World War I The Renault FT was widely used by French forces in 1918 and by the
American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) on the Western Front in the closing stages of
World War I. Its battlefield debut occurred on 31 May 1918, east of the
Forest of Retz, east of
Chaudun, between
Ploisy and Chazelles, during the
Third Battle of the Aisne. This engagement, with 30 tanks, successfully broke up a German advance, but in the absence of infantry support, the vehicles later withdrew. From then on, gradually increasing numbers of FTs were deployed, together with smaller numbers of the older
Schneider CA1 and
Saint-Chamond tanks. As the war had become a war of movement during mid-1918, during the
Hundred Days Offensive, the lighter FTs were often transported on heavy trucks and special trailers rather than by rail on flat cars. Estienne had initially proposed to overwhelm the enemy defences using a "swarm" of light tanks, a tactic that was eventually successfully implemented. Beginning in late 1917, the
Entente allies were attempting to outproduce the
Central Powers in all respects, including artillery, tanks, and chemical weapons. Consequently, a goal was set of manufacturing 12,260 FT tanks (7,820 in France and 4,440 in the United States) before the end of 1919. It played a leading role in the offensives of 1918, when it received the popular name "Victory Tank". The
British Army used 24 FTs for command and liaison duties, usually with the gun removed. Italy received 3 FTs in June 1918, but they did not see action and no other tanks were received until the end of the war.
Interwar period After the end of World War I, Renault FTs were exported to many countries, including Belgium, Brazil,
Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Finland, Iran, Japan, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey, and Yugoslavia. Renault FT tanks were used by most nations having armoured forces, generally as their prominent tank type. They were used in anti-Soviet conflicts such as the
Russian Civil War and
Polish-Soviet War. On 5 February 1920, Estonia purchased nine vehicles from France. French tanks deployed in
Vladivostok were given to the Chinese
Fengtian Army of
Zhang Zuolin in 1919. 14 more Renaults were bought in 1924 and 1925. These tanks saw action to protect the border from the Soviets in the 1920s and against the
warlord Wu Peifu in 1926. After the
Japanese invasion of Manchuria, nearly all were handed over to the
Manchukuo Imperial Army. Renault tanks were also used in colonial conflicts, for instance crushing a revolt in
Italian Libya in 1919. The French Army sent a company of FT tanks to
Syria during the
Great Druze Revolt. In Brazil, the FT tanks were used by the
Old Republic to crush various revolts between 1924 and 1927 and by
Vargas forces against the
Constitutionalist Revolution. 105 more were in service in the colonies of Morocco and Algeria and 58 in
French Levant, Madagascar and
Indochina. Some FT tanks had also been buried within the ground and encased in concrete to supplement the
Maginot Line. The fact that several units used the Renault FT gave rise to the popular myth that the French had no modern equipment at all; actually, they had as many modern tanks as the Germans; however, the majority had one-man turrets and were less efficient than German tanks such as the
Panzer III and
IV. The French suffered from strategic and tactical weaknesses rather than from equipment deficiencies, although many of the French tanks were also markedly slow (unlike the German tanks of the time). When the best French units were cut off by the German drive to the English Channel, around 390 FTs, previously used for training or stored in depots, joined the 184 to 192 FTs in service with internal security units. The
Wehrmacht captured 1,704 FTs. French Army FTs saw combat deployment during the
Japanese Invasion of French Indo-China and the
Franco-Thai War in the period from September 1940 to January 1941. The last known use was in the 1980s during the
Soviet–Afghan War, when some FTs were used as pillboxes or roadblocks. In 2003, derelict former Afghan military Renault FTs were found by US occupation forces in Afghanistan.
Derivatives , a copy of "Russkiy Reno" The FT was the ancestor of a long line of French tanks: the FT Kégresse, the NC1, the NC2, the
Char D1, and the
Char D2. The Italians produced the
FIAT 3000, a moderately close copy of the FT, as their standard tank. The Soviet
Red Army captured 14 burnt-out Renaults from
White Russian forces and rebuilt them at the
Krasnoye Sormovo Factory in 1920. Nearly 15 exact copies, called "Russkiy Reno", were produced in 1920–1922, but they were never used in battle because of many technical problems. In 1928–1931, the first completely Soviet-designed tank was the
T-18, a derivative of the Renault with sprung suspension.
Operators Tanque Renault F-17 español Rif.jpg|Spanish FT tank in Morocco, 1922 Renault FT-17 in ROC.jpg|Chinese FT tanks Tankai Renault-FT-17.jpg|Lithuanian FT tanks in 1925 Francouzské tanky Renault vz. 17 čs. armády.gif|Czechoslovak FT tank in 1928 • (some tanks, four discovered by US forces in 2003) • (54 tanks bought in 1919, used until 1934 in a tank regiment and then used by the
Gendarmerie before being scrapped in 1938) • (12
Carros de assalto, six with 37mm gun, five with 7mm Hotchkiss MGs and one TSF, bought in 1921, later joined by approximatively 28 others, in active service until 1938 and in training service until 1942) • (seven tanks, bought in 1921–1923 and used until 1933) • (four FTs with gun and eight FT with machine guns, bought in 1924 and used until 1940) • (34 tanks, used 1919–1942) • •
Vichy France Captured tanks given by
Nazi Germany. • (captured) • (captured) • (some tanks received from France in 1924, actual delivery disputed) • (13 tanks, some used alongside
Renault NC1s in Manchuria in 1932) • (seven FTs in 1919 and many more
Fiat 3000s) • (12 FTs with
Maxim machine guns, bought in 1923) • (ex-Chinese tanks from 1931, with some Japanese or French tanks later supplied) • (one FT with
Schwarzlose machine gun, used for trials) • (one ex-American tank, used 1936–1940) • • (74–76 Renault FTs, including 40 tanks with 37mm guns, bought in 1919, used by the
Regiment 1 Care de Lupta and during WW2 by an internal security battalion) •
Russian White movement • • (18 FTs delivered from France between 1919 and 1925 and 48 others delivered from France and Poland to the
Spanish Republic) • (one tank bought for trials in 1923) • (two tanks bought in 1921 and three others in 1939 for training the infantry to the tanks) • (one company of Renault FT, received from France in 1921 or 1928) • (24 on loan in 1918, for command and reconnaissance. Returned after War.) == Variants ==