A promising pistol for the army and police. The Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia is switching to a new type of weapon

The Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation is switching to a new type of weapon, abandoning the Kalashnikov assault rifle and Makarov pistol and acquiring stun guns, ITAR-TASS reports citing First Deputy Interior Minister Mikhail Sukhodolsky.

"In the near future, it is planned to change the type of regular weapons for all employees of the internal affairs. In particular, they will be replaced by Yarygin pistols, and - by submachine guns or - said M. Sukhodolsky.

According to him, the new weapon is different in that the bullet used in it has a lower recoil ability. "This is important for urban use," he said.

Also in the arsenal of Russian policemen will appear stun devices, including remote-action ones, according to NEWSru.com. "The rearmament will go according to plan and it will take several years," Sukhodolsky said.


Submachine gun PP-2000
The PP-2000 submachine gun was developed at the Instrument Design Bureau in Tula. A patent for its design was registered in 2001. The ability to use high-power armor-piercing ammunition allows the PP-2000 to be used to fight enemies in individual protective equipment (helmets, body armor), as well as to effectively hit targets inside vehicles.

At the same time, compared to small-caliber counterparts produced in Western countries, such as the Belgian 5.7mm FN P90 or the German 4.6mm HK MP-7, the PP-2000, thanks to the use of 9mm bullets, provides greater effectiveness against targets not protected by body armor. It is currently in serial production.
Caliber: 9x19mm Luger/Para and 9x19 7H31
Weight: about 1.4kg
Length (butt folded / open): 340/582 mm
Rate of fire: 600 rounds per minute
Magazine capacity: 20 or 30 rounds
Effective range: up to 100 meters.


Pistol Yarygin
Pistol Yarygin (PYA "Grach", Index GRAU - 6P35) is designed to replace the PM. Adopted by the Russian army in 2003. Used by Russian special forces. The design resembles the Italian Beretta 92 pistol.
Caliber - 9 mm
Muzzle velocity - 465 m/s
Weight with magazine without cartridges - 0.95 kg
Overall length - 210 mm
Magazine capacity, number of rounds - 18
Combat rate of fire - 35 v / m
Cartridge length ~ 29.7 mm.


Submachine gun "Vityaz"
The PP-19-01 "Vityaz" submachine gun is a further development of the PP-19 "" submachine gun. "Vityaz" was developed by the IZHMASH concern specifically for the requirements of the special forces detachment of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs "Vityaz", from which it got its name. Currently, the PP-19-01 "Vityaz" submachine gun is in mass production and is already entering service with units of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs.
Caliber: 9x19mm (Luger/Parabellum/7H21)
Weight: ~ 3 kg empty
Length (stock folded/open): 460/698 mm
Barrel length: 230 mm
Rate of fire: 750 rounds per minute
Magazine capacity: 30 rounds
Effective range: 100-200 meters.

In the work of law enforcement agencies, military weapons are not the main tool. Nevertheless, in the past few decades, police and security forces have become heavily armed. In different countries, one can see the formation and increase in the number of armed response groups (Great Britain) and special weapons and tactics (SWAT, USA), mobile special forces, special rapid reaction units (Russia). This craze is a reaction to the growth of armed crime and the spread of terrorism. The modern police arsenal is extremely diverse. In addition to pistols of various modifications, it can include automatic and smooth-bore weapons and even grenade launchers.

Faithful companion - pistol

It is difficult to imagine a police officer on duty without a personal weapon, although in real life police officers do not carry weapons with them as often as in the cinema. In the police small arms system, a revolver or pistol is not an auxiliary weapon, as in the army, but one of the main and most widely used types of weapons that most services and units have. It is interesting that combat pistols were divided into police use and military (army) almost from the very appearance of self-loading pistols.

Since then, the police services have received a large number of samples, varying in system, caliber and size. These are such compact models as the German "Walter" PP and PPK (old models, to this day copied in the world), and "full-size" American "Smith and Wesson" models 539 or 5946, "Ruger" series R-89 - R -94, the German-Swiss "SIG-Sauer" of the R-220 family, and the Austrian "Glocks", and such powerful models used in special forces as the Russian SR-1 "Vector" (P.I. Serdyukov's systems, in the army version - SPS) or the American "Springfield Armory Operator".

In a number of countries, including Russia, police services are armed mainly with the same models as the army. At the same time, the requirements of the police for a pistol in terms of reliability and unification are somewhat lower - the city police, for example, are of little interest in the ability of a weapon to shoot after it has been wet for a day in a swamp. Requirements such as safety of handling and the speed of firing the first shot become very significant, because skirmishes often occur suddenly and at a distance of less than 25 m. Weight and dimensions are important - the pistol should not burden the owner too much. Looking, say, at the belt of a police officer on guard duty, in addition to a holster for a pistol and a pocket for a spare magazine, we will see on it a loop for a baton, holders for a flashlight and a gas cartridge, covers for handcuffs and a working folding knife. In addition, the ratio of cost and required functionality is essential. This, for example, the ability to shoot with both hands, the presence of mounts for devices such as laser designators or illuminators of visible and infrared light. It is not surprising, therefore, that Austrian Glock pistols are especially popular in the world of police models.

The first pistol of the Glock-17 family, which appeared in the early 1980s, did not make a bright military career, but in various calibers and modifications it came into service with the security forces and police in about 60 countries, including countries with their own developed arms industry. For example, agents of the US FBI were armed with Glocks. Russia also entered this list - 9-mm Glock pistols of modifications 17 (17T), 19 (19T) and 26 are included in the number of foreign weapons that the internal affairs bodies adopted in 2007 in addition to domestically developed weapons. The Glock owes its success not only to the relatively moderate weight and size characteristics with a large-capacity magazine and the ergonomics of the weapon, but also to its relative cheapness - plastics are widely used in its design. Simply put, the Glocks have a good balance between price and quality, so many companies took up the production of pistols with plastic parts in different versions, which primarily counted on the police weapons market: armies are armed with such pistols more carefully.

The variety of tasks solved by the police requires a wide selection of bullets and cartridges. These are bullets of increased penetration (because criminals use different personal protective equipment, and sometimes you have to shoot at cars), and bullets of increased stopping power, which quickly lose their damaging effect and therefore are necessary when shooting in crowded places. In addition, the police arsenal contains non-lethal cartridges - gas, traumatic.

