Like
the rest of China’s military revolution over the past quarter century,
its small-arms revolution is a remarkable achievement.
China Is Now Making Some of the Most Powerful Guns on the Planet
China’s
People’s Liberation Army has traditionally relied on foreign and
Communist bloc weapons manufactured in China under license—or not. Now,
however, as the PLA undergoes an unprecedented modernization, a new
generation of locally designed and manufactured light weaponry is arming
China’s armed forces, from handguns to light machine guns.
China’s
first modern, locally designed and produced assault rifle is the
QBZ-95, currently standard issue across the People’s Liberation Army and
China’s internal security force, the People’s Armed Police. The weapon
first entered Chinese service in the mid-1990s. The
QBZ-95
is a so-called “bullpup” rifle, meaning the trigger and fire-control
group are placed ahead of the magazine, which is inserted into the rifle
stock.
Typical
of bullpup rifles, the QBZ has a twenty-inch barrel but an overall
length of just under thirty inches. This gives it a longer barrel, and
slightly longer range and velocity against the American M4 carbine,
while at the same time having an overall length three inches shorter
than the American gun. The downside of the bullpup design is a fixed
length of pull that is not adjustable to a user’s unique arm length and
the lack of a viable
The
QBZ-95 is fed from a thirty-round magazine and uses a locally designed
5.8-millimeter×42 round. Exactly why China went through the trouble of
designing this round is a mystery, as both NATO 5.56 and Russian 5.45
rounds are well established, and it would have been a simple matter to
simply copy them and their characteristics. One possible explanation is
that, like the Soviet Union, China did not want foreign ammunition to be
able to be fired from their weapons.
Internally
the QBZ-95 has a short-stroke gas piston, rotating bolt design. In that
respect, the insides of the Chinese rifle resembles the Soviet AK-47.
In addition to the standard rifle version, there are three variants. A
carbine version has a shorter overall length of just twenty-four inches,
giving it the compactness of a submachine gun with the stopping power
of an assault rifle. A third weapon, the light-support-weapon variant,
has an even longer barrel and is equipped with a seventy-five-round drum
for delivering suppressive fire.
A
new version of the rifle, the QBZ-95-1 features a number of
improvements that make for a better, combat-ready rifle for a wider
range of users. The improved rifle has a heavier, longer barrel for
sustained firing, a muzzle brake to reduce felt recoil and ergonomics
that are more friendly to left-handed users. The QBZ-94-1 also
reportedly features a bolt-hold-open feature, important for inspecting
and cleaning the breech and a gas system regulator. Perhaps most
importantly, it is chambered for an improved bullet, the DBP-10, which
compares favorably to the U.S. Army’s M855 round, particularly at longer distances.
Unlike the armies of the West, the PLA still sees value in submachine guns. The
QCW-05
is a submachine gun very similar in external configuration to the
QBZ-95, being a bullpup rifle, the main difference being the former uses
a shorter, less powerful 5.8×21 round. A curved, quadruple-stack
magazine inserted into the stock magazine well feeds fifty rounds to the
submachine gun. The QCW-05 is issued to People’s Liberation Army and
People’s Armed Police special operations forces, and is likely issued to
military police units and vehicle crews guarding vital equipment, such
as PLA Rocket Forces crews.
The PLA’s standard pistol is the
QSZ-92 handgun.
Outwardly similar to Western pistols, inwardly the design is dated and
breaks down into four main parts: a polymer receiver, steel barrel,
steel frame and steel rail with attached fire-control group. The
double-action firing system cocks the pistol and releases the firing pin
with a single pull. As 5.8-millimeter×21 rounds are narrower than
Western nine-millimeter Parabellum rounds, the Chinese pistol takes
fifteen- or twenty-round magazines, considerably more than a Glock, Sig
Sauer, or Smith & Wesson M&P nine-millimeter pistol.
The
seeming need for all of China’s modern small arms to use one of many
types of 5.8-millimeter ammunition is a mystery. There appears to be no
rational reason for this. While Western armies are neatly delineated
between 7.62-millimeter ammunition for medium machine guns;
5.56-millimeter ammunition for automatic rifles, assault rifles and
carbines; and nine-millimeter ammunition for pistols (and the occasional
submachine gun), China has no fewer than four different types of
5.8-millimeter ammunition for light machine guns, assault rifles,
submachine guns and pistols. This could create severe logistical
problems in wartime, as a curt request for “5.8-millimeter ammo” could
result in a large shipment of pistol ammunition to the front line.
As
it gradually does in all fields of armaments, China is proclaiming its
independence from foreign weapon and ammunition designs with a range of
modern weaponry. These weapons are a particular point of pride, as this
is the first time in the modern era that China is fully supplied with
indigenously designed and produced small arms. For the first time in
decades, China’s borders are quiet, guarded by Chinese soldiers equipped
with Chinese guns. Like the rest of China’s military revolution over
the past quarter century, China’s small-arms revolution is a remarkable
achievement.
left-handed shooting ability.
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