Portuguese variants In 2005, the Portuguese government signed a deal worth 364 million euros to acquire 260
Pandur II armoured vehicles, with an option for further 33 worth 140 million
euros, to equip the
Portuguese Intervention Brigade of the
Portuguese Army and the marines of the
Portuguese Navy. Portugal was the first country to buy the Pandur II. The sale of Pandur II to Portugal includes an associated
offset agreement for a value of 516 million euro. The Pandur II (
Viatura Blindada de Rodas) for the Portuguese Army is fitted with Steyr add-on armour that provides Level 4 protection according to
STANAG 4569. The vehicles for the marines are equipped with Level 3 armour and have a cargo ramp instead of the original doors.
Legal dispute In 2002, the Portuguese Ministry of Defence decided that they would need new 8×8 APCs. After they had requested for tender on 14 August 2003, three companies — (
Finnish arms maker
Patria Oyj, Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeuge (now part of
General Dynamics), and MOWAG (also part of General Dynamics)) — made their offers. In December 2004, Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeuge's Pandur II was chosen; the Portuguese Ministry of Defence signed a 365 million Euro contract about the purchase of 260 units of the Pandur II with General Dynamics on 15 February 2005. The contract also included an option of additional 33 units. The first 260 units of the Pandur II were supposed to be built by General Dynamics European Land Combat Systems in Austria (41 units) and by Fabrequipa in Portugal (219 units), from 2006 to 2009; on 27 January 2007, production at Fabrequipa commenced. In March 2009 General Dynamics announced that they intended to move the production from Portugal to Czechia. On 8 May 2010, the Portuguese Minister of Defence announced that the Ministry of Defence would charge General Dynamics with breach of contract, because they had failed to deliver all 260 units. The contract with General Dynamics was terminated by the Ministry of Defence in October 2012 — until that date, 166 units had been built. Then began a process of negotiation leading to an agreement in September 2014 — General Dynamics agreed upon delivering 22 more units of the Pandur II until August 2015. The additional 33 units option was never used. In January 2005, General Defence's competitor Patria Oyj accused General Dynamics of "misconducts during the tender and contract formation procedures". Thus, Patria Oyj called for the legal suspension of the contract awarding to General Dynamics at the Public Attorney's Office of the Administrative Court in Lisbon. Patria Oyj's appeal was rejected by Lisbon's Court in February 2005. After General Dynamics had failed to deliver all units of the Pandur II, the Portuguese Public Prosecutor announced on 20 August 2010 that he would investigate corruption charges regarding the Pandur II contract awarding to General Dynamics. However, a case was never mounted against General Dynamics, and no further action was taken.
List of all Portuguese Pandur II • 105 Infantry Carrier Vehicles with a 12.7 mm machine gun • 7 Infantry Carrier Vehicles with a 12.7 mm machine gun installed in a
Protector M151 RWS • 16 Command Vehicles • 7 Recovery Vehicles • 8 Medical Evacuation Vehicles • 5 Anti-tank Guided Missile Launchers – variant with
TOW ITAS (Tube-launched, Optically tracked, Wire-guided Improved Target Acquisition System) missile launcher • 30 Infantry Fighting Vehicles – variant with SP30 turret with 30 mm gun. • 6 Signalling Vehicles • 4 Surveillance Vehicles
Czech variants The
Czech Army use the Pandur II. In total, they have purchased 127 units. •
KBVP: Wheeled infantry fighting vehicle, equipped with the
Elbit Samson RCWS-30 turret (ATK MK44 30mm, 7.62 mm machine gun, Spike missile, smoke grenades) :(72 units purchased 2009-2013) •
KBVP M1 RVS: A modified variant for service in Afghanistan, with additional multilayer and bar armour, improved electronics, and without water jet propulsion. : (4 units purchased in August 2010) •
