Fail-safe, simple to use and cheap to produce – the world’s most popular weapon, AK-47, will long remain a monument to its late ‘father,’ Mikhail Kalashnikov, who died in Russia on Monday aged 94.
1. Mikhail Kalashnikov, who was a tank commander during World War II, began his career as a weapons designer after a shoulder injury during the Battle of Bryansk. While in hospital in 1942, he overheard wounded soldiers complaining about Soviet rifles and decided to change that.
2.
The first Kalashnikov rifle was produced in 1947, bringing its
creator the Stalin Prize and the Order of the Red Star. The AK-47
has been the standard issue assault rifle of the Soviet and then
Russian army since 1949.
3. Durability, low production cost, availability and ease of use
are the features, which assured AK-47 global success.
Kalashnikov’s creation performs in sandy or wet conditions that
jam more sophisticated weapons. The designer called it a
“symbol of the creative genius” of the Russian people.
4. The AK-47 has made it into the Guinness Book of Records as the
most widely spread weapon in the world, with 100 million
Kalashnikov rifles currently in use.
5. Military and special forces in 106 countries around the globe
from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe are now armed with AK-47s.
6. Russia not only distributes the Kalashnikov rifles all over
the world, but also licensed its production in over 30 other
countries, including China, Israel, India, Egypt and Nigeria.
7. It is believed that AK-47s have caused more deaths than
artillery fire, airstrikes and rocket attacks combined. An
estimated quarter of a million people are gunned down by bullets
from Kalashnikovs every year.
8. But Mikhail Kalashnikov himself never experienced
self-reproach about the blood spilled with the help of his
invention as he created AK-47 for protection. “I sleep well.
It’s the politicians, who are to blame for failing to come to an
agreement and resorting to violence,” he said in 2007.
9. Relative cheapness has always been one of the most important
advantages of AK-47. The average global price of the assault
rifle was estimated at $534 in 2005, according to Oxford
University economist Phillip Killicoat. Though in African
countries the price of AK-47 is on average $200 cheaper.
10. Osama bin Laden always had a Kalashnikov rifle with him
during his video appearances. According to some reports, it was
the US, which gave the Al Qaeda founder his first AK-47 to fight
the Soviets in Afghanistan.
11.
During the Vietnam War, many American soldiers gave up their M16s
for the more reliable Kalashnikov rifles, which they picked up
from dead enemies. Even now, the US marines carry AK-47 magazines
with them because of how common the weapon is.
12. The image of AK-47 appears on the flag of Mozambique as well
as coats of arms of Zimbabwe, Burkina Faso (1984-97) and East
Timor. The Kalashnikov rifle is also present on the flag of
Lebanese militant organization, Hezbollah.
13. The parents in some African states name their babies
‘Kalash,’ which is another nickname for the Kalashnikov assault
rifle, according to a documentary by Russia’s Channel One.
14. Russia’s top basketball player, Andrey Kirilenko, born in the
city of Izhevsk, which hosts the Kalashnikov rifle factory, has
played under No.47 in the NBA and was nicknamed ‘AK-47.’
15. Egypt has immortalized the AK-47 by erecting a giant
monument, portraying a barrel and bayonet of a Kalashnikov rifle
at the Sinai Peninsula.
16. A gold coated Kalashnikov assault rifle was recovered by US
troops from the weapon collection of former Iraqi leader, Saddam
Hussein.
17. Coins dedicated to Mikhail Kalashnikov and his creation were
issued not only in Russia, but also in such a peaceful place as
New Zealand, which marked the rifle’s 60th birthday with special
two-dollar pieces. They came in cases shaped after the AK-47
magazine.
18. French newspaper, Liberation, has named AK-47 the most
important invention of the XX century, with the Russian rifle
leaving the atomic bomb and space flight behind.
19. Mixing vodka, absinth, lemon, cinnamon and sugar is the
recipe for the Kalashnikov shot drink. There’s also a Kalashnikov
vodka brand, which has been sold in bottles resembling the shape
of an AK-47 since 2004.
20. Colombian artist, Cesar Lopez, has transformed a dozen of
AK-47s into guitars, with then UN General Secretary, Kofi Annan,
getting one of the musical instruments as a gift in 2007.