Lithuania has placed an order to acquire 18 French Caesar guns

by time news
French army soldiers install a Caesar cannon during a demonstration at the Eurosatory international land and air defense and security exhibition in Villepinte on June 12, 2022.

Lithuania signed a letter of intent to acquire 18 French Caesar self-propelled guns during a meeting between the two countries’ defense ministers on Monday on the sidelines of the Eurosatory defense fair, the two countries announced .

“Lithuania to buy 18 Caesar Mark II howitzer guns”Lithuanian Defense Minister Arvydas Anusauskas announced in a tweet accompanied by a photo of the signing of the letter of intent with his French counterpart, Sébastien Lecornu. “They will significantly strengthen the capabilities of the Lithuanian army”he adds, specifying that it is the “largest acquisition project” never spent with France.

This decision comes as the Baltic country, a member of the EU and NATO, decided to increase by 300 million euros, bringing it to 1.5 billion, its defense budget for 2022 in the light of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the fears it raises for its own security.

According to the French Ministry of the Armed Forces, “the ties that unite Lithuania and France in terms of defense are very solid and will be further developed in the weeks to come, in the degraded geopolitical context that we are experiencing in Europe”.

A system already sold to 300 copies

The conflict in Ukraine recalls the role of artillery in high-intensity conflicts, with the West, primarily the United States, providing dozens of guns to Ukrainian forces to contain Russian thrusts. In this context, France delivered, at the end of April, six Caesar guns to kyiv, as well as thousands of shells.

Read also: War in Ukraine: arms deliveries and military aid promised by Western countries

Produced by Nexter, the Caesar is a truck-mounted 155mm cannon capable of firing six rounds per minute at a range of 40 kilometers.

France has 76 copies. The system has also been sold nearly 300 copies to seven countries (Saudi Arabia, Denmark, Indonesia, Thailand, Czech Republic, Morocco and Belgium).

The World with AFP

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