From "exotic"

Among the systems of police weapons are the most unexpected. Automatic pistols "Mauser" models 711 or 712, it would seem, have long found a place in museum collections. Meanwhile, on the streets of Rio de Janeiro, not so long ago, one could meet military police soldiers with a slightly modernized Mauser automatic - the old pistol was equipped with a stock with an additional holding handle and a shoulder rest. The Brazilian police used other unusual designs. Its special forces used a Danish-made Madsen light machine gun in a version with a shortened barrel. Once upon a time, the Brazilian army handed over these long-obsolete machine guns to the police, where they peacefully coexisted with much more modern models. Police officers often have to carry, in addition to the main one, a spare pistol, usually a small one, designed for concealed carry. The stock of cartridges and high rate of fire for such weapons is a secondary issue, the main thing is small dimensions, ease of carrying, speed of extraction and the first shot. It is not surprising that such an old type of personal weapon as the "derringer" - non-automatic pocket pistols with one, two or even four barrels - finds use for itself. True, they remain popular mainly in their historical homeland - in the United States.

submachine gun

Submachine guns played a huge role in World War II. But with the advent of cartridges of intermediate power, the scope of automatic weapons for a pistol cartridge began to narrow sharply. In armies, submachine guns gradually replaced submachine guns, assault rifles and carbines. The main consumers of submachine guns were various police services and special forces.

Whatever tasks the fighters of law enforcement structures solve - whether they patrol roads and settlements, guard an object or free hostages - they, as a rule, have to conduct a short-range firefight at short distances. Factors such as the compactness of the weapon, the speed of opening and transferring fire, which stops the action of the bullet, become decisive. The relatively low power of the pistol cartridge makes it possible to make the weapon small and light without sacrificing reliability and controllability during automatic firing. Weapons and ammunition occupy a smaller share in the total calculation of a fighter. The low initial velocity of the bullet reduces the range of its lethal action (for comparison, it reaches 350 m for a 9 mm pistol cartridge, and 1350 m for a 5.45 mm submachine gun), and the likelihood of ricochets is reduced. Finally, the parameters of the pistol cartridge make it possible to create “silent” weapon modifications.

One of the most popular police models of automatic weapons is the German MP5 submachine gun, or rather, a whole family created by the German company Heckler und Koch based on it. After the police, border guards and customs service of Germany adopted this weapon in 1966, it quickly gained popularity and has been holding it for more than 40 years. The excellent qualities of the MP5 have been confirmed in many police and counter-terrorism operations. MP5 submachine guns of various modifications - with a fixed and retractable stock, "silent", small-sized - in native or licensed versions, in caliber 9 or 10 mm - are used in more than 30 countries, from the USA and Great Britain to Sudan and Zambia. Submachine guns "Heckler und Koch" MP5, MP5K and MP5SD caliber 9 mm were included in the list of weapons and Russian law enforcement agencies. Although in Russia, of course, their own samples have been created. It is characteristic that the revival of submachine guns in our country occurred in the early 1990s. The weapons design bureaus offered the Ministry of the Interior a number of developments, both new and based on previously created prototypes. Among the latter was, for example, the 9-mm Kedr submachine gun (designed by Evgeny Dragunov), developed by E.F. Dragunov and modified by M.E. Dragunov. In 1994, this small-sized submachine gun was adopted by the authorities under the designation PP-91 "Kedr" and has since been purchased in fairly large quantities. On the other hand, at the Izhevsk Machine-Building Plant V.M. Kalashnikov and A.E. The Dragunov developed a larger Bizon-2 submachine gun with a large-capacity auger magazine, which was put into service under the designation PP-19, under the same 9 × 18 PM cartridge. Over time, the samples were modernized, say, after the appearance of the domestic pistol cartridge 7N21 type 9 × 19, modifications were created for this cartridge.

The experience of using submachine guns by the formations of the Ministry of Internal Affairs helped to formulate in 2003 the tactical and technical assignment for a new 9-mm sample, which received the designation "Vityaz" (officers of the special forces detachment of the Ministry of Internal Affairs "Vityaz" participated in the formation of requirements for a new weapon). This is how the PP-19-01 Vityaz submachine gun appeared, chambered for 9 × 19, which also entered service with police forces.

1. Equipment option for a 12-gauge cartridge for a combat shotgun - a bunch of feathered arrow-shaped elements (USA)
2. Self-loading smoothbore "special carbine" 18.5 KS-P (Russia). Cartridge - 12/70, 12/76, weight without cartridges - 4.0 kg, length with folded butt - 970 mm, optimal range 3. 4. 2. 1. shooting - shot - up to 35 m, lead bullet - up to 90 m, magazine capacity - 6 rounds. The Picatinny rail on the receiver is designed to mount various types of sights
3. The M1014 combat shotgun (USA) is based on the Benelli M4 Super 90 commercial self-loading shotgun. Cartridge - 12/70, 12/76, weight without cartridges - 3.8 kg, length with butt extended - 1011 mm, with retracted butt - 886 mm, effective shot range - up to 40 m, magazine capacity - 7 or 6 rounds

Submachine gun in a holster

Of considerable interest to law enforcement agencies are small-sized submachine guns, adapted to be carried in a holster and for firing both with two hands and with one. An example of a Russian-designed weapon is the 9-mm PP-2000, chambered for the 9×19 cartridge by the Tula Instrument Design Bureau and entered service with the Ministry of Internal Affairs. The magazine of this weapon is located in the handle, plastic is used in the manufacture of body parts. The features of the weapon include the inclination of the pistol grip, the trigger guard, which forms an additional holding handle, a detachable folding stock, a reloading handle that allows right or left hand operation, and a mount for a collimator sight - this type of sight can become the main one in close combat.

Armament and equipment

Compactness is not the last issue for police weapons. They have to be controlled in cramped conditions, sometimes it is also necessary to carry various devices: tools for opening doors (a sledgehammer, a manual ram, a safe detonation charge), assault ladders, surveillance devices. The equipment itself should facilitate the action with weapons, providing the ability to quickly use them.

Automatic for the police

Police and counter-terrorist formations also have in their arsenals such typical army weapons as machine guns and assault rifles. And yet the specific requirements of police weapons require specific solutions. An example of such a solution is domestic small-sized assault rifles designed for special cartridges of the 9 × 39 type - SP5 and SP6 and their counterparts 7N9 and 7N12. The SP5 and SP6 cartridges were developed for use in "silent" weapons systems and combine the low (less than sonic) muzzle velocity of heavy bullets with their stability on the trajectory at distances up to 400 m, high penetration and stopping power. In addition, such cartridges have a low recoil momentum, bullets are less prone to ricochets and therefore allow you to create a compact weapon that is convenient to use in populated areas, tight spaces. Armor-piercing cartridges allow you to hit the enemy in a bulletproof vest of the 3rd protection class at distances up to 200 m.

