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The Kalashnikov celebrates 60 years

Posted: Monday, July 09, 2007 1:58 PM
Filed Under:

 Russia’s most popular weapon celebrated its 60th birthday, and it couldn’t come at a better time for Russia’s weapons industry.

At a ceremony in Moscow’s Armed Forces Museum, a first model of the Kalashnikov rifle, the AK-47 (the first version was produced in 1947), was unveiled and placed into the hands of its creator, Mikhail Kalashnikov.

NBC News/ Yonatan Pomrenze
Mikhail Kalashnikov, inventor of the famed rifle, celebrates 60 years of the weapon dominating armed conflict all over the world.

The 87-year-old Kalashnikov said he was excited to greet what he called his "first-born," but also said he loves all versions of the Kalashnikov equally – the way a mother loves all her children.

Weapon of choice
He’s not alone in loving Russian weapons. Russia is second in the world in weapons exports, with only the United States selling more. The vast majority of these weapons are sold through the official state arms export agency, Rosoboroexport.

According to government estimates, Russia sold over $6 billion worth of weapons last year and plans to break the $7 billion mark in 2007. The government agency also estimates that future orders booked last year will be worth over $20 billion.

Venezuela survived the U.S. arms embargo by buying billions of dollars worth of Russian weapons, and Israel complains that Russian weapons sold to Syria make their way to Hezbollah. While those deals by Russia get most of the critical Western press attention, the country’s main weapons trade is with China and India.

But no export is as well-known or widespread as the Kalashnikov rifle. Easy to manufacture and tough to jam, the Kalashnikov is the weapon of choice for national armies (President Hugo Chavez ordered 100,000 for Venezuela) and countless militias, guerrillas, and insurgent groups.

An estimated 100 million Kalashnikovs are in circulation in the world – outstripping the U.S.’s M-16 (estimated 12 million) by almost 10-1 – and are ubiquitous in armed conflicts around the world. They are manufactured in 14 different countries.

But the Kalashnikov’s status may be best gauged by the range its cultural symbolism. One can find the Kalashnikov on the flag of Mozambique, the logo of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp., the flag of Hezbollah and even referenced in the N.B.A. – Utah Jazz star (and Russian native) Andrei Kirilenko’s number is 47 (hence his nickname, AK-47).

Resting easy
But for the weapon’s inventor, Mikhail Kalashnikov, the existence of vast numbers of the weapon doesn’t faze him.

Without even being prompted by the question, he told reporters that he sleeps fine at night, because it’s "the politicians to blame for failing to come to an agreement and instead resolving their problems with violence."

All he did, he says, was create a weapon to defend the Russian fatherland.

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Veing cheaper may have made it more popular thruout the gun toting world but not neceserally better. M-16 over AK$& any day.
What a nice world this could be without these two war-mongers.
Steve,

Sorry buddy the AK-47 was not a cpoy of the STG-44 the two weapons are so completely different you would be amazed. They sure look alike though....
Ha, no one got upset when the inventor of the M-16 Mr Stoner was featured meeting kalashnikov.  Talk about double American standards. And whats this crap about the'Motherland", the Nazis have thier Fatherland, and the other master of illegal invasions now have thier "homeland". Hmmmm...seems to be some pattern here.  Anyway, The AK-47 is one of the main weapons that defeated the Americans both in Vietnam and Iraq so no wonder you are quick to belittle what has to be the most effective weapon of all time.

