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Iraq. Manufactured under license as the Tariq. Establishments from 1981 onwards. Production stopped in 2003 and resumed from 2009 onwards. The internal design appears identical to the original pistols. [3][page needed] Zastava CZ 99. 9×19mm Parabellum. Serbia.
Tabuk 7.62mm assault rifle. Iraq. 7.62×39mm. Locally produced copy of the AKM, it can fire rifle grenades. [6][9][10] Tabuk 5.56mm assault rifle. Iraq. 5.56×45mm NATO. Locally produced copy of the AKM or AKMS, presumed to fire the M193 cartridge.
Iraqi EE-9 Cascavel armoured car hit by Coalition tank fire in February 1991. Coalition aircraft inbound during Operation Desert Shield.. List of Gulf War military equipment is a summary of the various military weapons and vehicles used by the different nations during the Gulf War of 1990–1991.
Israel used the M109 against Egypt in the 1973 Yom Kippur War and in the 1982 and 2006 Lebanon Wars. Iran used the M109 in the Iran–Iraq War in the 1980s. The M109 saw service with the British, U.S. Army, Egyptian and Saudi Arabian Armies in the 1991 Gulf War. The M109 also saw service with the U.S. Army in the Iraq War from 2003 to 2011.
Light machine gun Soviet Union Both RPK and RPK-74 variants used. [7] Type 81: Light machine gun China Used in Iraq. [10] Browning M1919A6 [7] Medium machine gun United States KGK [7] Medium machine gun Hungarian People's Republic: DShK: Heavy machine gun Soviet Union Stolen from the Iraqi or Syrian army. [21] KPV: Heavy machine gun Soviet Union
Tabuk Sniper Rifle. The Tabuk Sniper Rifle is an Iraqi semi-automatic designated marksman rifle, made from a modified version of the Zastava M76 sniper rifle. The Tabuk Rifle was manufactured at the Al-Qadissiya Establishments in Iraq [7][8][9] using machinery sold to Iraq by Zastava Arms of Yugoslavia when Saddam Hussein was president.
Scout Sniper Day Scope (SSDS)—Schmidt and Bender PM II 3–12×50. The M40 rifle is a bolt-action sniper rifle used by the United States Marine Corps. [1] It has had four variants: the M40, M40A1, M40A3, and M40A5. [2] The M40 was introduced in 1966. The changeover to the A1 model was completed in the 1970s, the A3 in the 2000s, and the A5 in ...
The M21 remained the Army's primary sniper rifle until 1988, when it was replaced by the M24 Sniper Weapon System; some M21s were later re-issued and used in the Iraq War. [12] [3] In standard military use, the M21 uses a 20-round box magazine as the other members of the M14 family and weighs 11 pounds (5.27 kg) without the scope. [13]