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STG-44 "one piece no moving parts"

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Iron Gray Metallic (13100) / Filament with spool / 1 kg

Description

eveloped in Nazi Germany, the StG 44 (Sturmgewehr 44) is widely recognized as the world's first true assault rifle. It revolutionized infantry combat by combining the rapid-fire capabilities of a submachine gun with the accuracy and range of a rifle, utilizing a revolutionary 7.92x33mm Kurz (short) intermediate cartridge. 

World War II Origins & Deception

In 1938, the German Army contracted C.G. Haenel to develop a weapon bridging the gap between standard bolt-action rifles (like the Karabiner 98k) and submachine guns. Despite the Heereswaffenamt's progress, Adolf Hitler initially opposed the project, preferring the continued mass production of conventional submachine guns. To bypass Hitler's veto, engineers continued development under the deceptive designation MP 43 (Maschinenpistole 43). 

After troops on the Eastern Front praised the weapon in combat trials, Hitler finally permitted its production. In 1944, recognizing its propaganda and battlefield value, he personally designated it the StG 44(Sturmgewehr 44), translating to "assault rifle".

Post-WWII & Cold War Service

Although over 400,000 were produced, the StG 44 arrived too late to change the outcome of World War II. Following Germany's surrender, its design heavily influenced global firearm development—most notably serving as a fundamental inspiration for the Soviet AK-47. 

Large stockpiles of the StG 44 were captured by the Soviet Union and subsequently distributed to proxy forces and allied nations: 

  • East Germany & Czechoslovakia: Used by paramilitary police and early frontline units until being phased out in the 1950s and early 1960s. 
  • Yugoslavia: Issued to elite parachute units, which used the weapon until it was formally retired in 1983. 
  • Global Proxies: Surplus rifles were widely supplied to anti-colonial and communist movements, seeing deployment in Algeria, Vietnam, and Somalia. 

Modern Usage & Legacy

The StG 44 has demonstrated an incredibly long service life. During the 2011 Libyan Civil War, looted Yugoslav-era stockpiles resurfaced and were utilized by rebel fighters. Similar caches were subsequently discovered and deployed on the frontlines of the Syrian Civil War, and examples have even been sparsely documented in the Russo-Ukrainian conflict. 

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