Italian Army Surplus
Esercito Italiano • Vegetato • Alpini • Carabinieri • Marina • Aeronautica
Authentic surplus from the Esercito Italiano — Italy's modern 160,000-strong NATO army built atop one of the deepest small-arms traditions in Europe (the 1526 founding of Beretta makes it the oldest continuously-operating arms manufacturer in the world). Our Italian collection covers Vegetato pattern field uniforms (Italy's 2004-adopted woodland camo replacing the 1992 Roma 90), Alpini mountain-troop cold-weather gear from the world's oldest mountain infantry corps (founded 1872), Carabinieri and Guardia di Finanza uniforms from Italy's distinctive 4th-branch military police, Marina and Aeronautica issue items, and the genuinely-Italian quirks of military gear: Air Force espresso sets, wine glasses, and coffee cups as actual issue items.
Italian Army Surplus at Keep Shooting
Keep Shooting carries authentic surplus from the Esercito Italiano (Italian Army) — the modern Republic of Italy's 160,000-strong NATO ground force built atop one of the deepest small-arms and military-textile traditions in Europe. Our 40+ SKU Italian collection covers the Vegetato-pattern field uniforms, jackets, caps, and tactical gear that became Italy's standard camouflage in 2004; Alpini mountain-troop cold-weather gear from the world's oldest active mountain infantry corps; Carabinieri and Guardia di Finanza uniforms from Italy's distinctive 4th-branch military-police forces; Marina Militare and Aeronautica Militare issue items; and the culturally-Italian quirks of Italian military gear — Air Force espresso sets, wine glasses, coffee cup sets, and the Italian Army field soup cooker, all genuine issue items reflecting Italian military culture's particular relationship with food and drink as essential field-life elements.
The Esercito Italiano — from Risorgimento to NATO. The modern Italian Army traces its origins to the 1861 unification of Italy under the House of Savoy, when the Royal Sardinian Army of the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia became the Regio Esercito (Royal Italian Army) of the new unified Italian state. The Royal Italian Army served Italy through both World Wars before being reconstituted as the modern Esercito Italiano following the 1946 constitutional referendum that established the Italian Republic. Italy joined NATO at the alliance's founding in April 1949 as one of the original twelve member states, and the Italian Army has operated as a NATO-aligned force ever since — through the Cold War with deployments in defense of the Italo-Yugoslav border, Lebanon peacekeeping operations beginning in 1982, the Balkan operations of the 1990s, the Iraq and Afghanistan deployments of the 2000s, and ongoing Mediterranean and global peacekeeping commitments.
Vegetato — Italy's modern camouflage pattern. The Mimetico Vegetata (commonly Anglicized as "Vegetato") is the Italian Army's standard camouflage pattern adopted for general issue in 2004 — a mottled pattern of chocolate brown, russet, and olive green shapes on a khaki base, optimized for the mixed Mediterranean and Central European terrain Italian forces typically operate in. Vegetato replaced the earlier Mimetico Roma 90 pattern (1992-2004), which had itself replaced the historic Telo Mimetico pattern that the Italian Army first adopted in 1929 — making Italy the first nation in the world to adopt a standardized military camouflage pattern, decades before US M81 Woodland (1981), German Flecktarn (1976), or any other modern camouflage system. The Vegetato pattern was adopted first by the Italian Army, then shortly after by the Italian Air Force, and by the early 2010s across the Italian Navy and special forces (BSM). A Vegetato Desert variant (chocolate brown, ochre, light tan on sandy-beige) covers desert operations, and the Italian Army is currently transitioning to a new multi-terrain pattern over 2025. Our Vegetato lineup includes the Vegetato Camo Field Jacket, Vegetato Soft Shell Jacket, Vegetato Tactical Field Shirt, Vegetato Wet Weather Suit, the Mil-Tec Vegetato Tactical Vest, plus desert-camo Vegetato field caps and woodland Vegetato cap variants.