The 9-mm small-sized 9A-91 assault rifle, created by the Tula Instrument Design Bureau, is very popular in the system of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs. Moreover, the developers tried to make it as simple and cheap as possible to manufacture. It is worth mentioning the Klimov assault rifles SR3 and SR3M "Whirlwind" and the Izhevsk AK-9. These "noisy" samples have undergone their own evolution and formed the basis of new "silent" machine guns and sniper rifles. So, on the basis of 9A-91, a “silent” sniper rifle VSK-94 was created, a set of accessories for SR3M allows you to get both a “silent” machine gun and a sniper rifle. True, the same special cartridges make the ammunition load of machine guns more expensive than that of submachine guns.

Smooth trunk brings order

One of the original features of police weapons is a rather wide niche reserved for smooth-bore models, which are sometimes called shotguns for simplicity. Many experts believe that for short-range combat, hand-held smoothbore weapons of the 20th and 12th "hunting" calibers are preferable to rifled ones. It is capable of firing various types of charges, from shotguns to bullets, with the necessary damaging characteristics depending on the task. At the same time, the rapid loss of the damaging effect of shot and bullets flying out of a smooth barrel significantly reduces the risk of injuring random people.

Traditionally, to create combat smooth-bore samples, commercial samples of the store circuit worked out in production were used - just recall the popular American "pump-action" (rechargeable by the movement of the forearm) models "Remington-870" or "Mossberg-500" and "Mossberg-590". Over time, self-loading models began to attract more and more attention: a large number of such samples appeared in the last 25-30 years. When conducting police and counter-terrorist operations, they are armed not only with fighters, but also with remote-controlled vehicles - to destroy explosive devices or open locked rooms.

In our country, in the 1990s, smooth-bore guns began to be widely used by security agencies, at the same time, weapons enterprises launched the production of the corresponding guns and "smooth-bore carbines." They also aroused the interest of law enforcement agencies. In 2006, a whole range of SSK-18.5 smooth-bore weapons entered service with the internal affairs bodies, including self-loading "special carbines" 18.5 KS-K and 18.5 KS-P and a number of 12-gauge ammunition. The number 18.5 in the designation of the weapon corresponds to the diameter of the bore of the 12-gauge (about 18.5 mm), the indices "K" and "P" - to the box and underbarrel magazines. The 18.5 KS-K carbine with a detachable box magazine was made by the designers of the Izhevsk Machine-Building Plant based on the Kalashnikov assault rifle system, or rather, the Saiga carbine. It is curious that the muzzle device of the KS-K carbine is designed for firing with the barrel resting against an obstacle, for example, when door locks are destroyed by a shot. The carbine 18.5 KS-P with a permanent underbarrel magazine was created at the Izhevsk Mechanical Plant on the basis of the MP-153 self-loading smoothbore gun.

From "small things" to DShK

The range of calibers and power of cartridges for which sniper rifles can be fired is demonstrated by two Russian samples. At one extreme is the SV-99 rifle, created by Izhevsk designers on the basis of a biathlon rifle chambered for a 5.6-mm rimfire cartridge - a well-known "small thing". The use of a low-power cartridge gives a reduction in the size, mass of the weapon, a small recoil momentum, a low level of muzzle pressure and an insignificant shot flame. A non-jacketed bullet has a sufficient stopping effect at short ranges, but requires hitting unprotected areas of the body. It turns out a special weapon designed to work at short ranges, for example, in settlements, where aimed shooting is often carried out to the width of the street. Since the requirements implied the possibility of working in a cramped room, the stock was made removable, instead of it you can put a pistol grip. The other pole is sniper rifles chambered for powerful large-caliber cartridges for hitting long-range targets in personal armor protection equipment, vehicles, and counter-sniper combat. This type of weapon is popular in special forces, but with the growth of the role of police special forces, it also got into service. The internal troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the FSB, for example, use a self-loading 12.7-mm OSV-96 rifle, created by the Tula Instrument Design Bureau chambered for 12.7 × 108. The characteristic features of this rifle include a folding design that allows you to reduce the size of the weapon.

For police sniper

The growth of terrorism and armed crime around the world has forced special attention to snipers in the police and counter-terrorism units. The variety of tasks that a sniper may face, and, accordingly, the variety of tools for solving them, can be judged from the samples received by Russian law enforcement agencies.

First of all, of course, these are sniper rifles of normal caliber and increased accuracy. It is worth noting the differences in requirements for military and police rifles. The military must constantly be with its owner when on foot, in a transport-combat vehicle, withstand the ingress of dust, snow, and moisture. The police force is usually operated in less severe conditions. At the same time, if a miss by an army sniper may not have fatal consequences, then the cost of a miss by a police officer may be the death of a hostage or the injury of a random person.

Repeating rifles have long come to the fore here. Izhevsk gunsmiths proposed a 7.62-mm SV-98 rifle, supplementing the “cartridge - weapon - optical sight” complex with a number of devices: this is a low-noise firing device, an anti-miracle tape pulled over the barrel to protect the field of view of the sight from distortion by heated air. At the same time, Russian law enforcement snipers are armed with 7.62-mm AW and AWP rifles, created by the British company Accuracy International. The list of samples adopted by the Russian Federation also includes the Austrian SSG Steyr rifle and the Finnish TRG-22. Also, the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs received such an original type of sniper weapon as the SVU-AS (short, automatic sniper rifle, with a bipod). Executed by TsKIB SOO specialists on the basis of the Dragunov self-loading sniper rifle, it differs from it in a shortened barrel, the ability to fire in bursts, the installation of a low-noise firing device and a folding bipod, and a number of other changes.

combat and special

Already in the “dashing nineties”, the Tula Instrument Design Bureau created a magazine-type 43-mm grenade launcher GM-94 - a multi-purpose weapon for firing special (non-lethal action) and live ammunition. The design of the grenade launcher is based on the scheme of a pump-action shotgun with the location of the magazine above the barrel and reloading by the longitudinal movement of the barrel back and forth. Several types of VGM-93 rounds are used for firing - gas, equipped with an irritating action formula, shock-shock with an elastic striking element, thermobaric. A thermobaric grenade is capable of hitting manpower within a radius of 3 m from the point of detonation, equipment with an armor thickness of up to 8 mm.

