Uzi Farewell

Winter

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Israel's army phases out country's iconic Uzi submachine gun

December 17, 2003 By Jason Keyser

(Associated Press) Israel's military is phasing out the legendary Uzi submachine gun, calling it antiquated and replacing it with more sophisticated, electronics-outfitted weaponry, an army spokesman said Wednesday.

But the Uzi, a national icon and the country's most famous contribution to the arms industry, will still be produced and exported, to the presumable delight of drug dealers, secret service agents and Hollywood action heroes alike.

Israel's military took the simply constructed, half-century-old weapon out of frontline units two decades ago, but continued to issue it to some elite units and soldiers carrying heavy gear who needed a light weapon for self-defense.

Now the army says it will dump it altogether.

As of this week, "we're no longer training soldiers on the Uzi," said army spokesman Capt. Jacob Dallal. "Basically, it's antiquated," he said of the 9-mm weapon.

State-owned Israel Military Industries has made over 1.5 million Uzis and will continue manufacturing the weapon, which has earned hundreds of millions of dollars from sales the world over, including in the United States and developing nations in Latin America and Africa where Israel has had influence.

Illegal arms sales have also put the weapon into the hands of Colombian drug lords.

In Israel, the weapon's smaller models are still popular with security guards who favor portability who accuracy. Many private security companies use the original, larger model because it's cheap.

It's also still a mainstay with some of the world's police forces and security services guarding VIPs, said Yiftah Shapir of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University.

The Uzi, while still used by the U.S. Secret Service, is also beloved of U.S. gangs because of its reputation as "a macho weapon," said gun expert Tim Brown of Globalsecurity.org. But he added the Uzi "is not a very good gun - it's very inefficient, inaccurate ... It's mostly used in bad Hollywood action movies."

In 1984's "The Terminator," for example, Arnold Schwarzenegger's cyborg makes a point of decisively ordering the "Uzi nine millimeter" in a gun shop before commencing his murderous rampage, and is commended by the owner.

Whatever its qualities as a weapon, the Uzi arouses nostalgia and pride in Israel, where it was developed around the same time as the country's war-rattled birth.

"It was the first Israeli weapon after 2,000 years of diaspora," Shapir said. Recalling his own days in the military in the late 1960s, he added, "I can still disassemble an Uzi with my eyes closed, hands tied behind my back, even if you wake me in the middle of the night."

Elite Israeli fighting units found it useful because of its resistance to mud and water, giving the weapon a further mystique - and marketing cachet.

The Uzi again made headlines when the weapon's creator, Uzi Gal, 79, died in September 2002.

At 15, Gal developed a bow that could automatically fire arrows, and later he secretly made weapons for pre-state Jewish underground in a metal workshop. He was asked to develop a submachine gun for Israel's army - which faced weapons embargoes and had little cash - when the first Arab-Israeli war erupted in 1948.

The Uzi first found its way into soldiers' hands in 1954, and it swiftly proved its deadly effectiveness two years later in the Sinai campaign against Egypt.

Among various models are Uzi Carbine, with a long barrel, the Micro-Uzi, which is smaller, and the Uzi Pistol, an semi-automatic weapon slightly larger than a regular handgun and weighing less than 4 pounds (2 kilograms).

The Uzi - whose modified single-shot pistol version can be had for some US$500 in the United States - is one of the most copied weapons in the world, with knockoffs produced in China and several eastern European countries, according to Israeli media reports.

Through its long years of service in the Israeli military, soldiers revered it for its hardiness and ease of operation - but at the same time lamented its limited range and disturbing tendency to fire itself when dropped or struck.

Its short barrel gave it an effective accurate range of just 50 yards (meters).

The weapon was taken out of use by frontline units in Israel in the early 1980s. It was replaced with standard and short versions of the American-made M-16, which can accurately hit a target at 1,000 yards (900 meters).

The M-16 and the Israeli-made Galil rifle became the main frontline weapons in Israel. The M-16 is now gradually being replaced as well.

Earlier this year, Israel announced the development of the Tavor, a new, compact assault rifle to be issued to soldiers starting in January. The rifle comes in three designs: a basic assault rifle, a sharp-shooting model and a shorter version for commandos and paratroopers that is useful in urban warfare.

The Tavor is also made by Israel Military Industries.

Shapir said the Tavor is vastly better than the Uzi. Both are small enough to be useful in street combat, but the Tavor can be outfitted with high-tech electronics, like sights that can provide real-time data on targets a soldier might not be able to see with his own eyes.

By comparison, the simple Uzi, despite its deadliness, is greatly outdated, Shapir said.

"Just a few pieces of metal, one spring, and that's it."

SOURCE
 

corsair7772

New Member
Verified Defense Pro
The Uzi was one of the best weapons ive ever seen. It was small, easy 2 conceal,simple like the AK-47 and Deadly. I wonder y the israelis arent upgrading the weapon and giving it a new design? Maybe theve grown stupid and arrogant by now or there arent enuff palestinians 2 shoot anymore.
 

gf0012-aust

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
the uzi was excellent if you didn't need to target shoot beyond 50 metres.

It was the ideal "clearing house" gun, designed for a purpose and served that purpose well.

BUT, there were others with just as much a mythological capability such as the Mac or Ingram

Over 100metres and I'd be betting on the bloke using an AK-47 or M-16
 

corsair7772

New Member
Verified Defense Pro
the AK-47 isnt long ranged cuz it doesnt have aiming devices and its 4 assault troops mainly while the M-16 is a totally different story.
 

gf0012-aust

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
corsair7772 said:
the AK-47 isnt long ranged cuz it doesnt have aiming devices and its 4 assault troops mainly while the M-16 is a totally different story.
Look at the end of an AK-47. See the funny bit that is added to the barrel? Thats an aiming device. Most people call it a "sight". ;)

As for the fact that it is an assault rifle, yes, thats true, it's exactly what the russians intended when they copied the original grand daddy of assault rifles (the Spg -44)

If you think that 100m is long range, then I'd hate to know what you consider a sniper distance to be... ;)

The M-16 is a carbine, it was designed and intended to fulfill the same tasks that the AK-47 does.

Different design concepts, similar design brief.

addendum, actually they didn't copy the MP-44, but a fair degree of its function and form was built into the AK
 
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