More coming from S Korea

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nathan

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$5K for a Springfield -03A4 sniper, $999 for an old Garand retail. How many old rifles does the AFP have?

Korean war rifles sold back to US

South Korea has come up with a novel way to boost its defence budget - by selling a vast stockpile of old Korean-war rifles to collectors in the US.

The guns were originally sent to Korea as military aid, and some were also used during the war in Vietnam.

For more than five decades, they have been kept mothballed in warehouses.

Most of those on offer are M1 rifles - a weapon once described by US General George S Patton as "the greatest battle-implement ever devised".

The rifles and carbines were originally sent by the Americans to help during the Korean war.

Since then they have occasionally glimpsed daylight, in training exercises for reserve forces, according to the BBC's correspondent in Seoul, John Sudworth.

But for the most part these weapons have been quietly gathering value as collector's items, our correspondent says.

A total of 86,000 M1 rifles will be sold, and another 22,000 carbines - although these have a more patchy reputation.

In the Korean war they had a reputation for jamming in extreme cold weather conditions, and complaints were recorded from US troops that they often failed to stop heavily clothed North Korean or Chinese soldiers at short range.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/8271041.stm
 
I guess those puny rounds couldn't stop them N.Koreans. Should've used some .50BMGs. Goes to show how the grass is always greener and no matter what caliber our military uses, it'll never be enough.
 
Every reference I have read concerning failures to stop during the Korean conflict was with the M1 carbine.
 
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