Shotguns-revolvers

The original application in the weapons of the police and special purposes was found by the revolving scheme. An example of this is the South African 12 gauge Stryker and Protect shotguns. In addition to the revolving scheme, they also differ in the way the drum rotates. In the Stryker, this was done by a spring wound up with a special key; in the Protect, the shooter turns the drum before firing, shaking the front grip of the weapon. Note that the Russian 6G30 hand grenade launcher also has a revolving scheme, but in it the spring that rotates the block of 40-mm rifled barrels starts when the shooter turns the block, loading the weapon.

Grenade launchers for the police

Police sometimes have to use special and even live grenades. Hand grenades are not widely used, but law enforcement agencies have hand grenade launchers. They can have different schemes and principles of grenade stabilization (rifled or smooth-bore with grenade stabilization with plumage), have a single-shot and magazine type. Throwing is usually done in an active pattern, since you have to shoot in conditions where rocket weapons would be too dangerous. As a rule, grenade launchers are designed for non-lethal ammunition, which are used in the fight against riots, in operations to capture armed criminals, and free hostages.

An example is the evolution of a domestic special 50-mm grenade launcher system, created in the late 1980s and including a single-shot breech-loading smooth-bore hand-held special grenade launcher RGS-50 and non-lethal shots - with grenades GS-50 annoying, GSZ-50 light-sound, EG-50 and EG-50M shock-shock action. In the future, not only the grenade launcher itself was modernized (RGS-50M, manufactured by the V.A. Degtyarev Plant), but the ammunition load was replenished with shots for knocking out GV-50 locks, breaking window glass BK-50, smoke GD-50, as well as combat - with a fragmentation grenade GO-50, cumulative GK-50.

Illustrations by Rostom Chichyants, Oksana Alekseevskaya

In early September, Andrey Raisky, an employee of the patrol service, died at the Kurskaya metro station in Moscow: a policeman was killed by a bullet from his own Makarov pistol. Recently, this is not the first case when service weapons not only do not help the police, but even turn against them. And this despite the fact that attackers every year increasingly attack law enforcement officers. The conclusion is disappointing: the Russian police have big problems with fire training. I understood the difficult relationship between law enforcement officers and their service weapons.

Victims in uniform

In the past two months, several high-profile attacks on police officers have been committed in Russia at once, during which law enforcement officers have shown surprising defenselessness. July 27 at the Embassy of Slovakia in Moscow, a 17-year-old boy with a knife on a 30-year-old police captain, platoon commander of a special police regiment for the protection of diplomatic missions. The captain received several stab wounds, including penetrating the chest, and was hospitalized. He did not use a service weapon. The man who attacked the policeman fled; he was arrested two days later.

On August 23, 31-year-old native of Kabardino-Balkaria Renat Kunashev in Sivtsev Vrazhek lane, not far from the main building, fired at two policemen with a Stechkin traumatic pistol, converted to a live cartridge. Law enforcement officers returned fire from service weapons. The footage shows that the shootout in a narrow alley lasts half a minute, while Kunashev does not even try to hide from bullets, while the police hide behind cars. The attacker, according to various sources, managed to fire from 10 to 20 shots, wounding one policeman in the leg. In the end, Kunashev received a bullet in the head, the wound was fatal.

Youtube / Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation

On the evening of August 21, a 23-year-old resident of the Moscow region, armed with a knife, attacked two policemen in Klin. To stop the attacker, they fired into the air, which had no effect. As a result, the raider was still tied up, but he managed to injure both law enforcement officers.

Finally, on the night of September 3, an employee of the patrol service (PPS) Andrei Raisky was dead in the office at the Kurskaya metro station; the cause of his death was a gunshot wound to the head. Nurlan Muratov, a 42-year-old visitor from Orenburg, was detained on suspicion of committing a crime. According to the investigation, Raisky stopped Muratov for a check and took him to the office. There Muratov snatched a service pistol from a policeman and shot him dead. According to another version, which, however, raises doubts, the accused hit Raisky several times on the head with a blunt object, but he managed to get a pistol and shoot, but the bullet ricocheted in a cramped room and hit him in the eye.

In all cases, service weapons did not help the police in any way. During the attack at the Slovak embassy, ​​the policeman did not even use it; in Klin, for some reason, patrolmen fired into the air; in the case at Kurskaya, the law enforcement officer, apparently, died from his own pistol. True, during a shootout near the Foreign Ministry building, the police still shot the attacker, but before that, the two of them tried for half a minute to hit the enemy, who was standing not far from them like a living target, without even trying to hide! It's scary to think what would happen if some militant with serious weapons were in the place of this shooter.

Weapon mess

According to Vladimir Vorontsov, the founder of the Police Ombudsman community, today the Center for Special Combat Training (CSBP) operates in the capital - it is located in the west of Moscow. The police speak well of his instructors and methods. But there is one problem: the Center is not able to cover the entire metropolitan police garrison.

For employees working "on the ground", firing takes place once or twice a month, says Vorontsov. - What are these classes? Pull the pistol out of the holster and hit the target with three bullets in ten seconds (exercise #2). That's all. But management cannot send employees to such classes without violating their labor rights. For example, an employee of the teaching staff works day and night. In theory, he should be ordered to shoot on a day off and give him a day off for this, but there is a catastrophic shortage in the units, so there can be no time off. As they can, they get out.

The Metropolitan Police departments periodically test employees for suitability in situations involving the use of firearms. True, for some reason, the test tasks included the assembly and disassembly of pistols and theoretical questions about how much the weapon weighs and how fast the bullet flies. Of course, this is useful knowledge, but it is rather distantly related to the development of practical skills in the use of weapons.

The main place where ordinary police officers undergo semi-annual initial training in the capital is the Professional Training Center of the Main Directorate for the City of Moscow on Klyazminskaya Street, in the Klyazma common people, ”continues the interlocutor of Lenta.ru. - There is still an old shooting range. They shoot there, but not as thoughtfully as in the TsSBP. But on the Klyazma, much attention is paid to all kinds of household work, cleaning the territory, combat and guard duty. It turns out that an employee must regularly visit shooting complexes at his own expense, but how can this be done with a salary of 43 thousand rubles? The most amazing thing is that some policemen somehow manage to do it.

Today, for the security forces of various departments, including the Ministry of Internal Affairs, a lot of all kinds of new products in the field of weapons and equipment are being developed. Meanwhile, the material and technical equipment of the police, Vorontsov notes, leaves much to be desired. These are old uncomfortable holsters and pistols - sometimes from the 60s and battered bulletproof vests. They weigh eight kilograms each, and if they are worn for 12 hours in a row for two years, health problems cannot be avoided.

