Muluwheyo Army (Muluwheyo, The African dream that could have been)

Overview


The national army has 3 CH-47 Chinook helicopters, 3 Sud Aviation Alouette III helicopters, 1 Sikorsky HO4S (S-55) light cargo helicopter, 6 Centurion tanks (1 is in storage due to damage caused in the war with SWAPO and SWANU.), 2 Véhicule de l'Avant Blindé APC, 5 Chieftain tanks, 10 M30 107 mm (4.2 inch Mortar) heavy mortars and 15 Land Rover ‘defenders’.

There are 6 British Land Rover ‘defenders’, 10 American M113 armored personnel carriers, 2 Canadian CH-47 American Chinook helicopters, 3 CH-47 American Chinook helicopters, 8 S. African Leopard 2 A4 Main Battle Tanks and 2 Namibian Centurion tanks.

Weapons

 * 1) Stokes mortar
 * 2) Enfield No. 2 Mk I Revolver
 * 3) The Rifle, Anti-Tank, .55in, Boys commonly known as the "Boys Anti-tank Rifle" (or incorrectly "Boyes", nicknamed the "elephant gun")
 * 4) Austen submachine gun
 * 5) Short Magazine Lee-Enfield Mk I (1903)
 * 6) Kalashnikov AK-47

Special forces
It has 5 Land Rover ‘Defenders’, 2 Centurion tanks and 2 CH-47 Chinook helicopters.

Treaties with Namibia, NATO and others.
The UK and USA have had a small standing army in the nation due to tensions with both Namibia's SWANU rebels and the Angolan civil war. This force fell slightly after 1992.

South Africa made a mutual defence treaty with Muluwheyo. Similar treaties were made with Niger (1992), Angola (1993), Namibia (1994), Botswana (1995) and Mozambique (1995) agreed to in the next few years. The tiny nation joined NATO in 1999. These treaties were made in the wake of a brief set of UNITA attacks on the pro-MPLA village of Tonytown in Northern County.