The long arm of
Kalashnikov's AK-47
Mikhail Kalashnikov,
the Russian gun designer whose AK-47 rifle became the weapon of choice for many
national armies and guerrillas around the world, died Monday, the Kremlin
announced on its website.He was 94.
Kalashnikov designed
his first machine gun in 1942 after suffering injuries as a tank commander for
the Soviet Union's Red Army during World War II, but it wasn't until 1947 --
after years of tweaks -- that the AK-47 was introduced for Soviet military
service.
The weapon,
recognizable by its banana-shaped ammunition magazine, became known for its
simple effectiveness. It was easy to use and maintain, and it was reliable in
extreme conditions, be they hot, cold, wet or sandy.
From the early 1950s,
it became the standard weapon for Soviet and Warsaw Pact countries, according
to IHS Jane's. The gun also proved popular with paramilitary groups: It was so
successful in Mozambique's successful rebel movement of the 1960s and 1970s that
its image appears in the national flag.
Photos: People we lost
in 2013 Photos: People we lost in 2013
Russia stopped
producing AK-47 models in the late 1960s, but production of variants continued
there and in other countries.
The Guinness World
Records book recognized the AK-47 -- AK being a Russian acronym for
"Kalashnikov's machine gun" and 47 standing for its debut year -- as
the world's most common machine gun.
Russian President
Vladimir Putin on Monday "expressed his deepest condolences to the family
of Mikhail Kalashnikov in connection with his death," a post on the
Kremlin's website read.
In 2009, Kalashnikov
told CNN that two main qualities described the AK-47: simplicity and
reliability.
"It is very
important because a soldier doesn't have university degrees," he said.
"He needs a simple and reliable weapon. Just as an academic, for that
matter, in a combat situation. There's simply no time to figure how to operate
a complicated weapon and press many buttons when the enemy is advancing on you."
He said the question he
hated most was whether he felt sorry about the hundreds of thousands of people
that were killed as a result of his invention. He had a standard answer:
"I've designed my
weapon to defend the borders of our Fatherland, and let it continue to serve
this purpose."
In 2011, Izhmash, the
Russian manufacturer of the AK-47 family of weapons, said it was abandoning the
design in favor of a new one for its next-generation assault rifles.
Kalashnikov's 90th
birthday, in November 2009, was celebrated in Russia nearly like a national
holiday. In a televised Kremlin ceremony, then-President Dmitry Medvedev
decorated him with the country's highest order, the Hero of Russia.
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