The following pages link to 2S3 Akatsiya
External toolsShowing 50 items.
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (links | edit)
- Lao People's Armed Forces (links | edit)
- Armed Forces of Tajikistan (links | edit)
- Armed Forces of Turkmenistan (links | edit)
- M109 howitzer (transclusion) (links | edit)
- Regiment (links | edit)
- List of armored fighting vehicles of the Soviet Union (links | edit)
- AS-90 (links | edit)
- Nuclear artillery (links | edit)
- SIPRI Arms Transfers Database, Iraq 1973–1990 (links | edit)
- 2S1 Gvozdika (transclusion) (links | edit)
- 2S5 Giatsint-S (links | edit)
- 2S19 Msta-S (links | edit)
- List of artillery by country (links | edit)
- ZU-23-2 (links | edit)
- ZSU-57-2 (links | edit)
- Abteilung (links | edit)
- List of military vehicles (links | edit)
- List of modern armoured fighting vehicles (links | edit)
- List of armoured fighting vehicles by country (links | edit)
- 100 mm anti-tank gun T-12 (links | edit)
- Sprut anti-tank gun (links | edit)
- MT-12 (links | edit)
- BM-27 Uragan (links | edit)
- BM-21 Grad (links | edit)
- SPG-9 (links | edit)
- 130 mm air defense gun KS-30 (links | edit)
- B-10 recoilless rifle (links | edit)
- B-11 recoilless rifle (links | edit)
- National Museum of Military History, Bulgaria (links | edit)
- 122 mm howitzer 2A18 (D-30) (links | edit)
- 152 mm SpGH DANA (links | edit)
- List of Gulf War military equipment (links | edit)
- BM-14 (links | edit)
- BM-30 Smerch (links | edit)
- Republican Guard (Syria) (links | edit)
- Ukrainian Ground Forces (links | edit)
- List of equipment of the Russian Ground Forces (links | edit)
- 4th Guards Tank Division (links | edit)
- 2S4 Tyulpan (links | edit)
- ASU-85 (links | edit)
- TOS-1 (links | edit)
- ASU-57 (links | edit)
- 2S31 Vena (links | edit)
- War in Abkhazia (1992–1993) (links | edit)
- 2B14 Podnos (links | edit)
- Acacia (disambiguation) (links | edit)
- 19th Motor Rifle Division (links | edit)
- 2A36 Giatsint-B (links | edit)
- Libyan Army (1951–2011) (links | edit)