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Posted: 1/6/2006 11:07:05 PM EDT
BIG HI-RES VERSION U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Daniel Fields and Pvt. Jeman Gaddi provide security during a patrol in Rawah, Iraq, Jan. 3, 2006. Both Soldiers are with the 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry Regiment. This photo appeared on www.army.mil. by Lance Cpl. Shane S. Keller BIG HI-RES VERSION U.S. Army Sgt. Terence Spradlin of the 4th Battalion, 11th Field Artillery Regiment, pulls security in Q-West, Iraq This photo appeared on www.army.mil. January 5, 2006 by Spc. Clydell Kinchen U.S. Marines take cover after being fired at by small fires while they were on patrol in Kubaysah, in Iraq's Al Anbar province, in this photo taken on December 31, 2005 and released on January 4, 2006. REUTERS/Gunnery Sgt. Keith A. Milks/Handout Iraqi soldiers hold their rifles during the 85th Army Day celebration at the heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad January 6, 2006. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz Iraqi police investigators inspect the charred wreckage of a suicide car bomber, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2006, in central Baghdad, Iraq. The suicide car bomber was targeting an Iraqi army patrol but missed, injuring three civilians and killing himself in al-Kailani district central Baghdad police said. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed) Iraqi soldiers cordon off the scene of a car bomb in the Alawi district of Baghdad, close to a local hospital. The car detonated causing no injuries. At least 120 people, including five US soldiers, were killed in bomb attacks across Iraq, fuelling sectarian tensions as the country looks to form a new government.(AFP/Ali al-Saadi) A French soldier part of International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) passes by the water fountains, which are for sale in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2006. Afghanistan's art activities including carving is legal now, after the making of status was banned during the fundamentalist regime of the Taliban, who were kicked out of the power by U.S forces in late 2001. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq) Police officers stand outside the Hadassah hospital in Jerusalem Thursday Jan. 5, 2006. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was in serious condition early Thursday following seven hours of emergency surgery to stop 'massive, widespread' bleeding in his brain that doctors feared would cause permanent damage. A brain scan after surgery showed bleeding had been stopped, and Sharon was transferred to the intensive care unit (AP Photo/Oded Balilty) An Israeli soldier prays at the Western Wall, Judaism holiest site, in Jerusalem Thursday Jan. 5, 2006. Rabbis called Israelis to flock to synagogues and say special prayers for 77-year-old Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon who fought for his life Thursday following seven hours of emergency surgery to stop widespread bleeding in his brain. The massive stroke made it unlikely that he would return to power, and plunged the region into uncertainty.(AP Photo/Kevin Frayer) Palestinian militants representing the armed wings of Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the Popular Resistance Committees as well as the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades and Abu Rish Brigades, gather in Rafah. The main armed Palestinian factions issued a joint appeal for an end to the spiralling security chaos in the Gaza Strip.(AFP/Said Khatib) Pakistani soldier in Wana tribal area. Gunmen shot dead seven tribesmen in a restive tribal region along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border where the military is hunting Al-Qaeda-linked militants, officials said.(AFP/File) A Sri Lankan soldier carrying a light machinegun guards a street in Jaffna, northern Sri Lanka, January 6, 2006. One person was killed and six were wounded in sporadic attacks in Sri Lanka's troubled eastern region overnight, the military said on Friday, as the government sought U.S. diplomatic help to avoid a slide back into war. REUTERS/Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi An armed police officer patrols outside the main entrance of U.S. Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2006. The U.S. Embassy in Malaysia reopened Thursday with enhanced security six days after it was shut due to fears it was under surveillance by suspicious, camera-wielding foreigners, officials said. (AP Photo /Andy Wong) In this photo made available by the Presidential Secretariat, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono inspects a rifle at an Indonesian weapons plant Tuesday Jan. 3, 2006 in Bandung, Indonesia. The United States recently ended a six year ban on military ties with Indonesia, and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will visit the world's most populous muslim Nation next week.(AP Photo/Presidential Secretariat, Dudi Anung) Members of the Sudanese People's Liberation Army march, Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2005, in Leer in southern Sudan. Some 2 million people died in the 21 years before the United States helped negotiate peace last January, many in places forgotten by the passage of time, not named on any map, without roads, running water, electricity, schools or health care. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo) An Italian soldier serving with the European Union (EUFOR) peacekeeping force in Bosnia stands guard at a village near the eastern town of Rogatica where a wife of a Bosnian Serb war crimes suspect was killed in a shoot-out when EUFOR moved in to arrest her husband at their home on January 5, 2006. Suspect Dragomir Abazovic and the couple's 11-year-old son were also shot and injured in the morning raid. A police spokesman said EUFOR was acting on a warrant for Abazovic issued in 1999 by local authorities for crimes in the Rogatica area during the 1992-95 war between Bosnian Serbs, Muslims and Croats. REUTERS/Danilo Krstanovic An armed British police officer stands in front of lights on a Christmas tree as he guards the Houses of Parliament in London, Thursday Jan. 5, 2006. The trail of those behind the London suicide bombers appears to have gone cold six months after the attacks, as authorities struggle to prevent new bombings and counter the militancy that led a group of young Britons to strike the capital's transit system. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham) Officers with an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) special response tactical team sit atop a V-150 armoured personnel carrier with assault weapons at the ready before a news conference by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff at the San Ysidro port of entry in California January 5, 2006. Chertoff spoke about his agency's efforts to stop illegal immigration. According to Customs officials, the V-150 is part of Chertoff's entourage and not part of their border enforcement efforts. REUTERS/Fred Greaves Anderson Goncalves dos Santos, left, is escorted by police in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Thursday, Jan 5, 2005. Goncalves dos Santos, known as Lorde, surrendered early Thursday after negotiations between his lawyers and police, said a spokesperson with Rio de Janeiro's public safety ministry. Authorities said Lorde, one of Rio's most wanted drug traffickers, was responsible for the November attack that killed five people _ including a 1-year-old girl and her mother. (AP Photo/Agencia Estado, Fabio Motta) The bodies of five Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC, and their weapons are seen in Vista Hermosa, 105 miles (169 kms) south of Bogota, Colombia, Friday, Jan. 6, 2005. Fourteen FARC guerrillas and two soldiers lost their lives during clashes in a coca-growing area in southern Colombia, near where 29 soldiers were killed last month.(AP Photo/William Fernando Martinez) A police officer escorts Armando Ruiz, an allegued rebel of the National Liberation Army (ELN), Colombia's second largest group at a police station in Medellin, Colombia, Friday, Jan. 6, 2005. (AP Photo/Luis Benavides) An army soldier stands guard with an M60 machine gun, at the south zone of San Salvador , El Salvador Thursday, Jan. 5, 2006. (AP Photo/Luis Romero) |
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Only time there are high-res versions are when they come off .mil sites. Sorry bro. |
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It is. Those are Bushmaster rifles. Italians have a bunch of them. |
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Right. I was just wondering how they are holding up to real world duties.
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Can you believe they took the time to line all those rounds up in front of the mags in the pic of the dead FARCs?
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They work for me but they are not very hi-res, they are only about twice the size as what Lumpy posted. Any body else notice that the only trigger finger violations were by the palestinian assholes. Thanks Lumpy. |
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Lumpy's back!
Thanks for another set of great pics! LOVE these threads! |
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Daewoo at world.guns.ru Perhaps this one Good call chrome1 |
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I guess no one told all these other countries what a POS the M16/AR15 is. They need to do more reserch on the internet armchair commando sites to get the straight skinny.
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eeeew, messygood idea. |
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WTF, over? Get your asses down to the border!!! You are IMMIGRATION AND CUSTOMS !!!!! Not Secret Service, or the A-Team, or Rangers or anything else. Am I over-reacting, or is this completely retarded??? Great pics, lumpy - thanks ! |
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I'm OK with messy. |
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From your mouth to the IDF's ears! |
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I don't think so... |
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I'm sure it is this rifle not a deawoo look here for more good pictures scroll down forums.army.ca/forums/index.php?topic=37025.msg303071 the net is cool you can look stuff up |
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nope...7.62x54 |
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Actually, I'd rather see a breaking up napalm canister up over them and see flaming fingers of napalm descending down on them. |
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Completely fucking retarded. OTOH, the guy's actual job is to take responsibility for the next lethal terrorist attack on American soil. While an APC escort is not quite the same as having Rachel Ray ride the toy pony and then make you a sammich with a side of polenta, it's some incentive for 4 years in the barrel. |
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Negative. It is Indonesian SS2 V1. Designed and manufactured by Indonesian National armory Pindad, West Java. The lower receiver is derived from that of an FNC (they are licensed by FN to manufacture their own version called the SS1). The upper is a new design which takes a lot of design features from the Korean K2. SS2 uses the long stroke piston system. The bolt is similar to that of the M16. |
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even better call........... It would seem a lot of designs are copies of others - with a twist - and the Daewoo has some similarities to this one. The firearm identification wherewithal of this crowd is dizzying- and unparalleled |
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