• : Angolan Army purchase for Special Forces. • : Azerbaijan purchased a number of TAR-21 for the special operations forces of the
Azerbaijani Army in August 2008. • : Produced under license by
Taurus for the military, but as of 2017, Taurus has never carried out a licensed production of the Tavor TAR. Small numbers are issued to soldiers in the Frontier Brigade. • : Issued to the Special Forces of Cameroon Army. • : Issued to
Chadian Ground Forces since 2006. • : Used by special forces and the
National Police of Colombia. • :
Investigations Police of Chile. • : The Tavor Χ95 assault rifle is used by Cypriot Special Forces. • • : Guatemala's police force or PNC (
Policia Nacional Civil) operates the TAR-21. • : The
Honduran Army operates the Tavor X95. • : In late 2002, India signed an deal with
Israel Military Industries for 3,070 manufactured TAR-21s to be issued to India's special forces personnel, where its ergonomics, reliability in heat and sand might give them an edge at close quarters and deployment from inside vehicles. By 2005, IMI had supplied 350–400 TAR-21s to India's northern
Special Frontier Force (SFF). These were subsequently declared to be "operationally unsatisfactory". The required changes were made and tests in Israel during 2006 went well, clearing the contracted consignment for delivery. The new GTAR-21s came with a modified single-piece stock, new sights and Turkish-made
MKEK T-40 under-barrel grenade launchers chambered in
40x46mm. A consignment of over 500 Tavor TAR-21s and another 30
Galil sniper rifles worth over and respectively was delivered to the
MARCOS (Marine Commandos) in December 2010. In 2016, IWI announced that it was establishing a 49:51 joint venture with Punj Lloyd in India, in order to manufacture rifle components in India. • : Used by
BRIMOB Police Special Forces. • : Used by Ivorian Special Forces. • :
General Directorate for National Security equipped with the Tavor X95. The first Arab or North African country to use the Tavor X95 publicly. • : The
State Security Service employ it as the primary assault rifle for their close protection and tactical units replacing the
Uzi. • : Used by Rapid Deployment Unit (Tar-21) and Special Anti-terrorist Unit – Tiger (Tavor x95) . • and
Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency and one PNP SWAT team in Pasig. • : Small quantities of the TAR-21 are in use by field and intervention units of the
Polícia Judiciária, like hostage negotiation teams and investigators who usually work alongside other dedicated law enforcement intervention units—the
Special Operations Group (GOE) and the
National Republican Guard's Special Operations Company (COE); these weapons were initially intended to equip a new unit under the command of the
Polícia Judiciária resembling the GOE. The TAR-21 also participated in the competition for the new
service rifle for the three branches of the
Portuguese Armed Forces and the Police Special Operations Group (GOE)—a bid that also included the local production of the TAR-21 in Portugal. However, the TAR-21 was excluded from the shortlist. The competition has meanwhile been annulled, after the other contenders and both political and defence critics accused the competition of favouring the
Heckler & Koch G36. • • : Issued to the Special Forces of the Senegal Army. • : 76,000 in use • : Used by
Special Forces Command in
executive protection role. • • :
Yuriy Lutsenko, then head of
Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, announced on October 1, 2008, that IWI and Ukrainian state-owned company
RPC Fort would jointly manufacture Tavor TAR to enter service with special Ukrainian military and police units. RPC Fort had displayed working samples of Tavor TARs chambered in
5.45×39mm cartridge with
Milkor 40mm UBGL grenade launchers to showcase to Ukrainian security forces officers as a means of convincing them to buy Ukrainian-made Tavor TARs for special forces units. In December 2009, a resolution was adopted to purchase the Fort 221 chambered in 5.45x39 for Ukrainian intelligence/border guard agencies, purchased in small numbers. It was subsequently adopted in 2014 for Ukrainian military and police forces. • : In August 2013, IWI US announced that the
Pennsylvania Capitol Police had adopted the Tavor SAR, a variant specifically designed for the U.S. market. In July 2014, it was announced that the
Lakewood, New Jersey Police Department would begin to adopt the Tavor SAR, after the weapon "met the demands and requirements of the Lakewood PD for reliability, ease-of-maintenance, durability and accuracy". The
Hidalgo County Sheriff's Office in Texas, operate Tavor SAR. • : On 13 October 2021, it was reported that the
Uruguayan Ministry of the Interior acquired some 200 Tavor X-95s, manufactured by IWI, for the
Uruguayan National Republican Guard Directorate. Training was carried out by an instructor from IWI, brought especially to Uruguay for that purpose. The
Uruguayan police also purchased thousands of Tavor rifles from IWI. • : From 2012, the TAR-21 entered service in special units of the
Vietnamese Army, equipping special forces, naval infantries and navy personnel. • : Used by the Zambian Army Special Forces Group. File:Members of the Azerbaijani Special Forces during a military parade in Baku 2011.png|Members of the Azerbaijani Special Forces march with TAR-21 during a military parade in Baku File:US_Navy_090911-N-4267W-095_GM1_Sean_Sammons_assigned_with_Expeditionary_Training_Command_(ETC)_observes_a_member_of_the_Guatemalan_Navy_Special_Forces.jpg|Guatemalan Navy special forces with STAR-21 designated marksman rifle File:1st SFG (A) Trains with Indian Special Forces.jpg|Tavor CTAR used by
Para SF of the
Indian Army File: India_Para2.jpg|Indian Army
Para SF soldier equipped with Tavor TAR File:Tiger_Claw_1_(01).jpg|Polish
JW Grom trains with a Tavor TAR-21 during Tiger Claw at
CIJWS File:Ethiopian Rep. Guard 2.jpg|
Ethiopian Republican Guards disembarking from an Ethiopian Airlines flight protecting Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed in Sudan with TAR-21s ==See also==