KBV-VR: Wheeled infantry fighting vehicle (company command post) : (11 units purchased) •
KBV-Pz —
průzkumné kolové bojové vozidlo (
Wheeled reconnaissance fighting vehicle) fitted without a battlefield surveillance radar. : (8 units purchased In September 2017, Indonesia reportedly received four Pandur II 8x8s. The four Pandur IIs made their first public appearance at the 72nd
Indonesian National Armed Forces Day celebration on 5 October 2017. On 12 April 2019, the Indonesian Minister of Defense and
Pindad signed a contract worth US$80 million for another 22 units of Pandur II 8x8 that supposed to be manufactured locally as the Pindad Cobra 8x8 Infantry Fighting Vehicle (IFV). On 25 March 2020, the
Czechoslovak Group announced that the Czech companies in coordination with local producers will deliver 23 units of Pandur II 8X8 to Indonesia, in following the contract was signed in December 2019. On 22 February 2022, Indonesian Minister of Defense Prabowo Subianto witnessed the signing of the cooperation contract between the
Ministry of Defense of Republic of Indonesia and Excalibur International, a subsidiary of the Czechoslovak Group (CSG), at Ministry of Defense office, in
Jakarta. The cooperation contract includes a license agreement for the Pandur II 8X8 armored vehicle, carried out by the President Director of PT. Pindad Abraham Mose with Michal Stranad, CEO of the CSG group, where PT Pindad receives a Transfer of Technology (ToT) to assemble special specifications according to the needs of the
Indonesian Army. On 13 August 2023, Indonesia reportedly started to received another 11 units of Pandur II 8x8s. On 28 February 2024, Pindad hand overed 10 units Pandur II 8×8 infantry fighting vehicles to the Indonesian Army. Furthermore, on 2 October 2024, 23 units of Pandur II 8X8 ordered by the Indonesian Ministry of Defense were delivered by Pindad to the Indonesian Army. 18 units of the Indonesian Army's Pandur II 8x8, along with 12
Pindad Anoa 6x6, will be sent to Lebanon to be operated by the Indonesian 2025 Task Force to UNIFIL (United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon) for peacekeeping mission. Pindad Cobra 8x8 specifications: • Turret system: Unmanned turret Elbit System, Ares UT30 MK II. • Main armament: Northrop Grumman
Mk44 Bushmaster II, cal. 30 mm. • Secondary armament: Pindad
SM2 V2, cal. 7.62 mm. • Capacity: Three mechanic personnels (commander, driver and gunner). • Payload: The rear cabin can accommodate up to eight fully armed troops (up to 8.5 tons). • Dimensions: Length of 7.5 m; width of 2.67 m; height of 2.1 m. • Weight: 17.6 tons (standard); 22 tons (with add-on armor). • Additional protection: • Exterior add-on passive armor made by Rafael. • Bottom hull coated with SSAB ARMOX 500 (mine/IED resistant). • Front Wave Breaker shield. • Engine: Cummins EURO III diesel engine (455 hp). • Speed: Maximum 105 km/hour (road); 10 km/hour (water). • Operational range: Maximum cruise-range 700 km. • Night Vision System: CDND-1 (Combined Day/Night Day-1) night vision system consists of two prisms cut from special optical glass for an extra wide field of view equipped with anti-laser filters for wavelengths 800, 900, 1064, 1540 nm.
Philippine variant The
Sabrah light tank wheeled version is a new variant developed and offered by
Elbit Systems for the
Philippine Army's Light Tank Acquisition Project. It uses the Pandur II 8×8 platform fitted with a new turret armed with a 105 mm gun developed by Elbit in partnership with
Denel Land Systems. The Notice of Award (NOA) for the project was issued to Elbit Systems Land by the Department of National Defense in September 2020.
Prototypes Slovenian KOV "Krpan" The
KOV "Krpan" (
Kolesno Oklepno Vozilo, "Wheeled Armoured Vehicle") from Sistemska Tehnika Armas is the Slovenian license version of the Pandur II with a number of improvements and with 55% of its components and subsystems produced locally. This APC was proposed to the
Slovenian Army but was not bought, because the Army decided to buy the
Patria AMV instead. ==Operators==