Austria: The Austrian Army acquired 114 Leopard 2A4s from surplus Dutch stocks plus one turret. In 2014 only 56 Leopard 2A4s are still in service, the rest was sold to Krauss-Maffei Wegmann (KMW) defence company.[citation needed] Canada: The Canadian Army acquired 100 Leopard 2A4 tanks from the Netherlands in 2007. Twenty Leopard 2A6M were borrowed from the German Army beginning in mid-2007 to support the Canadian deployment in Afghanistan,[43] with the first tank handed over after upgrading by KMW on August 2, 2007,[45][61] and arriving in Afghanistan on August 16, 2007.[47] Two Bergepanzer 3 Büffel were loaned from the German Army for use with the Canadian deployment in Afghanistan.[62] An additional fifteen Leopard 2A4 tanks were purchased from the German Army for spare parts.[63] An additional 12 surplus Pz 87 were purchased from Switzerland in 2011 for conversion to protected special vehicles.[64] The Canadian Army can field 59 tanks (31 A4s,12 2A4M CAN and 16 2A6M CAN) supported by 13 AEVs,6 ARVs and 15 Logistic Support Vehicles.[citation needed] Chile: The Chilean Army acquired 132 Leopard 2A4s upgraded to the Leopard 2A4CHL standard (plus 8 to be used as spares) from German stocks in 2007.[65] In April 2013, Chile began negotiations to purchase 100 Leopard 2A5 tanks from surplus German stocks, as well as modernization kits to upgrade all its current Leopard 2A4s up to A5 standard.[66] Denmark: The Royal Danish Army operates 57 Leopard 2A5DK (equal to Leopard 2A6 minus the L55 gun) and 6 Leopard 2A4 (for spares) from German stocks.[67] Finland: The Finnish Army originally bought 124 2A4s from surplus German stocks in 2003.[68] 12 have been converted into bridge-laying and combat engineering tanks.[69][70] 12 tanks have been disassembled for use as spares, leaving 100 operational tanks. In 2009 the Finnish Army bought 15 more German surplus Leopard 2A4s for spare parts of existing fleet[71] Finland currently has 139 Leopard 2s. On 16 January 2014, Finland agreed with the Netherlands to purchase 100 used Leopard 2A6NL tanks for approximately €200 million.[72] Germany: The German Army operated about 2,350 Leopard 2s of all versions. To reduce maintenance costs, the German military has sold, donated or scrapped 90% of its inventory. Approximately 250 Leopard 2 tanks are in service as of March 2015.[73] Greece: The Hellenic Army operates 353 Leopard 2s (183 ex-German 2A4s and 170 newly built Leopard 2A6 HEL vehicles)[citation needed] Indonesia: Indonesia sought and obtained approval for the purchase of 103 used Leopard 2A4 tanks from Bundeswehr stocks, along with 4 Büffel ARV (Bergepanzer), 3 Leguan AVLB bridge-laying tanks (Brückenlegepanzer) and 3 Kodiak AEV (Pionierpanzer). About 63 of Leopard 2A4 will be upgraded to Revolution standard by Rheinmetall. 50 Marder 1A3 infantry fighting vehicles would also be acquired as part of the deal.[74] In September 2013, the Indonesian Army (TNI-AD or Tentara Nasional Indonesia - Angkatan Darat) received the first two Leopard 2A4 tanks and 2 Marder 1A3 infantry fighting vehicles.[75] Norway: The Norwegian Army operates 52 ex-Dutch Leopard 2A4s, designated A4NO. The Norwegian Leopards will be upgraded to 2A5 standard.[citation needed] Poland: The Polish Land Forces operate 128 Leopard 2A4s and ordered further 14 Leopard 2A4 and 105 Leopard 2A5 as of March 2013. The Polish Leopard 2 tanks serve with the 10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade based in Świętoszów. In March 2013, the Polish Ministry of National Defence announced that similar numbers of Leopard 2 tanks will be bought for a second brigade to be established.[76] By November 2013, the Polish Defense Ministry had acquired 119 tanks (105 Leopard 2A5s and 14 2A4s) from the German Army. All acquired Leopard 2A4 tanks are to be upgraded to Leopard 2PL standard.[77] First 11 Leopard 2A5 arrived to 34th Armoured Cavalry Brigade based in Żagań on 16 May 2014.[78] Portugal: The Portuguese Army has 37 ex-Dutch Leopard 2A6s in service. Singapore: The Singapore Army acquired a total of 96 ex-German Leopard 2A4s, including 30 spare tanks. A number were upgraded with additional AMAP composite armour in 2010 by IBD Deisenroth and ST Kinetics and renamed Leopard 2SG in October 2010. By 2013, it was reported that Singapore had taken delivery of a total of 182 Leopard 2A4s.[79] Spain: The Spanish Army operates 327 Leopard 2s (108 ex-German Leopard 2A4s and 219 new-built Leopard 2A6+ (Leopard 2E). Spain offered its Leopard 2A4 for comparative tests to be conducted by the Peruvian Army for possible acquisition. By September 2013, the Leopard 2A4 had been disqualified by Peru due to logistical complexities.[80] Sweden: The Swedish Army operates 120 Leopard 2(S) (local designation Strv 122) and has operated 160 leased ex-German Leopard 2A4s (Strv 121). Only the Strv 122s are still in active service.[81] Switzerland: The Swiss Army purchased 380 2A4s designated Pz 87, for Panzer 87. 35 of these were bought from Germany while the remaining ones were license manufactured locally. Beginning in 2006, 134 of these tanks have been modernized, 42 were sold back to Rheinmetall, and 12 were turned into de-mining and engineer vehicles. The remaining tanks are in storage.[citation needed] Turkey: The Turkish Army received 354 Leopard 2A4s.[34] Dėmesio! klausimas. "Gintas" wrote in message news:min56q$fq6$1@trimpas.omnitel.net... Pradek nauja posta, gal atsiras norinciu prisijungti :) "Bone Daddy" <info@bonedaddy.serveftp.com> schrieb im Newsbeitrag news:min53q$fpq$1@trimpas.omnitel.net... > Dėmesio! > dabar bus seksas. > > "Gintas" wrote in message news:min4uv$fol$1@trimpas.omnitel.net... > > O mes ka pristatinesim? Klausimas juk buvo: > As klausiau (demesio klausimas): >