World War II The M8 light armored car entered combat service with the Allies in
the 1943 invasion of Sicily. It was purpose designed to serve as the primary basic command and communication combat vehicle of the U.S. Cavalry Reconnaissance troops. It was subsequently used by the US Army in Italy, Northwest Europe and the Pacific. In the latter
theater, it was used mostly on
Okinawa and the Philippines, and was even employed in its original tank destroyer role, as most Japanese tanks had armor that was vulnerable to its 37 mm gun. Over 1,000 were supplied via
Lend-Lease to US allies; the United Kingdom,
Free France and Brazil. after the
liberation of Paris In the European Theater, the M8 received "varied acceptance." Its on-road performance was generally good, and it was armed and armored well enough for reconnaissance missions. On the other hand, the turning radius was considered too wide, and the engine was considered underpowered, routinely experiencing problems such as overheating from being run at high output continuously and/or having its ventilation louvers obstructed by personal equipment stored on the rear of the vehicle. Large numbers were regularly under repair, gaining the vehicle a reputation of being unreliable. Off-road mobility, especially on soft ground like mud or snow, was poor; in the mountainous terrain of Italy and in the Northwest European winter, the M8 was more or less restricted to roads, which greatly reduced its value as a reconnaissance vehicle. It was also very vulnerable to
landmines. In February 1944, an add-on armor kit was designed to provide an extra quarter-inch of belly armor to reduce landmine vulnerability. Some crews also placed sandbags on the floor to make up for the thin belly armor. Another problem was that commanders often used their reconnaissance squadrons for fire support missions, for which the thinly-armored M8 was ill-suited. When it encountered German armored reconnaissance units, the M8 could easily penetrate their armor with its 37 mm gun. Conversely, its own thin armor was vulnerable to the 20 mm autocannons that German scout cars were equipped with. Due to mobility problems with the M8, namely with regards to its suspension, the US Army's Special Armored Vehicle Board recommended the development of a new six-wheeled armored car which matched the M8's dimensions and size but was equipped with an articulated, independently sprung suspension system. Two prototypes, the
Studebaker-developed
T27 Armored Car and the
T28 designed by
Chevrolet were trialed by the US and also reviewed by the British Armed Forces. The EBR was accepted as a generic replacement for all remaining M8s by the French military in 1956. Between 1956 and 1964 the remaining M8s and M20s were donated to the
Mobile Gendarmerie, as well as the armies of several former French colonies. ARVN M8s and M20s saw considerable action during the
Vietnam War; however, by 1962 the US noted the attrition rate of the fleet was becoming high due to age. Another country which received a substantial number of ex-American M8s following the war was Belgium, which presumably received them as part of a
NATO military assistance program. These M8s were adopted primarily by the
Belgian Air Component, which issued them to base security units, and the
Force Publique in the
Belgian Congo. Following Congolese independence several of the Force Publique M8s fell into the hands of
Katangese separatists, while others were repurposed for peacekeeping operations by the
United Nations Operation in the Congo (ONUC). The continued proliferation of M8s and M20s during the late 1960s and the 1970s resulted in American and French defense contractors offering several commercial upgrade kits to extend their service life. At least ten countries, Cameroon, Cyprus, Ethiopia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Jamaica, Morocco, Venezuela, and Zaire, modernized their M8/M20 fleets with diesel engines and new transmissions during this time. The
National Army of Colombia also invested heavily in upgrading the M8's turret armament, having it replaced by a single .50 caliber machine gun and a launcher for
BGM-71 TOW anti-tank missiles. This project spawned a series of indigenous prototypes, including a bizarre four-wheeled variant of the M8 chassis known as the
VBB, and another more conventional six-wheeled design known as the
VBR-2. The latter subsequently evolved into the first Brazilian-manufactured armored car, the
EE-9 Cascavel. ==List of operators==