A separate story is the legal assessment of the use of weapons, says Vorontsov. - The police are simply afraid to use it. On the one hand, the law says that each armed officer is an authorized representative of the authorities and interprets the requirements of the law in a particular situation. On the other hand, this interpretation of it has no meaning and authority for superiors and employees (TFR). They will then judge in their own way and accuse the policeman of abuse of authority. In the end, the policeman with the gun is faced with the choice of "either six will be carried, or three will be judged."

Scarce ammo

Meanwhile, back in the 70s of the XX century, a new sport appeared in the USA - practical shooting. It was created precisely as an applied discipline for American police officers: it turned out that the standard exercises with weapons in the shooting range were not enough for law enforcement officers. Practical shooting fills these gaps: it reinforces the ability to quickly and correctly draw and hold weapons, aim and pull the trigger. In addition, this sport involves the creation of new and more complex scenarios for the use of weapons. Exercises in it are carried out for a while, while using special distracting and annoying elements for the shooter.

Today, practical shooting is actively developing in Russia, and against this background, the low level of fire training of Russian police officers is especially noticeable. However, this is not surprising: since the times of the USSR, shooting ranges have not been provided for in standard buildings of police departments - they have only recently been included in projects, in new buildings. This means that most police officers cannot regularly train in shooting by dropping into the shooting range before or after the shift. Of course, there are places like TsSBP, but it is unlikely that an overburdened law enforcement officer will be able to visit them regularly, especially if he lives on the other side of the city or in the region.

Yes, in some police units there are premises equipped for firing - such as, for example, at the famous Petrovka, 38. However, according to a Lenta.ru source in law enforcement agencies, classes there are very rare, and when they do happen, ammunition openly save. If in private shooting complexes a typical training session can include a hundred shots, then the opportunity to shoot two magazines of eight rounds in police shooting classes is considered a great success. And there are no instructors around.

As a result, by exercising once or twice a month, the police tend to reinforce not shooting skills, but characteristic shooting mistakes. This affects even the performance of the elementary and most important exercise No. 2 for assessing the “combat capability” of an employee. The source of "Lenta.ru" notes: in the fall of 2008, even in the legendary Moscow Criminal Investigation Department (MUR), many operatives could not complete exercise No. 2 for a satisfactory assessment. As for the police officers, whose positions are not directly related to the law enforcement service on the streets, there are many of them who are simply afraid to pick up service weapons. It is not surprising that when such a need does arise, the most elementary safety requirements are violated.

overseas parallels

The only ones who shoot well and a lot with us are the fighters of the special forces, but not the ordinary employees of the teaching staff, - says in an interview with Lenta.ru, the chairman of the Right to Arms movement. - If we take the police in the USA for comparison, then there, like ours, law enforcement officers report for each shot - with this strictly. But every American police officer is a priori determined that the enemy can be armed, because there are a lot of weapons in the country. And across the ocean, law enforcement officers are immediately set on the fact that they have the right to use weapons, because their main task is to return from the shift alive and healthy.

According to Shmelev, despite the fact that crime in Russia has changed a lot and has become more armed, the police are still being trained according to Soviet methods of the 60s of the last century. For example, the standard for removing weapons and the first aimed shot is approximately 3.5-4 seconds. For comparison: for people who are passionate about defensive shooting (by no means top shooters), this standard is 1.2-1.3 seconds. Judging by the regulations, the police clearly have nowhere to rush.

But even for this, law enforcement officers are trained in a traditional shooting range, while in the preparation of Russian special forces today, elements of the training of practical shooting athletes are increasingly used, and competitions among special forces are conducted by certified judges in practical shooting. In the United States, police departments (analogous to our MIA) take advantage of the opportunity to invite instructors from the National Rifle Association and pay them for training personnel.

For the American police, shooting training is one of the main disciplines, tests are regularly passed on it, - continues the interlocutor of Lenta.ru. - Did not pass - you lose bonuses, part of the salary, up to and including dismissal. In our country, shooting training in the police is taught by the same police officers. At the same time, there are practically no shooting galleries in the local police departments, they get out of the situation as best they can. On the other hand, what choice do they have?

Rare trunks

An important difference between American police officers and their Russian counterparts is that they carry weapons all the time, 24 hours a day. Even without being in the service, the law enforcement officer in the United States, if necessary, is obliged to take measures to suppress illegal actions. Russian police officers, on the other hand, carry weapons only at work, turning them in at the end of their shift. And then in uniform, but unarmed go home.

Finally, an important nuance is the weapon itself, - Igor Shmelev notes. - American law enforcement officers can choose from several options for service weapons or purchase their own and wear it on duty. The only caveat: if the caliber is non-standard, the policeman will provide himself with ammunition. Plus, law enforcement officers both overseas and in Europe have very ergonomic service equipment that allows you to quickly remove weapons. Only special forces can boast of this in our country.

The Makarov pistol - the main service weapon of the Russian police - was adopted in 1951 and became obsolete by the end of the 20th century, like the 9x18 cartridge for which it was developed. Supporters of the pistol refer to a number of its advantages, in particular - a special stopping power. But in the modern world, this is far from the main thing. But the inability of "Makar" to fleeting skirmishes makes it useful only at the firing line.

For comparison: in the USA and many European countries, revolvers and pistols of a larger caliber than the 9x18 cartridge are considered service weapons of the police. Such ammunition is more powerful and deadly, but more expensive. Yes, and the weapon itself, which is in service with law enforcement forces abroad, is much newer: the same Glock 17 (adopted in 1980) today has several special brackets for attaching target designators, sights and flashlights, and a pair of overlays is sure to come with it on the handle, taking into account the individual characteristics of the owner. And Glock-19, SIG Sauer 266, Colt, Heckler und Koch are even younger. What can I say - both in the USSR and in Russia, the pistols that are in service with the police and the police were developed for army officers. In other words, for completely different tasks. Any foreign company, even a Chinese one, clearly distinguishes between army and police pistols.

***

When asked about the shooting training of police officers in the press center of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, Lente.ru explained that citizens hired by the internal affairs bodies undergo professional training to perform official duties, including in conditions associated with the use of firearms. This training is carried out in the universities of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, as well as in the centers of professional training of the territorial bodies of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia.

“Upon completion of vocational training, fire training classes are held at the place of service of employees at least once every two weeks. Control of professional readiness, including firearms skills, is carried out at professional service and physical training classes at the place of service of employees," the ministry said.