The Alpini — the world's oldest mountain troops. The Alpini (literally "Alpine") are the Italian Army's specialized mountain-warfare infantry corps — the oldest active mountain infantry in the world, established in 1872 with the original mission of defending Italy's Alpine border against potential French and Austro- Hungarian incursion. The Alpini were recruited from men born in Italy's mountain regions on the principle that locals already familiar with snow, cliffs, altitude, and high-mountain survival would be the most effective mountain soldiers — a recruiting model that produced the elite mountain-warfare culture for which the Alpini remain famous. The Battle of Adamello (1915-1918) and the broader Guerra Bianca ("White War") of WWI saw Alpini engaged in three years of continuous combat at altitudes above 3,000 meters against Austro-Hungarian Kaiserjäger and German Alpenkorps — the most sustained high-altitude warfare in military history. The Alpini's distinctive symbol is the black eagle feather worn in their traditional mountain cap, the Cappello Alpino, and their motto "Di qui non si passa" ("You shall not pass from here") speaks to the corps's defensive mountain-warfare tradition. Our Italian Alpine cold-weather gear — the Italian Army Balaclava, Italian Alpine Cold Weather Face Mask, Italian Army Wool Leggings, OD Wool-Blend Shirt, OD Commando Sweater, OD Fleece Sweater, and Italian Army Winter Gloves — is the same kind of high-altitude cold-weather kit that equips modern Alpini units in their two active operational brigades.
Carabinieri — the 4th military branch. Italy is nearly unique in maintaining a fourth military branch beyond the standard Army-Navy-Air Force structure: the Arma dei Carabinieri, a gendarmerie-pattern military police force that holds full military status (the Carabinieri is not subordinate to the Army; it is a coequal armed-forces branch reporting directly to the Ministry of Defense) while simultaneously functioning as Italy's primary national civilian police service. The Carabinieri was founded in 1814 by King Vittorio Emanuele I of Piedmont-Sardinia — predating the unified Italian state by nearly 50 years — making it one of the oldest continuously-operating military- police organizations in the world. Today the Carabinieri fields approximately 110,000 personnel across both military and civilian police roles, and Carabinieri uniforms carry distinctive insignia and traditions that mark them clearly as a separate branch from the Army. Our Carabinieri Jacket and Carabinieri Pants are authentic Carabinieri-issue uniforms — a genuine collector piece for those interested in Italian military-police traditions.
Guardia di Finanza — the finance police. Italy also maintains a fifth militarized service: the Guardia di Finanza (Finance Guard), a militarized gendarmerie under the Italian Ministry of Economy and Finance responsible for customs enforcement, border patrol, financial crime investigation, anti-smuggling operations, and economic-policy enforcement. Founded in 1774 as the Light Troops Legion of the Kingdom of Piedmont, the Guardia di Finanza is older even than the Carabinieri and operates with military rank structure and equipment despite its civilian regulatory mission. Our Italian Guardia di Finanza Parka and Italian Finance Ministry Socks are authentic Guardia-di-Finanza issue items.
Italian small arms heritage — the Beretta dimension. Italy has the deepest small-arms manufacturing tradition in the Western world. Fabbrica d'Armi Pietro Beretta was founded in 1526 in Gardone Val Trompia, Brescia province — making Beretta the oldest continuously- operating firearms manufacturer in the world, predating the founding of every other major arms maker by centuries (Beretta is older than Smith & Wesson by 326 years, older than Colt by 310 years, older than Remington by 290 years). Beretta has equipped successive Italian states for nearly 500 years and today produces the Italian Army's standard service pistol — the Beretta 92FS (also adopted by the US military as the M9 from 1985 – 2017). Our Italian Police Beretta 92FS Holster is the authentic Italian-police duty holster pattern for this Italian-designed pistol, and the Italian Army Full-Size Holster and Italian Army Leather Belt Holster cover broader Italian-issue holster patterns. We also carry magazine pouches for the Beretta PM12 (Pistola Mitragliatrice Modello 12, a Beretta-designed 9mm submachine gun adopted by Italian forces in 1961) in both 30 and 40-round capacities — the PM12 served as the Carabinieri's standard-issue SMG through much of the late 20th century.
Italian M1 Garand — the Beretta connection. One of the more historically distinctive items in our Italian inventory is the Italian M1 Garand Stock and Italian-Made M1 Garand Barrel Brushes. Following WWII, Italy received large numbers of US M1 Garands as part of the Marshall Plan and NATO equipment transfers, and Beretta subsequently produced M1 Garands under license in Italy through the 1950s as the Italian Army adopted the M1 as its standard service rifle. Beretta then designed the BM59 — a modernized M1 Garand variant with detachable 20-round magazine, select-fire capability, and a bayonet lug — which served as Italy's standard service rifle from 1959 through the early 1990s. Italian-made M1 Garand parts and accessories from this period are increasingly collectible as the BM59 platform fades from active Italian inventory. For the broader M1 Garand and M14 magazine catalog see our M14 Magazines category.
