The Wiesel was developed for the West German army to meet a requirement for an air-transportable light armored vehicle for use by its
airborne troops, as the infantry of the West German
Bundeswehr, especially airborne infantry, were considered unprepared to successfully fight enemy
main battle tanks (MBT) in the 1970s. The requirements were that the vehicle should fit in common
NATO transport planes and could eventually be air-dropped. It should be able to fight infantry as well as enemy tanks or aircraft.
Porsche produced some prototypes of the future fighting vehicle for the Bundeswehr in 1975, but the Bundeswehr stopped the project in 1978 due to lack of funds. Nevertheless, Porsche continued development, because of interest from other countries. The Bundeswehr eventually ordered 343 of the vehicles in 1985. The
Wiesel was introduced as a new weapon system for the Bundeswehr with deliveries beginning in the late 1980s. The vehicle was named
Wiesel ("
weasel") because of its small size and agility, which make it very difficult to detect on the battlefield. Production of the Wiesel 1 ended in 1993. Of 343 Wiesel 1 vehicles, 210 were armed with Raytheon
TOW wire-guided anti-tank guided missile system and 133 have the one-man KUKA turret E6-II-A1 armed with the dual-feed
Rheinmetall Mk 20 RH-202 20 mm
autocannon. Germany deployed both types to
Somalia in 1993 as part of the
United Nations forces intervention in the
Somali Civil War (
UNISOM II). The Wiesel 2 is an enlarged and extended version of the Wiesel 1 with five road wheels instead of four, and a more powerful engine. The Bundeswehr ordered 178 of the new vehicle in various types, including air defense, radar, and anti-aircraft missile launcher, 120 mm mortar carrier, command and fire control, and ambulance variants. ==Configuration==