As noted in the press service, a set of exercises is provided to confirm the skillful possession of service weapons. According to the representative of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, each of them is designed in such a way that during training, the employee acquires the skills of firing in a variety of situations. The use of firearms by employees is regulated by the requirements of Article 23 of the Federal Law "On Police".

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For a long time there has been talk about the need to replace the obsolete PM pistol. Back in the 80s, the development of a promising pistol on the theme "Rook" was started. Samples were created that met the requirements of the military. These were SPS, GSh-18, PYa pistols and a modernized Makarov PMM pistol. The PMM pistol used 9x18 mm PMM cartridges with a lightweight conical bullet and an increased powder charge, the SPS pistol used powerful cartridges with an armor-piercing bullet 9x21 mm (the cartridge is made on the basis of a regular 9x18 mm cartridge case), GSh-18 and PYa use 9x19 mm Para cartridges, more precisely, their Russian counterparts 7N21 and 7N31 with increased bullet penetration. Let's delve into to understand the tasks assigned to Russian gunsmiths.

First, let's go back to the post-war competition for a new pistol for the army and police of the USSR.

The Nagant revolver was adopted back in tsarist Russia and by the beginning of the Second World War was considered an obsolete model. In the Nagant, cartridges with a cylindrical bullet recessed into the sleeve with a low penetrating and stopping effect were used. The advantages of the revolver were the simplicity and reliability of the design, the subsonic speed of the bullet and the ability to use a silencer, the absence of a breakthrough of powder gases between the drum and the barrel due to pushing the drum onto the barrel, fairly high accuracy and accuracy of fire at a distance of up to 50 m. The disadvantages include a weak cartridge and the inconvenience of reloading a 7-drum charging drum.

The TT pistol was created in 1930 by the famous gunsmith Fedor Tokarev and put into service under the name TT-33. The weapon uses an automatic recoil scheme with a barrel engaged with the bolt. The design is reminiscent of Colt M1911 and Browning 1903 pistols. For firing, 7.62x25 mm cartridges are used, created on the basis of the German Mauser cartridge. A 7.62 mm caliber bullet carries an energy of about 500 J and has a high penetrating effect (capable of penetrating a Kevlar body armor without hard elements). The pistol has a single-action trigger trigger in the form of a single block, instead of a safety lock, the trigger is set to a safety platoon, the pistol uses a single-row magazine for 8 rounds. The advantages of the TT include high accuracy and accuracy of fire at a distance of up to 50 m, a powerful cartridge with a high penetrating effect of a bullet, simple design and the possibility of minor repairs. The disadvantages include the insufficient stopping effect of the bullet, the rather low survivability of the structure, the danger of handling due to the lack of a full-fledged fuse, the possibility of the magazine spontaneously falling out when the latch tooth is worn, the inability to effectively use the silencer due to the supersonic speed of the bullet, the lack of self-cocking.

The Makarov pistol was developed in accordance with the requirements of the military in the 1947-1948 competition to replace the TT pistol and the Nagant revolver.

Pistol PM

The weapon was put into service in the pistol-cartridge complex. For firing, 9x18 mm cartridges with a round-nose bullet of 9.25 mm caliber are used, which are slightly more powerful than the foreign 9x17 K cartridge. A 6.1 gram bullet leaves the PM barrel at a speed of 315 m / s and carries an energy of about 300 J. Standard army ammunition has a bullet with a mushroom-shaped steel core for increased penetration on non-solid objects. The stopping power of a blunt bullet is quite high on an unprotected target, but the penetration action leaves much to be desired. In the 2000s, a 9x18 mm PBM cartridge was created with an armor-piercing bullet weighing only 3.7 g and a speed of 519 m/s. The armor penetration of the new cartridge is 5 mm at a distance of 10 m, while the recoil momentum has increased by only 4%. A slight increase in the recoil momentum allows the use of new ammunition in old PM pistols.


Cartridges 9x18mm PBM

The gun outwardly resembles the Walther PP, but this is only a superficial resemblance. The internal structure is significantly different from the German. There are 32 parts in the pistol, many structural elements perform several functions. The PM has a double-acting trigger trigger with a convenient and reliable safety (blocks the trigger, hammer and bolt), uses a simple scheme of operation of automatics with a blowback, the pistol uses a single-row magazine for 8 rounds. This is one of the most powerful pistols with a similar principle of automation. Accuracy of fire for a pistol of this class is quite normal and is not inferior to other compact samples. On the basis of the PM, a silent pistol was created for the special forces of the PB.

The advantages of the pistol include: the highest reliability in operation and a high resource, simplicity of design, self-cocking, compactness and absence of sharp corners, sufficient stopping effect of a bullet on an unprotected target. The disadvantages include: low bullet penetration, inconvenient descent (a matter of skill), inconvenient location of the magazine latch, insufficiently high accuracy of fire in comparison with full-size army pistols, insufficient magazine capacity by modern standards.

Despite the moral obsolescence of the design, the PM will be in service with many CIS countries and the satellite states of the USSR for many years to come. The pistol was produced under license in the GDR, China, Bulgaria, Poland and a number of other countries.

To eliminate the shortcomings of the PM, within the framework of the Grach program, a modernized pistol was created, which received the name PMM.


PMM pistol

By design, unification with PM is about 70%. The pistol has modifications with a magazine for 8 or 12 rounds (double row with rebuilding in one row). The structural difference from the PM is the presence of Revelli grooves in the chamber to slow down the opening of the shutter when fired. For firing, high-impulse 9x18 mm PMM cartridges are used with an initial speed of a conical bullet of about 420 m / s and a recoil momentum 15% higher than the standard one. The use of new cartridges in conventional PM is prohibited due to the risk of structural destruction during prolonged firing with more powerful ammunition.


Cartridge 9x18mm PMM with a conical bullet weighing 5.8 g.

Although one of the shortcomings of the PM was eliminated - the insufficient penetrating effect of the bullet, the modernization could not correct all the shortcomings of the old design. The issue of increasing the accuracy of fire was not resolved, the magazine capacity was still inferior to foreign analogues of similar dimensions and weight, the magazine spring worked with overvoltage. In addition to all this, the quality of weapons manufacturing dropped sharply after the collapse of the USSR. Formally, the pistol was adopted by some services. The task of completely replacing the PM in the army and police was not solved.

Another pistol developed under the Rook program was the Yarygin PYa pistol. Adopted by the army in 2003.


