Authors: C. J. Chivers
Tags: #Europe, #AK-47 rifle - History, #Technological innovations, #Machine guns, #Eastern, #Machine guns - Technological innovations - History, #Firearms - Technological innovations - History, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #General, #Weapons, #Firearms, #Military, #War - History, #AK-47 rifle, #War, #History
Washington Daily News,
307
–8
Watson, Peter H.,
30
WDMET (Wound Data and Munitions Effectiveness Team),
265
n
weapons:
contests for designs of,
4
,
144
–48,
150
–54,
158
–61,
188
–89,
191
–92,
195
n
,
197
,
200
,
205
,
207
,
345
profiteering and,
32
–33
standardization of,
32
–33,
203
–4,
214
–15,
249
,
255
–57,
275
,
296
,
364
–65,
408
,
419
n
,
435–36
n
,
444
n
stockpiling of,
5
,
9
,
12
–13,
340
–44,
349
,
354
–58,
366
–68,
387
,
398
–99,
410
–11
West Germany,
see
Germany, Federal Republic of
whale hunting,
12
Wheeler, Earle,
292
–95
Whirlwind, Operation,
238
“White Man’s Burden, The” (Kipling),
104
Wilkinson, Captain,
62
William, Archduke,
83
special machine-gun units and,
117
World War I and,
118
Williston, Edward B.,
84
Winter War,
166
Winton, Sir Francis de,
84
–85
Wolseley, Lord Garnet J.:
Maxim’s relationship with,
105
Armistice in,
137
machine guns and,
45
,
84
,
90
,
119
–22,
124
,
128
–31,
133
–34,
163
,
165
,
246
,
251
–52,
255
,
424
n
,
426
n
start of,
118
stockpiles of weapons from,
344
training for,
123
–27
trench systems in,
121
–25,
127
–29,
131
–33,
135
,
137
–39,
233
,
236
,
251
World War II,
151
–53,
161
,
246
,
264
,
269
–70,
280
–81,
332
,
334
,
342
–44,
365
,
405
German invasion of Soviet Union in,
4
,
146
,
155
–57,
159
,
164
–65,
168
–69,
176
–80,
182
,
185
,
199
,
209
,
238
,
343
,
358
Kalashnikov in,
144
,
146
–47,
149
,
151
,
176
–78,
180
,
183
,
185
,
209
,
224
,
226
Soviet Union and,
4
,
143
–44,
146
,
153
,
155
–59,
164
–66,
168
–69,
174
–83,
185
,
199
,
202
,
209
,
212
,
214
,
221
,
224
,
238
,
280
,
343
,
358
,
436
n
Winter War and,
166
Wound Data and Munitions Effectiveness Team (WDMET),
265
n
XM8,
20
Xu Xiangqian,
216
Yakovlev, Aleksandr,
158
Yassin, Sheik Ahmed,
11
Ybarr, Corporal,
313
Yeltsin, Boris N.,
406
Yepishev, Aleksei,
18
–19
Yousaf, Mohammad,
382
–83
and AK and AK-type rifle production and distribution,
9
,
11
–12,
16
,
250
–51,
257
,
364
,
390
–91,
412
arms pilfering and,
367
Zaharoff, Basil,
86
Zhao Erlu,
217
Zmukshir,
49
–50
ABOUT THE AUTHORzundnadelgewehr
(needle gun),
42
C. J. CHIVERS is a senior writer for
The New York Times
and its former Moscow bureau chief, and a frequent contributor to
Esquire
. From 1988 to 1994, he was an infantry officer in the U.S. Marine Corps, and served in the Gulf War and in the Los Angeles riots before being honorably discharged as a captain. His work has received several prizes, including a National Magazine Award for Reporting for the reconstruction in
Esquire
of the terrorist siege in Beslan and a shared Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for coverage in the
Times
of combat in Afghanistan. His war re-portage from 2003 through 2009 in Iraq and Afghanistan was selected by New York University as being among the Top Ten Works of Journalism of the Decade in the United States. He lives with his family in Rhode Island.
The first reasonably effective rapid-fire arm was the Gatling gun, shown here in patent drawings submitted by its inventor, Dr. Richard J. Gatling, in 1862. Gatling claimed he entered the weapons business to save lives. His weapon was not a true machine gun; firing it required a man to turn a crank. But it was the precursor to the rest.
As the killing powers of rapid-fire arms became understood, and manufacturing technology improved, new types of weapons—machines guns, submachine guns, automatic rifles, and assault rifles—entered markets. With time they were brought down in size and price, and connected to planned economies that produced them whether there were customers or not. The lethality, availability, and small size of assault rifles ultimately made them attractive to most anyone, including terrorists. Here, a Kalashnikov with its stock removed, which had been worn on a makeshift sling under the parka of a man who attacked a police station in Nalchik, Russia, during an insurgent raid in 2005. Its owner was dispossessed of it when he was killed. The keys beside the weapon provide a sense of scale. A fully outfitted Gatling could weigh a ton. A Kalashnikov like this weighs less than 8 pounds. (
Photo by C. J. Chivers
)