Happy birthday Micheal :)
Re: Jack from Scottsdale. You are correct in that Russia has traditionally referred to itself as "the Motherland." But since the fascist Putin took power it has been increasingly been called The Fatherland, with Putin himself starting this trend.
Funny how all you Yanks know what the Russians call their country. Guess what: you are all wrong. It is fatherland.
IT WAS EASY TO COPY FINE GERMAN ENGINEERING
To the sadly misinformed: While the AK-47 to the untrained eye looks very similar to the German STG44, it operates and is made VERY differently.The Germans may have come up with the idea of a "medium" caliber weapon, Kalasnikov perfected it.
John D, a closer look at home would also reveal the truth about the faith of the American Indian. Our own beloved and civilized ancesters massacared and almost totally wiped out this race from the face of the earth.
Kalashnikov, Enrico Fermi, John Oppenheimer, Albert Einstein, Werner Von Brawn John Moses Browning, Samuel Colt, Alfred Nobel, all geniuses with inventive minds that have given the world magnicifent inventions that have revolutionized mankind. It is up to the individual as to how best to utilize these tools for the benefit of all civilizations on our planet. Unfortunately ,politicians have taken advantage of many of these inventions to further their personal ambitions of power and delusions of grandeur.
The AK47 is not the problem. The problem is that the U.S., Russia, Germany and other 'civilized' countries make such huge profits from selling death and destruction all over the world.
why a message about weapons and not about the scape goating of illegal immigration?
while all the anti-gunners get their panties in a bunch over an article that doesn't completely demonize one of those "assault weapons" that are just jumping off tables to kill and mame, keep in mind that AK-47 rifles have killed a very small percentage of our combat troops, or Iraqi citizens.
The Soviet National anthem refers to Russia as the fatherland.  So the article is correct.
Well done, Mr. Kalashnikov.  I've fired an AK at a demonstration range - reasonably light gun, easy to handle, accurate.  Don't need anything like an AK myself; for my purposes (target shooting, home defense) I prefer the stopping power - and intimidation factor, should it come to that - of a Remington 870.  But, for its intended purpose, the AK is one of the best.  
For those of you saying that Kalashnikov ripped of the German designs of WW2... Kalashnikov admitted that. It just hasn't been printed in this blog. I read the full article a couple of days ago on some website, I forget where now, but he admitted that he designed the AK-47 after seeing a German Stg44 and an American M1 carbine. Those were the bases of his design.
Way better than any other "Assault Rifle" ever designed!! May not be the most accurate or the lightest, but it's the most dependable/easiest to use.
Whether or not you like firearms, this is a story with major historical significance. The very fact that the AK-47, originally intended to defend the Russian motherland (as opposed to the German fatherland), has become the weapon of choice for 3rd world despots, ragtag militias and terrorists (probably including Chechen separatists), and is now a major source of hard currency for the successor to the former Socialist Workers' Paradise, says it all.

Incidentally, copying other countries' weapons is as American as Apple Pie: the famed U S. 1903 Springfield bolt action rifle was ripped off by the U.S. Ordnance folks from Paul Mauser's design, and the U.S. actually paid royalties to the Germans for the pointed "Spitzer" bullet that became the famed 30-06.
Hi, the reference to the IRGC and Hezbollah emblem is wrong, those are German G-3 (HK) not AK-47.
I think it is stupid to talk about guns killing people. Guns are just a tool that people use to kill each other-it has no mind of its own.
Also, the whole purpose of projectiles in the first place(bullets, arrows, crossbow bolts, darts, rocks, etc.)is to be used defensively in a quick, efficient way.
I have shot an AK47, and I agree that it is quite a fine rifle.
MR K was once quoted as saying that while he slept well at night he wished he had gone down in history for having invented something useful like the lawn mower...He invented it to defend the motherland against the Nazi agressors...the germans actually developed the first "assult rifle" , a weapon like a submachine gun but shooting a compact rifle caliber round.  Made not for profit by a state arsenal, like our equally excellent M1 Garand, and M-14 ...Mcmanara closed down the goverment Springfield arsenal that made these rifles and turned over weapons production to private industry; as a result for the last 40+ yrs we have sent our people to war with the delicate, jam prone M16...it developed into a nice little .223 target rifle for the range but maybe not so good for dirt and sand...or less than perfect ammunition... We won WWll because we sent our troops to battle with the best rifle it was possible to make regardless of the cost...while the dictatorships sent expendable soldiers to battle with rifles from the last century...made by for profit companies....
It's a hell of a gun but it's not authentic
Definitely a reliable rifle but the M16 is more accurate and balanced. Vietnam 1970 200 yard standoff. Guess who had the winning shot? the M16.
to steve k: the AK-47 was not a copy of the STG44, the design concept of an assult rifle comes from the STG44, but anyone who really knows weapons knows that the STG44 and the AK-47 are considerably different mechanically
Humans have an ability for creating and destroying.  Both are fascinating.  Death is horrible and scary.  Does the process of destroying actually set the stage for new creation.  No matter destructive or creative, humans tend to celebrate all their devices and inventions as marvels.  Many of the modern automatic weapons we posses today are in fact modeled or developed from the ideas of the Facist German Army of World War II. As for Kalashnikov, he is just a man, who copied a weapon, found ways to make it cheaper, yet still operate effectively.  Let's not blame him, let's blame the reason that necessitated him to create such a horribly perfect weapon.
Kalashnikov once had a coversation with Eugene Stoner, who was the engineer who developed the AR-15 rifle that led to the M-16. He told Stoner that "For making my rifle, I received medals from country as my reward.". "For your rifle, you rewarded with wealth.". "I would have rather received the money.". The motive behind any such invention will always boil down to the dollars.
C.R. Hill has an excellent point and for those who are interested in researching it furthur it seems that the vast majority of gun deaths in the U.S. are cheap .380 handguns- full-automatic weapons account for less than 5% of gun deaths, Jerry Bruckheimer be damned. John D. also has a point, HOWEVER we need work ALOT harder so events like VA Tech don't happen. I also happen to be a gun owner, think people should be able to own automatic weapons BATF approval + and regulation and criminals should not have ANY guns.
That's my rant :-)
Metal & wood has never killed anyone. to blame the death's of people on objects is absurd. To show arrogance to the weapon b/c it's not made by us would be naive. The weapon system is just that a system. it's the people who employ it and the reason they employ it for is to be looked at. did mass number of casualities not happen from a sword so is the sword bad now did people not die from a cars... so are the cars bad too. get a hold of your self before blaming technology. We created the A bomb did people not die from it. Surely they did but it surved a greater purpose with no WORLD WAR for over 60 yrs i think that was a feat of inovation.
to all the idiots who think that russians don't use the term "fatherland"