Pistol Yarygin

The pistol uses the widely used interlocking bolt action scheme. The frame of the pistol is made of steel, although a version with a polymer frame has also been created. USM pistol trigger double action, double-row magazine holds 18 rounds. For firing, 9x19 mm 7N21 cartridges are used with a speed of 5.4 g. A bullet of about 450 m / s. These cartridges are somewhat more powerful than their Western counterparts and have an increased penetrating effect of a bullet with a bare armor-piercing core.

The advantages of the pistol include: high accuracy of fire, good stopping and penetrating action of the bullet, good balance, large magazine capacity. The disadvantages include: poor workmanship (especially the first batches), low resource when firing 7N21 cartridges, insufficient reliability of the automation, angular design and the presence of sharp corners, a very tight magazine spring with sharp lips.

For all its merits, the PY turned out to be raw and could not fully replace the obsolete PM. Many law enforcement officers preferred the old reliable PM. According to some experts, the level of technology of the Yarygin pistol is the mid-70s, and at the moment the pistol is inferior in many respects to foreign counterparts. On the basis of the PJ, a sports pistol with a polymer frame "Viking" is produced, which has a weakened design and a magazine for 10 rounds.

The next candidate for an army pistol was the Tula GSh-18. The pistol was created at the KBP under the supervision of two outstanding designers of rocket and cannon weapons Vasily Gryazev and Arkady Shipunov. Adopted in 2003. Produced in limited quantities since 2001.


Pistol GSh-18

The pistol has an automatic mechanism based on a coupled bolt with a barrel rotation, a striker-type trigger with two automatic fuses, and a magazine capacity of 18 rounds. The frame of the pistol is made of polymer, the shutter-casing is stamped from 3 mm steel using welding, the barrel has polygonal rifling. The weapon turned out to be compact and light. For shooting, very powerful cartridges 9x19 mm PBP (index 7N31) with a bullet weighing 4.1 g, a speed of 600 m / s and a muzzle energy of about 800 J are used. The bullet is capable of penetrating a sheet of steel 8 mm thick at a distance of 15 m or body armor 3 th protection class.


Cartridges from left to right: regular 9x19 mm, 7N21, 7N31

Advantages of the pistol: small dimensions and weight, good applicability, high accuracy of fire, powerful cartridge with high penetration and stopping power, large magazine capacity, high safety in handling. Disadvantages: strong recoil due to a powerful cartridge and a small mass of the weapon itself, the front part of the casing-bolt open to dust and dirt, a tight magazine spring, poor workmanship and finish.

The pistol was adopted by the prosecutor's office and is a premium weapon. On the basis of the GSh-18, sports pistols "Sport-1" and "Sport-2" are produced, which have minor differences from the combat model.

The SPS pistol was developed in Klimovsk by Pyotr Serdyukov in 1996. It is in service with the FSO and the FSB.


Pistol SR-1MP

The weapon was created for firing at an enemy protected by body armor or an enemy in transport. The pistol has a bolt-action with locking, swinging cylinder (as in the Beretta 92). Thanks to this, the barrel always moves parallel to the shutter-casing when fired, which increases the accuracy of fire. The frame is made of polymer, double-action trigger trigger with two automatic fuses, the magazine has a capacity of 18 rounds, sights are designed for a range of 100 m. Powerful 9x21 mm cartridges are used for firing. Ammunition was created SP-10 (armor-piercing), SP-11 (low-ricochet), SP-12 (expansive) and SP-13 (armor-piercing tracer). The SP-10 cartridge has a bullet weighing 6.7 g with an initial velocity of 410 m/s. The bullet has a bare armor-piercing core and is capable of penetrating 5 mm steel plate at a distance of 50 m or standard US police body armor.


Armor-piercing cartridges 9x21 mm SP-10

The disadvantages of the pistol include large dimensions and weight, the use of rare ammunition, the inconvenience of an automatic fuse on the handle for people with short fingers.

On the basis of the SPS, the SR-1MP pistol was created with an enlarged safety key, a Picatinny rail, a silencer mount and an improved slide delay. At the moment, on the basis of the Union of Right Forces, the Udav pistol has been created and is being tested.

There were attempts to adopt foreign-made weapons, for example, the Austrian Glock or the Russian-Italian Strizh. But these pistols did not pass Russian state tests for reliability in harsh conditions. The developers of the Strizh pistol announced the possibility of using Russian armor-piercing cartridges 9x19 mm 7N21 and 7N31 in their pistol.

At the Army-2015 forum, a prototype pistol of the Kalashnikov concern, designed by Lebedev PL-14, was presented. The pistol has a bolt action, striker-type trigger, aluminum frame, and a 15-round magazine. The ergonomics of the pistol is designed taking into account the human anatomy, the pistol is very handy and easy to handle. During its creation, the developers consulted with IPSC athletes. When shooting, 9x19 mm cartridges, which are widely used in the world, are used. In the future, it is planned to produce a version of the PL-14 with a polymer frame and barrels of various lengths.


Prototype pistol of the concern "Kalashnikov" PL-14

The most promising, it seems to me, is the development from scratch of a completely new pistol-cartridge complex for a small-caliber pistol cartridge. An example of the successful introduction of pistols under a powerful small-caliber cartridge into law enforcement agencies is the Belgian FN Five-Seven 5.7 mm pistol and the Chinese QSZ-92 5.8 mm caliber. The Belgian uses a 5.7x28 mm cartridge with an armor-piercing bullet SS190. The powder charge accelerates a light bullet weighing 2 g to a speed of 650 m/s. The bullet is capable of penetrating a bulletproof vest with a titanium plate 1.6 mm thick and a pack of Kevlar fabric in 20 layers. Cartridges with expansive and tracer bullets were created. The automatic pistol uses the principle of a semi-free shutter, the trigger is only double-acting, the magazine capacity is 20 rounds. The frame of the pistol is made of polymer, and the steel casing-bolt is covered with a polymer shell.

The pistol is widely used by the Mexican drug cartels for its ability to penetrate standard police body armor, and is also used by the US Secret Service.


Pistol FN Five-Seven

Not much is known about the Chinese pistol. It uses 5.8x21mm cartridges with a 3g bullet and muzzle velocity of 500m/s. The bullet is capable of penetrating body armor that protects against the standard army 9x19 mm NATO. There is a version chambered for 9x19 mm. Otherwise, the pistol is unremarkable and inferior to the Belgian competitor in cartridge power and magazine capacity.


