Guns of Ukraine war picture thread

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Speaking of Dragunovs and snipers,...it seems there is a legend going around,...unprovable and likely untrue,...of a Ukrainian sniper known as "The Reaper". Some reports claim his identity is Volodymyr Vist. Apparently that is not an uncommon name, as I found 3 such named individuals on Facebook.

But whether real or imagined or created as propaganda, he is known of on BOTH sides, and he is either the boogyman in the treeline (if you're Russian) or the unseen angel who has your six (if you're Ukrainian). Supposedly his specialty is to pick off tank commanders riding in their open hatch.

As I say,...unprovable legend. But whether he be real or imagined,..."The Reaper" stalks the countryside in Ukraine.
 
Even before the war, there was some private firearm ownership in Ukraine. Those few folks who were well off enough to have a small collection of guns have been an invaluable resource in the past few weeks as average citizens have been volunteering to take up arms. Ukraine has been able to pass out weapons, but not so able to give everyone proper training. Gun clubs across the country that still have access to ranges or who have built improvised ranges in city centers, have been pulling their patriotic duty giving basic marksmanship. With ammo for actual combat rifles at a premium and needed for distribution to soldiers,...22lr weapons have been pressed into service for training. Here we see a Ruger Precision Rimfire being used to teach first time civilian students.

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Here we see another volunteer, seemingly outfitted with a privately owned AR. Without any official unit insignia or patches, but wearing commercially available gear, indicates this person was able to outfit themselves prior to the current madness.
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Suck My Glock said:
Speaking of Dragunovs and snipers,...it seems there is a legend going around,...unprovable and likely untrue,...of a Ukrainian sniper known as "The Reaper". Some reports claim his identity is Volodymyr Vist. Apparently that is not an uncommon name, as I found 3 such named individuals on Facebook.

But whether real or imagined or created as propaganda, he is known of on BOTH sides, and he is either the boogyman in the treeline (if you're Russian) or the unseen angel who has your six (if you're Ukrainian). Supposedly his specialty is to pick off tank commanders riding in their open hatch.

As I say,...unprovable legend. But whether he be real or imagined,..."The Reaper" stalks the countryside in Ukraine.

I thought 'The Reaper' is Nicholas Irving. Also 'Wali' is there from Kanaduh.
 
Real or not there’s always some boogeyman sniper rumor floating about in a war zone and invariably they have a cool name. When I was in Baghdad in 2005 supposedly AQI contracted the “Spider” to shoot us. He was allegedly from Turkey, used an SVD (of course), and never missed-always shooting his target at the base of the spine where there was no body armor. Did he exist? I dunno. But I can tell when I heard the stories I looked much more intently at windows and rooftops.
 
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This is Olena Bilozerska, 42, already a veteran sniper prior to the invasion from her time on the border with Donbas, where she had 10 confirmed kills prior to the invasion. Whereabouts currently unknown and MIA.

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Wish someone would start a "Girls with Guns of Ukraine war" picture thread, just sayin....
 
Here's a unique photo,...the entire unit seems outfitted with AKSUs (Krinks). They are usually only found with police forces or government officials and representatives, who likely received them from police arsenals.
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Here we finally see up close enough to identify this logo I have been seeing on all sorts of AR15s in Ukraine. At first, I didn't bother copying the pictures and posting them here, because I thought it might indicate some sort of engineered photo ops for propaganda purposes, using the same few weapons to take dramatic photos for public consumption. But I've finally seen this same logo on enough AR15s all throughout Ukraine to realize there are many of this brand in circulation, and in this photo I finally got a close enough look to identify it. DIAMONDBACK FIREARMS. Apparently they sold a truckload of these over there to civilians before the war started. In fact, I found a Ukrainian website still up for a gun shop in Kyiv where these remain advertised. https://shopgun.com.ua/diamondback Interestingly, the price for a Diamondback AR15 in Ukraine before the invasion was 40,000 Hryvnia, which is about $1350 bucks. By comparison, as a Ukrainian you could have bought an AK47 for just 24,000 Hryvnia, or $815 dollars.

