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Camouflage Europe Centrale (CEC) was introduced in 1991, replacing both, TAP 47 pattern camouflage and khaki F2 uniform dresses. It is a four-colour pattern of woodland shapes optimised for French forests.
Camouflage Europe Centrale (CEC) was introduced in 1991, replacing both, TAP 47 pattern camouflage and khaki F2 uniform dresses. It is a four-colour pattern of woodland shapes optimised for French forests.


The CEC pattern is used by the [[French Army#Uniform|French military]] and the [[Armed Forces of Senegal]]. It was also used by [[Austria]]n peacekeepers in [[Bosnia-Herzegovina]] (2004)<!--rm ref, an attack page with viruses-->
The CEC pattern is used by the [[French Army#Uniform|French military]]<ref>[http://camopedia.org/index.php?title=France Camopedia: France]</ref> and the [[Armed Forces of Senegal]]<ref>[http://camopedia.org/index.php?title=Senegal Camopedia: Senegal]</ref>. It was also used by [[Austria]]n peacekeepers in [[Bosnia-Herzegovina]] (2004)<!--rm ref, an attack page with viruses-->


The most commonly worn parade dress consists of camouflage uniforms worn with coloured [[kepi]]s, [[sash]]es, fringed [[epaulette]]s, [[fourragère]]s and other traditional items on appropriate occasions.
The most commonly worn parade dress consists of camouflage uniforms worn with coloured [[kepi]]s, [[sash]]es, fringed [[epaulette]]s, [[fourragère]]s and other traditional items on appropriate occasions.

Revision as of 19:07, 14 May 2018

French Centre Europe camouflage
Legionnaire of 2 REI with CCE dress

The Camouflage Europe Centrale is the standard camouflage pattern of the French military.

Camouflage Europe Centrale (CEC) was introduced in 1991, replacing both, TAP 47 pattern camouflage and khaki F2 uniform dresses. It is a four-colour pattern of woodland shapes optimised for French forests.

The CEC pattern is used by the French military[1] and the Armed Forces of Senegal[2]. It was also used by Austrian peacekeepers in Bosnia-Herzegovina (2004)

The most commonly worn parade dress consists of camouflage uniforms worn with coloured kepis, sashes, fringed epaulettes, fourragères and other traditional items on appropriate occasions.

Sources and references