Be INFORMED

Sunday, November 26, 2006

War and the AK-47

7:16 AM 11/26/2006
Atomic bombs and other WMD? when it comes to war and great weapons on the cheap, the AK-47 stands above them all. This light-weight weapon has been the weapon of choice for foreign countries militaries,terrorist and any other group wanting to stock up on the cheap.
Here's a little AK-47 history for you from WaPo :

By Larry Kahaner
Sunday, November 26, 2006

In the grand narrative of World War II, the Battle of Bryansk is a minor conflict, barely deserving of a footnote. But Bryansk has another place in history. It was there that a then-unknown tank commander named Mikhail Kalashnikov decided that his Russian comrades would never again be defeated. In the years following the Great Patriotic War, as Soviet propagandists dubbed it, he was to conceive and fabricate a weapon so simple, and yet so revolutionary, that it would change the way wars were fought and won. It was the AK-47 assault rifle.

The AK-47 has become the world's most prolific and effective combat weapon, a device so cheap and simple that it can be bought in many countries for less than the cost of a live chicken. Depicted on the flag and currency of several countries, waved by guerrillas and rebels everywhere, the AK is responsible for about a quarter-million deaths every year. It is the firearm of choice for at least 50 legitimate standing armies and countless fighting forces from Africa and the Middle East to Central America and Los Angeles. It has become a cultural icon, its signature form -- that banana-shaped magazine -- defining in our consciousness the contours of a deadly weapon.

The Beginning Of The End In Iraq?

    It is reported that  follows of Muqtada al-Sadr have taken over a television station to pretty much denounce the Iraqi government and, according to some viewers, to announce a call to arms.

FROM Mercury News:

Al-Sadr loyalists take over Iraqi television station
By Hannah Allam and Mohamed al Dulaimy
McClatchy Newspapers

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Followers of the militant Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr took over state-run television Saturday to denounce the Iraqi government, label Sunnis "terrorists" and issue what appeared to many viewers as a call to arms.

The two-hour broadcast from a community gathering in the heart of the Shiite militia stronghold of Sadr City included three members of al-Sadr's parliamentary bloc, who took questions from outraged residents demanding revenge for a series of car bombings that killed some 200 people Thursday .        Read More Here