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Here's a couple of interesting fellows. No insignia or markings anywhere to be seen. Knock-off copy of current U.S. OCP pattern camouflage. Their AK74s are certainly not stock. Are these guys Special Forces or just well equipped volunteers, or maybe contractors? Who the hell knows?
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And here we see a dude with a 7.62 Krink and suppressor. I find his pre-applied tourniquet an interesting choice. Not only does the color signify which side he's on,...no need to fumble breaking it out of the packaging if he gets wounded. Just reach over with his other arm, cinch it, and keep rocking. He ought to have another on the other side.
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Here is the NATO Secretary General greeting Slovakian soldiers maintaining the border with Ukraine. The Slovaks are still using the VZ58, even though they are currently transitioning to the BREN 805.
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Here we see another Tavor, with a PK in the background.
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Here is yet another group of volunteers with their privately owned weapons, outfitted with commercial kit. Notice the HK G36k, the full size AR15A2 and the suppressed Steyr AUG.

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Described as equipment brought by combatants from Georgia.
CZ 806 Bren-2 on the left and a Beretta MG 42/52 on the right.

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This is Anya Kyrychenko, 9 years old, from just outside Mariupol. These were obviously posed PR pictures, taken by her father and holding his shotgun. These pics were posted 6 days ago. Since then, Mariupol has been encircled. No one knows where Anya or her father are now and can't be reached.

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Here's another volunteer, this one with a Ruger American and suppressor, hoping to be a sniper.
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This guy has an expensive system there,...but no optic? Odd.
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Kel-Tec and Adams Arms donating weapons to Ukraine freedom fighters

https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-american-gunmakers-3c5fa03742ebc5806293a84a0e2b73cd

MIAMI (AP) — Adrian Kellgren’s family-owned gun company in Florida was left holding a $200,000 shipment of semi-automatic rifles after a longtime customer in Ukraine suddenly went silent during Vladimir Putin’s invasion of the country.

Fearing the worst, Kellgren and his company KelTec decided to put those stranded 400 guns to use, sending them to Ukraine’s nascent resistance movement to help civilians fight back against a Russian military that has been repeatedly shelling their apartment buildings, schools, hospitals and hiding places.

“The American people want to do something,” said Kellgren, a former U.S. Navy pilot. “We enjoy our freedoms, we cherish those things. And when we see a group of people out there getting hammered like this, it’s heartbreaking.”

Cocoa-based KelTec’s donation is a high-profile example of Americans collecting guns, ammunition, body armor, helmets and other tactical gear in response to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s promise to arm his citizens. But many similar grassroots efforts have been snarled by inexperience with the complex web of regulations governing the international shipment of such equipment.

Kellgren, who has dealt with such red tape for years, managed to connect through a Ukrainian neighbor with a diplomat in the Ukrainian Embassy who helped him secure [highlight=yellow]a federal arms export license in just four days. That process can often take months.[/highlight]

This week, as Congress debated whether to send more advanced weapons and defense systems to Ukraine, workers at KelTec’s warehouse forklifted four plastic-wrapped pallets containing their 9 mm foldable rifles for delivery to an undisclosed NATO-run facility. From there, the shipment’s new recipient, Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense, will be responsible for smuggling the weapons into the war zone.

“That’s when the real derring-do and heroism begins,” Kellgren said.

From California to New York, elected officials, sheriff’s departments and nonprofits say they have also collected thousands of sets of body armor and millions of rounds of ammunition for Ukraine.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis kicked off a campaign last week to ask police and sheriff’s departments to donate surplus ballistic helmets and other equipment. “We know that it can urgently be used to help stop Putin and save Ukraine,” he said.

But hazards abound: One New York City nonprofit leading an effort to collect tactical gear had 400 bulletproof vests stolen before they could be dispatched.

Many of the organizers have no clue how to navigate international arms export rules, which sometimes require approvals from the Departments of State, Commerce and Defense to ship even non-lethal tactical gear. Organizers of one such drive in New York are piggybacking on KelTec’s license to export 60 long guns they recently collected.

“I’m hoping that this movement spreads through the whole United States and every gun store and every gun manufacturer in the U.S. accepts these donations,” Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman said at a news conference Friday.

[highlight=yellow]The National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade group for firearms manufacturers, distributed step-by-step instructions this week to its more than 8,000 members on how to apply for an expedited export license. They also provided a list of specific sniper rifles, pistols and ammo requested by Ukraine’s Embassy in Washington.[/highlight]

KelTec hopes to arrange more shipments in the future. Its license allows the export of up to 10,000 weapons and the company has offered the Ukrainians their own production line and weekly shipments.

Details of KelTec’s efforts surfaced in a Justice Department filing this week by a Maryland-based real estate lawyer, Lukas Jan Kaczmarek, who said that as a volunteer with the Ukrainian-American Bar Association he is helping Ukraine acquire weapons in tandem with Volodymyr Muzylov, the first secretary at the Ukraine Embassy.

