Quoted Text
Quoted TextAs Olivier C. said the light camouflage is actually mud painted on the vehicle as a sort of short therm camo scheme during manouvers. A different picture showing this vehicle and another AML90 says that they belong to a training squadron from the 12e DLB (12e Division Légère Blindée, so 12th Light Armoured Division, a training formation in peacetime), quite correctly in Champagne. This division had one regiment with 36 AML90s, the 3e Regiment de Chasseurs (active from 1981 to 1997).
Impressive knowledge about this peculiar unit Tony
At that time, the French army had two light armored divisions composed of regular units which were supporting the branch schools, the 12th vicinity of Saumur (home of tank school) and the 14th vicinity of Montpellier (home of infantry school). The chore of the units was constituted by draftees and to reach the war establishment size, the students (officers and NCOs in training sessions) were used as augmentees.
Olivier
I blame the late Yves Debays photo caption and the "Armee Francaise 1989" website for the knowledge.
Here is the other AML-90 photo from the same occasion btw, this is taken from the book "Véhicules de combat francais d'aujourd'hui" by Debay (1998)