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Only Japanese Special Forces Group. [27] H&K MP7: Personal defense weapon: HK 4.6×30mm Germany: Only Japanese Special Forces Group. [28] Assault rifles and battle rifles M4 carbine: Assault rifle: 5.56×45mm NATO United States: Only Japanese Special Forces Group. [29] FN SCAR: Assault rifle: 5.56×45mm NATO Belgium: Only Japanese Special ...
Type 92 battalion gun captured and used by USMC on Saipan Type 92 battalion gun captured on Guadalcanal. The Type 92 battalion gun (九二式歩兵砲, Kyūni-shiki Hoheihō) was a 70mm (2.75 in) light howitzer used by the Imperial Japanese Army during the Second Sino-Japanese War and World War II. [3]
These weapons consisted of; rifles, Pistols, Submachine guns, Machine guns, infantry mortars, grenades and grande discharges, Light anti-aircraft weapons, Anti-tank weapons, Flamethrower, and Military swords. These weapons were utilized to help build the strength of the Japanese Imperial Navy but also defend and attack against opposing Navies.
This is a list of Japanese infantry weapons in Second Sino-Japanese War. Infantry regular artillery. 7cm field gun (75 mm) [1] 7 cm mountain gun (75mm) [2]
World War I Japanese infantry weapons (6 P) Pages in category "Weapons of Japan" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total.
Type 11 70 mm infantry mortar; Type 26 revolver; Type 30 bayonet; Type 30 rifle; Type 35 rifle; Type 38 rifle; Type 44 carbine; Type 92 heavy machine gun; Type 93 150 mm infantry mortar; Type 93/Type 100 flamethrower; Hamada Type pistol; Type 94 Nambu pistol; Type 94 90 mm infantry mortar; Type 96 light machine gun; Type 97 81 mm infantry ...
The Japanese Army, noting that grenades were short-ranged weapons, began efforts to optimize these weapons for close-in infantry fighting. After studying employment of grenades and mortars on the battlefield, the Japanese Army developed hand grenades, rifle grenades, and grenade and mortar shell dischargers (small mortars) suited to warfare in typical short-range combat environments such as ...
The Military Press (1984) ISBN 0-517-42313-8; War Department Special Series No 25 Japanese Field Artillery October 1944; US Department of War, TM 30-480, Handbook on Japanese Military Forces, Louisiana State University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-8071-2013-8; Felter, Bob. "Arcata"s Cannon". Humboldt Historian, Winter 2012 Volume 60 Number 4