they call ww2 the "great fatherland war"
it is, by far, the most important event in the collective national psyche
I don't know if we should be celebrating one of the most deadly weapons ever made.  To me, something is sick about being happy that the weapons you invented is responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths. Instead, we must remember that today national boundaries no longer define our world.  We face common problems and must work together as a world community to fight them.  The United Nation’s Millennium Development Goals, which call for cutting world hunger in half by 2015 and eliminating it altogether by 2025, are a good place to start thinking and acting with a global mindset.  It is estimated that the expenditure of a mere $19 billion would eliminate starvation and malnutrition worldwide.  In a time when the United States’ current defense budget is $522 billion, the goal of eradicating world hunger is clearly well within reach if we act together as one world.  
Good luck to anyone carrying one into battle.  Can't beat a MIRV carrying 3-12 warheads at 10 kilotons a piece.
Happy Birthday Mr. Kalashnakov.

As a few slightly informed people have mentioned; the Avatomat Kalashnikova is not a copy of any German Weapon. This technology of a small,close combat PDF or personal defense firearm was well into development several years prior to WWII.  Mikhail Kalashnikov was the engineer with superior intellect and intuition.

I would like to inform the readers of your site that,the main reason for the Kalashnikov's sucsess is the fact that it can be manufactured with a minimum 0f "hard metal machining". This reduces cost and increases it's attractiveness to developing military forces.
However this is at a great price to the foot soldier.
This "Battle Rifle" is amoung the least accurate of all combat field rifles. It is truly only effective when it is firing rapidly so as the shooter can guage their aim by the spray of bullets. A better choice in my view is the Simonov Karabina 56.(A close cousin of the AK-47)HABU2007@VERIZON.NET
Well, if the germans hhad a problem with Mr. Kalashnikov stealing the idea of the stg44, im sure they would have done something already by now? Just because it looks similar does not mean the idea was stolen.
I notice allot of wining about the sale of this weapon and no one notice that the US sells more weapons then anyone. Must be BUSH syndrome IF YOUR NOT WITH US YOUR AGAINST US! DO AS I SAY NOT DO AS I DO! Get over it and solve some real problem like illegal immagration or preventive health care for everyone.
Violence is the whore of the Helpless.  Viva the NRA!  Weapons don't kill People, People kill.  Bare hands, Knifes, Guns, & WMD's.  Aren't we awful creatures.  I wonder how far we are from Armageddon?  Leave Kalashnikov alone, and Russia should be left alone for celbrating one of their genius's.
Matches commit arson. Cars and trucks start themselves and drive drunk and high. Road side bombs plant themselves and detonate. Guns reload them selves and aim...then pull their own trigger and kill everything. Vest bombs capture people and wrap themselves about them and then pick the target and force the human being to the target and then it detonates itself....People kill people, no matter the utility...butcher knife.....or a bath tub...rope...etc.  So PLEASE keep it in proper perspective...and yes, it IS Mother Russia. Also quite right...It IS a copy of a German weapon...slightly enhanced.....smile. Combat Vet.
Lets call a Spade , a Spade. This weapon is so much better than our M16,
Doe's not jam, but our Generals would not ever admit it. But they all know it is better than what our troops carry. I wonder where all our expertise & ingenuity has gone.
Russians have two words for one's country of birth -- родина (a feminine noun, which means a place of one's birth) and отчизна (or отечество -- a land of one's father or fatherland).  However, the names of most countries in Russian are feminine in gender, so it's natural to personify Russia as Mother Russia.
The AK-47 concept came from the German STG44. It's an adequate assault rifle but I think Kalashnikov gets too much credit. Stoner's M-16 is a revolutionary design and a better rifle in the hands of a trained shooter.
Guns don't kill people, people kill people .. enuf said
If the AK is so dang swell, why then does the Russian Honor Guard march with rifles designed by Tokorev? The venerable SKS? Maybe because it's designed better..?
The troops that hopefully one day soon protect our southern borders get to carry the AK-47....
  Russians were using for centuries in hard times both expressions: Homeland which is close by meaning to russian word "Rodina" and Fatherland which is close to russian "Otechestvo". Both are very meaningful for Russians and were used when people were raising up to defend their own country from invaiders. And what is expecially imazing about Mr. Kalashnikov is that he didn't get any high education. Just emagine what he could have invented if he did got it too. Great mind indeed.
while the ak 47 has been mass produce and killed many people around the word, we in the west done it with less but with better quality and a little more class, happy birthday commy.
The message was about an enduring legend. No matter how he came to produce the AK47 it is still effective. And it bears his name.
Why is everyone so mad about an article that cronicles an invention that has made name for itself in every way? It was made from stolen engineering, has killed countless lives, changed nations, has and will continue to symbolize 3rd world violence for years, and has earned it's inventors billions! This may be cliche, but this weapon didn't kill billions, the people holding them did. Besides, throughout history there has always been a brutally effective weapon that became so ubiquitous in its own time that everyone either loved or hated. The Ak is no different.
Hey just for clarification, the STG44 is most similar to the G3 assault rifle. The russians definatly stole the idea for the M43 7.62x39 intermediate power round that the AK-47 uses. It was based off the revolutionary german 7.92x33 Kurtz that the STG44 was chambered for.

