A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jul 13, 2023

Russian Conscripts Now Being Armed With WWII Tommy Guns

Some of them might even work. 

But the revelation suggests how desperate the Russian military is in arming its troops - and why the Ukrainian strategy of targeting Russian logistics and supplies may work sooner than expected. JL 

The Kyiv Post reports:

Russian reserve troops from the Luhansk People’s Republic (are being armed) with Thompson submachine guns, an iconic but long-obsolete firearm dating back to the 1930s. Weapons dating back to the 20th century also visible are the Red Army PPSh “Shpagin”submachine gun, the Sudaev machine pistol,  the World War II-fielded RPD machine gun and World War I-era Mossin-Nagant bolt-action rifles, with bayonets. Russia in its now 17-month-old war with Ukraine has found arming troops increasingly difficult due to high casualties and limited stocks.

A video published on Ukrainian military media on Thursday showed Russian reserve troops unboxing Thompson submachine guns, an iconic but long-obsolete firearm dating back to the 1930s.

Images released by the Ukraine-based information platform WarLive identified soldiers in the video as service members from the Luhansk People’s Republic, an unrecognized statelet occupied by Russian troops during the Kremlin’s first invasion of Ukraine in 2014.

A soldier checks weapon actions and appears to find it functional. The unit appears to be at a base far behind the fighting lines. Some soldiers wear flip flops and others wear shorts.

\

Weapons dating back to the mid-20th century also visible in the video are the Red Army PPSh “Shpagin” submachine gun, and the Sudaev machine pistol, and the World War II-fielded RPD machine gun.

Other possible museum pieces inspected in the video were the Vietnam-era AKS Kalashnikov automatic rifle, the advanced-for-its-time SVT 1930s-developed combat rifle, the World War II-fielded RPD machine gun, and a World War I-era Mossin-Nagant bolt-action rifle, with bayonet.

Comments one soldier: “Friggen amazing.”

Russia in its now 16-month-old war with Ukraine has found arming troops increasingly difficult due to high casualties and limited stocks. The Kremlin has attempted to fill the gap with mothballed weapons like the T-55 and T-62 tanks, combat vehicles several generations older than and grossly inferior to modern tanks now being delivered to Ukraine. Referring a recent US decision to give Kyiv’s forces a 4.5 million shell reserve of modern and highly lethal cluster munitions for NATO-standard artillery fielded by the Armed Forces of Ukraine, the pro-Ukraine post comments: “This is exactly what you need to combat cluster munitions.”

0 comments:

Post a Comment