“I expect to work in this capacity for the duration of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and I have not, am not, and shall not receive any monetary compensation for my assistance,” Kaczmarek wrote in his registration as a foreign agent of the Zelenskyy government.

KelTec isn’t the only arms manufacturer to have answered the call.

Another Florida company, [highlight=yellow]Adams Arms, posted on its Facebook account a video of what it said is a shipment of carbine rifles destined for Ukraine.[/highlight] The company has also started selling T-shirts emblazoned with the iconic final broadcast of a bombarded Ukrainian Border Guard unit that told a Russian warship to “Go (expletive) Yourself!” Proceeds from shirt sales will go to the Ukrainian National Bank’s war funds.

While rifles are no match for Putin’s firepower of Sukhoi fighter jets and cluster bombs, they can play an important role if the Russians get bogged down in street-to-street combat, retired U.S. Army Major John Spencer said.

The semi-automatic rifles KelTec is shipping are perhaps even more valuable than high-tech, anti-aircraft missiles that require extensive training beyond the reach of most civilians, many of whom have never even held a gun before, he said.

“Every shipment of firearms is critical,” said Spencer, an urban warfare analyst at the Madison Policy Forum, a New York-based think tank. “You’re giving one more fighter, out of tens of thousands, the opportunity to resist with a simple-to-use weapon.”

Kellgren said he’s been inspired by the resourcefulness and tenacity of Ukrainian citizens and is confident the rifles he’s sending will make a difference.

“The people of Ukraine have had mostly just civilian firearms and they’re holding off a superpower,” he said. “So the X-factor here not isn’t necessarily what equipment you’re holding. ... It comes down to the will to fight.”

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Here's a new one from @UAWeapons.

We believe these rifles were donated by one of the Baltic states. In the late 90s Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia received huge quantities of M14 rifles from the US. Hopefully this donation included stocks of ammunition for it.


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MarkItZero said:
How has there not been one PPS?

Actually, I found one pic of a dude with a PPS43, if you look back on page 1. But yeah, I expected to find a buttload of old PPSh41s and such, but apparently they gave all those away to Vietnam and other hotspots during the Cold War. Even the 7.62 AKs are pretty uncommon for the same reason. Once they started converting over to 5.45x39 in earnest, they started giving away the old stuff as party favors to all troublemakers around the globe up until 1990. And then, they started selling them for hard cash on the open arms market.

Actually, during the run up to the partition of the country in 2014, sympathizers of the ethnic Russian factions did all sorts of skullduggery to liberate weapon stocks into the hands of the Russian-aligned groups. If you look at the pictures from 2014 on until before the invasion last month, you find the Russian breakaway dudes are often armed with the old stuff, because that's what they were able to secure for themselves back when this all began. When Russia started offering help and supply, they just started giving away lots of other old stuff, because it made logistics simple, and Russia didn't really need all that old 7.62x39 ammo laying around anyway.
 
aroyobob said:
Here's a new one from @UAWeapons.

We believe these rifles were donated by one of the Baltic states. In the late 90s Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia received huge quantities of M14 rifles from the US. Hopefully this donation included stocks of ammunition for it.


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The M-14’s were provided to the Baltic’s under the US Military Assistance Program. In the case of Lithuania they were VERY hot to get M-14’s when Estonia received a bunch. A former retired US Army infantry full colonel named Jonas Kronkaitis (Lithuanian-American) returned to Lithuania to help/assist their military. He was a HUGE M-14 fan and later became their minister of defense. In the case of Lithuania they had to pay for the packing and shipping of the rifles from Anniston to Vilnius. Winchester later built a brand new factory (where all that GGG ammo comes from) in Lithuania to feed them. I know Lithuania also got rebuilt 1911A1’s from Anniston (prior to acquiring the M-14’s). There are a number of different aspects to the Military Assistance Program one of them being that the country receiving them technically doesn’t actually own them i.e. if they transfer, sell, or destroy the items they must get permission from the USG (remember all those M-1 Garands and carbines South Korea wanted to return to CONUS during the Obama Administration? Same deal). I suspect the USG has either given permission before or after the fact if M-14’s were indeed given to Ukraine. My gut feeling is that while all three of the Baltic’s hate the Russians the Lithuanians hate them the most hence those M-14 probably came from there.
 
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