The Russians came back again in 1974 and borrowed our idea for a small caliber, high velocity cartridge- the 5.45x39, fired from the AK-74.

anyway, who cares about any of this because it sucks to be shot at no matter what they are shooting at you with.
Bush calls America HomeLand Iran,Is the axis of evil, shock & Awe.Heil Bush.
It's no big news that all good things get copied or stolen everywhere.....since when...?

Regarding the choice of the word FATHERLAND may be we could use a minor correction.

Those who lived in the Soviet Union know that the WWII in all texbooks and media was more commonly referred to as The Great Patriotic War 1941-1945(You can check the meaning of the word PATRIOTIC with the Merriam-Webster Dictionary "PATER = FATHER").

Since the beginning of the German invasion in the Soviet Union in June 1941 both terms, i.e. Motherland and Patria (not Faterland as it is a German word) have been in use by the meadia calling the Soviet People to defend it and after the war to commemorate the victory.

The method of using highly emotional text to mobilze everybody for an all-out effort is not new either.

Many people believe that it is not a gizmo or a method which is a good or a bad thing in itself.

What really matters is what political purpose the thing serves eventually.






A couple of observations:

1. Mikhail Kalashnikov bristles when the calumny that the AK-47 is a rip-off of the StG44 is mentioned. The AK has little in common with the SturmGewehr. The principal similarity was the concept of necking down the case and accepting the reduced range of the standard .30 caliber-class bullet in order to increase firepower. Mechanically, the two are very different.

2. Kalashnikov designed his weapon with the same guiding principles the US Army used for the Garand, the M-1 Carbine and the M-14 battle rifle. It had to function in crummy conditions with minimal maintenance because soldiers incombat don't have time to stop and clean their weapons every 5 minutes. This puts the AK-47 light-years ahead of the M-16 Poodle Shooter.

3. The reason the AK-47, its copies and its derivatives (e.g., the AK-74 and the Galil) are so popular is that, unlike the M-16, they always work. They may not have the tack-driving accuracy of the Garand or its successor, the M-14; but if you are fighting in primitive conditions you'll settle for reliability over pinpoint accuracy. That's the strong point of Kalashnikov's design.

4. When it comes to great military weapons designers of the 20th Century, there are really only three: John Moses Browning, John C. Garand and Mihail Kalashnikov. Their influence continues to be felt to this day. I wish General Kalashnikov well. He deserves his honors, even if our enemies use his weapon. It's not his fault the armed forces of the United States are saddled with a gilded turd of a battle rifle.


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