Chinese pistol QSZ-92

In the USSR, a PSM pistol was already created for a small-caliber cartridge of 5.45 mm caliber. The pistol was designed for concealed carrying by the leadership of the KGB and the Ministry of Internal Affairs. A bullet weighing 2.6 g had an energy of about 130 J, but due to its shape it pierced dozens of layers of Kevlar.

As you can see, pistols chambered for a powerful small-caliber cartridge have huge advantages over larger-caliber counterparts. The argument of critics of small-caliber weapons is supposedly a small stopping power, but there are expansive bullets. And besides, even an ordinary high-speed bullet creates a vast pulsating cavity around itself. The main advantages are seen as a large ammo, high flatness of the trajectory due to the high muzzle velocity, low recoil and muzzle rise, good armor penetration and high lethality. So what prevents Russian gunsmiths from creating a worthy analogue, taking, for example, a bullet from standard low-impulse ammunition 5.45x39 mm as a basis?

The collapse of the Soviet Union was accompanied by a widespread surge of violence that engulfed most regions of the once unified country. During this period, cases of terrorism, hostage-taking increased sharply, and interethnic conflicts arose.



The trigger mechanism allows firing single shots and bursts. The firing mode translator, which also performs the functions of a fuse, is located on the left side of the receiver above the trigger guard.

The PP-90 Ml submachine gun was developed by the KBP enterprise and is intended for arming police units and internal troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, army units not directly involved in hostilities, crews of armored vehicles and helicopters, as well as heavy infantry weapons crews.
PP-90 Ml largely meets the basic requirements for modern personal defense weapons being developed in many countries around the world in accordance with the PDW (Personal Defense Weapon) concept. As you know, such a weapon should be constantly with a serviceman, without interfering with the performance of his duties, i.e. be as light and compact as possible. At the same time, it must ensure sufficient fire efficiency to deter an enemy armed with combined-arms small arms.

Since 2008, the police departments and parts of the internal troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia have been receiving submachine guns PP-19-02 isp. 20 "Vityaz-SN". This submachine gun was designed and manufactured at Izhevsk Machine-Building Plant OJSC. The tactical and technical assignment for its development was issued by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia in 2003, and the name of the topic of development work, which was later assigned to the submachine gun, is directly related to the Vityaz special unit of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, whose commander S. I. Lysyuk became the initiator this development.
It should be noted that another prototype in the development of the "Vityaz" was the submachine gun PP-19 "Bizon", which was borrowed from the automation system, which works by using the energy of the recoil of the free shutter. At the same time, however, it was necessary to change the design of the rammer, since, unlike the Bizon store with a single-row exit of cartridges, the Vityaz store is made in two rows with a staggered arrangement of cartridges. Compared to the Bizon, the position of the reloading handle has also been changed. It is shifted forward, and the cutout for it in the receiver cover is completely closed by the firing mode translator shield (when the latter is in the “fuse” position). This prevents dirt from getting inside the receiver.
The main ammunition for both variants of the Vityaz submachine gun is the new 9×19 mm PRS cartridge (PRS - reduced ricochet ability). It has a lead-core jacketed bullet with a muzzle velocity of 360 m/s.

In 1991, the American company Calico began production of a submachine gun with an original auger magazine, the capacity of which was 50-100 rounds. Although the cost of this weapon was almost twice the cost of other similar submachine guns, the very next year the first 1000 Calico submachine guns entered service with the US Drug Enforcement Administration, orders for a submachine gun came from the Special Operations Forces and the Corps. US Marine Corps. By the middle of 1996, export deliveries were made to 27 countries of the world.
A similar weapon was created in Russia. At the end of 1993, a picture of the President of the Russian Federation B.N. Yeltsin appeared on the pages of Russian and foreign publications with an original-looking weapon in his hands - this was how the latest development of the designers of the Izhevsk Machine-Building Plant, the PP-19 Bizon-2 submachine gun ".

The PP-91 "Kedr" submachine gun is in service with many law enforcement agencies of the Russian Federation. They are armed with special police units and internal troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Federal Penitentiary Service, the Federal Drug Control Service, employees of departmental security, the Courier Service and collectors. The first 40 pre-series samples of PP-91 "Kedr" were manufactured in 1992 at the Izhevsk Mechanical Plant, subsequently serial production was organized at the Zlatoust Machine-Building Plant.
The simple and technological design of the PP-91 "Kedr" is
further development of the pistol- machine gun PP-71, developed by E. F. Drag new in the late 1960s. according to the tactical and technical assignment of the GRAU of the USSR Ministry of Defense within the framework of the Buket experimental design program. Work on the creation of the PP-92 was also carried out under the leadership of E.F. Dragunov, so the weapon was called "Kedr" - the design of Evgeny Dragunov.

Adopted in the early 1990s. The submachine gun PP-91 "Kedr" has one, but a very significant drawback for the armament of the units of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and other law enforcement agencies of the Russian Federation - its ammunition is a pistol cartridge 9 × 18 mm PM, which is not powerful enough to hit targets in personal armor protection. The effective firing range of this submachine gun does not exceed 50 m. For this reason, in the early 1990s. An attempt was made to improve the combat characteristics of the submachine gun of this system by developing its version for a more powerful 9 × 18 mm PMM cartridge, made in the dimensions of the 9 × 18 mm PM cartridge, but having a larger powder charge and a lighter bullet with a pointed head.
The 9 × 18 mm PMM cartridge bullet has an initial velocity of 425 m/s and at a distance of 20 m it pierces a 3 mm thick steel sheet or a car body, and at a distance of 10 m it ensures the destruction of a live target protected by an army body armor.

In 1997, at an arms exhibition in Moscow, the Gepard submachine gun was demonstrated for the first time, developed on an initiative basis by the designers of military unit 33491 and CJSC ROKS. The creation of this submachine gun is due to the fact that due to the use of insufficiently effective ammunition, many modern Russian pistols machine guns do not provide reliable defeat of targets in personal protective equipment.
« Cheetah"is a system on the basis of which you can create a family of submachine guns that best meet the requirements of various law enforcement agencies.
A shortened machine gun was used as a base for the development of the "Cheetah" AKC-74U, which borrowed a wooden forearm and pads, a fire mode translator, sights and a shortened receiver. At the same time, in contrast to the version OTs-39 P under a powerful cartridge 9 × 19 mm 7 H21 pistol- One of the essential features OTs-22"Beech" are small in size and weight. This was achieved through the use of a "pistol" layout scheme with the placement of the store in the fire control handle. Gun- machine gun equipped with mechanism
mi automation, working by using the energy of the free shutter recoil.

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