's basic layout was completed. The new EE-9 Cascavel entered the pre-production phase between 1972 and 1973. Assembly lines for the Cascavel and its armoured personnel carrier counterpart, the
EE-11 Urutu, were opened in 1974. The hulls were purchased by the Brazilian Army but mounted the same antiquated
37mm cannon and turret recycled from its elderly Greyhounds. To compete with more formidable armament available on the international market, Engesa also marketed a heavily modified Cascavel with an automatic transmission and the same 90mm (3.54 in) low-pressure gun found on the
Panhard AML. This model, intended for export, drew interest in the Middle East and twenty were immediately purchased by Qatar. The Qatari Cascavel sale proved to be a major success for Engesa, and Brazil's first successful inroad into the Arabian arms trade.
Abu Dhabi followed suit with an order for two hundred Cascavels in 1977. Both Iraq and Libya chose the Cascavel in preference to the Panhard AML-90 or
ERC-90 Sagaie, with the former negotiating a $400 million deal for the delivery of two hundred Cascavels and two hundred Urutus. Following the Libyan sale, Engesa unveiled a new production model carrying a Belgian designed, Cockerill main gun manufactured under licence as the
EC-90 in Brazil.
Service Gaddafi's
Libyan Army successfully deployed a number of EE-9 Cascavels against Egyptian tanks, likely
T-54/55s or
T-62s, during the
Libyan–Egyptian War in 1977. Libyan Cascavels also saw action in
Chad, where they engaged
AML-90s of the
French Foreign Legion and French Marines. An unknown number of these armoured cars were later donated to the
Polisario Front and
Togo, while others remained in service as late as the
2011 Libyan Civil War. Cascavels were still in use during the
2016 battle of Sirte against the
Islamic State. Chad's
Transitional Government of National Unity (GUNT) received five EE-9 Cascavels from Libya in 1986. Over the course of the
Chadian–Libyan conflict, seventy-nine ex-Libyan Cascavels were captured or recovered from the
Aouzou Strip by the Chadian military, which continues to hold them in storage. The
National Army of Colombia acquired 128 new EE-9 Cascavels in 1982, in order to modernize its equipment in case of an armed conflict with Venezuela. The armoured cars saw their first and most meaningful action during the
Palace of Justice siege in 1985, when members of the
M-19 guerrilla group took over the Palace of Justice in
Bogotá. The EE-9s made some direct hits against the structure's external walls, which started a fire that destroyed the building and killed several hostages. During the
Iran–Iraq War, EE-9 Cascavels were operated by Iraqi garrisons near the
Persian Gulf. The armored cars were frequently able to outmaneuver the heavier Iranian
Chieftain tanks and tracked combat vehicles on the relatively flat, sandy terrain near the coastal region. Coalition air strikes later destroyed several north of
Kuwait City in
Operation Desert Storm. Following the
2003 invasion of Iraq, the surviving fleet was condemned for scrap; however, American technical personnel did restore thirty-five to working order in 2008 and presented them to the
New Iraqi Army. Locally modified EE-9 were refurbished by Iraqi militias of the
Popular Mobilization Forces, with some having their 90mm replaced or supplemented by
DShK or
ZPU machine guns, 107mm
Type 63 rockets or a
2A28 Grom gun. They were used against Islamic State forces. Zimbabwe procured ninety EE-9 Cascavels in 1984 as a suitable replacement for the
Eland Mk7. At least one Zimbabwean Cascavel squadron deployed into
Mozambique during the
Mozambican Civil War to protect Harare's primary commercial links in
Tete Province. The armoured cars provided armed escort for local convoys and patrolled the roads to preempt attacks by
South African-backed
Mozambican National Resistance (RENAMO) insurgents. During Zimbabwe's intervention in the
Second Congo War,
Ilyushin Il-76s commandeered from local charter firms were used to airlift twelve Cascavels to
N'djili Airport. From there they subsequently engaged Rwandan troops advancing on
Kinshasa. Some were abandoned by Zimbabwean troops in the Congo after being sabotaged beyond repair, while four others were captured by rebel factions. Few remain in present service due to lack of funds to source new parts from Brazil. The EE-9 Cascavel was also saw combat during the
Myanmar civil war on the side of the
State Administration Council, taking some losses. The EE-9 Cascavel has found favour with many armies due to its simplified design and use of components already ubiquitous to civilian industry. Its low cost next to comparable Western armoured cars makes it an attractive purchase to developing nations in particular. At the height of the Cold War, the strictly commercial nature of Engesa sales—devoid of any political supplier restraints—was also perceived as an acceptable alternative to arms from
NATO and the
Warsaw Pact. ==Description==