The Italian military coffee culture. One of the most distinctive features of Italian military equipment — and one of the genuine cultural differentiators that makes Italian surplus distinctive from any other nation's surplus market — is the Italian military's approach to coffee, food, and drink as essential field-life elements rather than afterthoughts. Italian Air Force issue items in our catalog include the Italian Air Force Espresso Set, the Italian Air Force Wine Set, the Italian Air Force Coffee Cup Set, the Italian Air Force 3-Prong Dessert Fork, and the Italian Air Force Fish Knife — all genuine issue items, not novelties. Italian Army field issue includes the Italian Army Field Soup Cooker — a personal-issue compact cooking unit for hot soup preparation in the field, the kind of personal-cooking-equipment emphasis that exists in Italian military issue but not in most other NATO militaries' field kits. This cultural emphasis reflects the broader Italian principle that food and drink are essential infrastructure rather than nice-to-haves — and creates a category of Italian military surplus items genuinely unavailable from any other nation's military.
Marina Militare and Aeronautica Militare. Beyond the Esercito and the military-police branches, our Italian collection includes items from the Marina Militare (Italian Navy) and Aeronautica Militare (Italian Air Force). Marina items include the Italian Navy Sea Bag (the classic seaman's stowage bag in heavy canvas construction), the Italian Navy Middy (the traditional sailor's shirt with squared collar), the Italian Navy Desert Camo Gore-Tex Suit and Italian Navy High-Visibility Suit (modern Navy operational gear), Italian Navy Overpants, and the Italian Navy Jackknife with Spike (the traditional sailor's marlinspike- and-blade knife, used for line and rigging work). Aeronautica items beyond the coffee/dining sets include the Italian Air Force Pilot Knife (a survival knife carried by Italian aircrew), Italian Air Force blue knit-wool gloves, and the Italian Army Helmet Light (paired with helmet-mounted aircrew and ground- crew use).
Cold-weather and field-living gear. Italy's Alpine geography means Italian Army cold-weather gear is some of the most genuinely-mountain-tested cold-weather equipment on the European surplus market. Beyond the Alpini-specific items, our broader Italian cold-weather catalog includes the Italian Army Parka and Italian Army Gore-Tex Jacket (modern Italian Army wet-weather outerwear), the Italian Army OD Commando Sweater (the traditional wool sweater with reinforced shoulder and elbow patches that has served European militaries since the 1960s), the Italian Army Sleeping Bag with Stuff Sack, the Italian Army Tan Fire-Proof Blanket, and the Italian Army M70 Gaiters. For a broader catalog of military cold-weather gear across all nations see our cold-weather head wear category.
Holster heritage and Vega. Italy is also the global center of the premium-holster industry: most of the world's high-end leather holsters are produced in Italy (alongside premium watch straps and leather goods broadly), and several major holster brands operate from Italian Tuscany and the Brescia/Gardone leather-working belts. Vega Holster Srl, based in Vinci (Tuscany — the same town where Leonardo was born), is one of the most respected duty-holster manufacturers in Europe and supplies Italian military, police, and Carabinieri forces. Our Vega PA270 Tactical Nylon Thigh Holster in Green is authentic Vega-issue duty gear — typical of the high-quality Italian holster production that equips Italian forces and exports worldwide.
Keep Shooting ships all Italian Army surplus from our Pennsylvania warehouse with free shipping on orders over $49.95 and hassle-free returns. Whether you are an Alpini- culture enthusiast outfitting an Italian mountain-warfare reenactor impression, a Carabinieri-history collector building an authentic Italian military-police uniform set, a BM59 / M1 Garand collector sourcing Beretta-licensed Italian production parts, an Italian-Navy sailing enthusiast adding the Sea Bag and Middy to a maritime collection, or simply someone who appreciates that the Italian military takes coffee, wine, and soup seriously enough to issue proper equipment for them, every item in our Italian collection is genuine military issue from one of the deepest and most culturally- distinctive military traditions in Europe.
Frequently Asked Questions — Italian Army Surplus
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