Actually it was a problem in Vietnam. AFAIK US soldiers were picking up enemy ak's because they wouldn't jam in the most inappropriate moment. Since in the jungle the visibility was pretty bad soldiers often fired in the general direction where the sound was coming from. And the AK had a sound you couldn't mistake which often led to friendly fires.USMCMIDN wrote:US Infantry are not allowed to pick up enemy weapons because of friendly fire incidents. It may seem silly but when bullets are flying and you hear a AK around the corner (even if fired buy a friendly) there is a chance u just round the corner and pull the trigger. US Infantry and I believe all Coalition forces currently deployed right now are not allowed to pick up enemy weapons and USE them in combat. Now there are pics of guys carrying AKs in Iraq and Stan but they are prolly not using them in combat.
However I did see a video of a US Marine in Fallujah who picked up a AK and engaged insurgents with... Now yes your not supposed to do it but if you have no ammo and u need to most likely you would...
SF/O are a different story...
Keep it the way it is... But maybe not letting the HAT kits reload at insurgent cashes? ? ? Or is this hardcoded ?
PS that camo he is wearing was standard issue to US Forces in the beginning of the war it was maybe late 2004 when the Marines heavily fielded MARPAT and outsources the tri and later the US Army did the same with that ugly ACU (lol). The pic could very well be 2001-2005 ish. Some special forces/ops units such as the SEALs, some MARSOC units working with ANA units, CIA, DEA and AF SF/O that are in combat areas are still using the tricolor uniforms to this day.
As for the 556 bullet not having stopping power or enough energy to take down the enemy...theres 55,000+ insurgents killed in Iraq and over 30,000 in Stan that tell a different story. The 556 is a exceptional killing bullet against human targets, especially used correctly alike how Coalition forces are using them. I would keep my M4/16 any day rather then a AK. A major reason is my training and comfort lies with that weapon, muscle memory and not to mention the little goodies you can put on them.
Now Afghanistan and Iraq are a bit different. US weapons aren't as bad as they were in Vietnam and they don't change them right now. But I did see a lot of footage where US soldiers were firing enemy sniper rifles and RPG's. (Or maybe it was PMC but I'm quite sure those were US soldiers.) I'll post it if I will find it here.


