Estonian Special Forces personnel with HK MP5-SD silenced submachine guns.
Villar-Perosa submachine gun in museum exposition.
The submachine gun is an automatic or selective-fired shoulder weapon
that fires pistol-caliber ammunition. The concept of submachine gun
dates back to World War One; the trench warfare of this war required
effective and compact
weapons
for short-range fighting in trenches; additionally, a lightweight and
maneuverable fully automatic weapon was desirable to complement light
machine guns in both defensive and offensive scenarios, to cover last
200 meters of assault on enemy positions. The first weapon which can be
considered to some extent as the world's first submachine gun was the
Italian Villar-Perosa, which was a twin-barreled automatic weapon that
fired 9mm Glisenti pistol ammunition from top-mounted box magazines. It
was compact, but its primary tactical role was of short-range machine
gun; therefore it was usually fired from some sort of mount, and fitted
with machine-gun type spade grips instead of more conventional
rifle-type stock.
The first
true submachine gun was the
Bergmann / Schmeisser MP.18,I,
which saw some action during closing days of the Great war. This was a
shoulder-fired weapon, that set the basic pattern for all following
weapons of its class. The inter-war decades produced a significant
number of submachine guns, but the tactical niche for these weapons was
still unclear for many military experts. It was the Grand Chako war, the
Spanish Civil war and Russo-Finnish Winter war of 1940 that proved the
viability of submachine guns as general-issue weapons for fighting
troops. Nevertheless, regardless of the large number of available
models, by the start of World War Two in most armies submachine guns
were relegated to secondary role. For example, the very technically
advanced Wehrmacht (Hitler's army) issued
MP-38 and MP-40 submachine guns to infantry troops in proportion of about one SMG per ten bolt action rifles. It was the Red (Soviet) army which issued
PPSh-41 submachine guns
as primary infantry weapons to entire companies and battalions. Despite
the success of several new submachine guns, developed during the WW2,
this war marked the start of decline of submachine guns as primary
infantry weapons. The appearance of assault rifle, which, while being
only slightly heavier than most SMGs, had much longer effective range,
put an abrupt end to infantry use of submachine guns in Soviet army. On
the other hand, the NATO countries still issued 9mm submachine guns to
many non-infantry units and certain soldiers in infantry (i.e. scouts,
machine gun and mortar crews etc) to complement relatively large and
heavy semi-automatic or fully-automatic rifles firing powerful 7,62x51
NATO ammunition. The appearance (and wide distribution) of small-caliber
assault rifles marked the final phase of history of submachine gun as
general-issue infantry weapon.
Despite of all said above, it must be noted that submachine guns still
posses several qualities that are very useful in certain military
scenarios. For example, submachine guns can be easily silenced, making
them very useful for various special operations forces.
The police and security use of submachine guns, on the other hand, has
been greatly increased during last 30 or 40 years. Proliferation of
international terrorism, drugs trafficking, gang crime and other violent
crimes forced many police forces to adopt a variety of submachine guns
for special police teams. Compact submachine guns, which appeared during
1960's and 1970's, such as
Micro-Uzi or
HK MP5k,
were quickly adopted by various VIP protection teams that favored
compact size combined with massive short-range firepower of such guns.
Of cause, the other side of the law also saw benefits of submachine
guns; for example, more than few gangsters, outlaws and terrorists used
various submachine guns, starting with "Chicago typewriter" (
Thompson submachine gun) and up to Czechoslovak
Scorpion or Croatian
Agram 2000.
Russian law enforcement officer holds compact submachine gun during counter-terrorism operation (2005).
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Uzi Tri-Rail System
UTR
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Mini Uzi Tri-Rail System
UTR-M
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MP5 Rail System
MP5 RS
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Hard anodized aluminum Hand guards for H&K-G3
G3-RS
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Barrel Single Rail
BSR-1
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Barrel Double Rail
BDR-2
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Full Picatinny Rail Covers
RC
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MP5 LULA™
Loader & Unloader
LU9MP5BLK
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COLT SMG LULA™
Loader & Unloader
LU9COLTBLK
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UZI LULA™
Loader & Unloader
LU9UZIBLK
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Quick Release Argonomic Vertical Foregrip
AG-44-S
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Firearm Tactical Vertical Grip
TAL-4
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Tactical Folding Foregrip
FGG-S
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Integrated Foregrip & Light Holder
T-GRIP
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