Tuesday, December 29, 2009

New camouflage pattern to be tested ....

Sumrak in Palma Leto pattern

Headquarters chose us to field-test the new camouflage pattern. We are honoured that we are granted such a great degree of confidence and we will undertake a series of tests of both, the pattern and cut. Also Headquarters sent us goods to restock our devastating warmachine`s depots.



AKSU dropcase, Flora canteen pouches and helmet cover and plastic canteen

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Headquarters orders you to have a happy new year and successful campaigns in 2010! Enjoy NOW.



Friday, December 11, 2009

New supplies arrived at the frontline

Headquarters fielded us the 6sh92-3 Vest to test if it fits our requirements. Overall this gear is quite the same as the one we are currently equipped with, though it might be very helpful for night time operations, due to it's colour scheme and the way the pockets are closed, since they can be opened very silently compared to the velcro closed vests we are issued right now.


First Aid Dressing, 2Pcs, Plum Handguard, 6sh92-3 Vest

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

The Legion's arsenal grows....

Since our advances go on, the High Command recognized our value for their offensive plans and equipped our arsenal with more powerful equipment. The enemy shivers when our troops bring up their AKMS'. Also equipped with PBS-1 Silencers our special operation capabilities have been raised, like Comrade Ramius said: "They will tremble at the sound of our silence!"


Kalash (with PBS-1) and VFC AKMS

Sunday, November 22, 2009

The Legion advances...

As the front is moving towards the Alps, the Legion had it's most recent campaign in Styria in the Area of "Perchau". A reconnaisance troop formed of long-serving members of The Legion was on a routine mission, it ran into an outpost of the NATO forces. Our brave soldiers drove back the enemy defence lines far beyond their associated positions, took their water supplies and burnt their inadequate equipment. Soviet power and tactics overwhelmed the enemy forces and made them run back home, crying for reinforcement. After our tremendous victory over the Capitalists, we documented our victory for the following generations.


Our brave Heroes

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Superior Firepower


AKMS (small picture: AKMS feat. PBS-1 suppressor and drummag)

Since our troops have been considered Special Purpose Troops, our High Command decided to equip us with the good old 7,62x39 round. With this new (old) guns our superiority on the field has moved on to the next level. Now no enemy formations can stand our attacks and have already started to withdraw across the Alps. Of course we were also equipped with sound suppressors for our new equipment for conducting night operations. This is a big step ahead!

Friday, October 30, 2009

железный легион strikes again!

The Iron Legion got their patches and is ready to rumble again!
Thanks to the Moscow Propaganda Center we were equipped with the new patches to keep up the fight for the souls and hearts of the local people in our deployment area. We are looking forward that they will soon see that the great Soviet Union is just here to liberate them!


Thursday, October 29, 2009

Supplies for the progressive Soviet Fighting Machinery arrived!


VDV Canteen dated '73, 6ш18 dated '84

Recently a supply convoi entered our deployment area andrestocked our dried out warehouses. Our troops recieved their needed equipment. A Soviet VDV Messkit/Canteen dated '73 and a 6ш18 (6sh18) SVD Pouch.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

мёртвая рука

Source: Wired Magazine



Valery Yarynich glances nervously over his shoulder. Clad in a brown leather jacket, the 72-year-old former Soviet colonel is hunkered in the back of the dimly lit Iron Gate restaurant in Washington, DC. It's March 2009—the Berlin Wall came down two decades ago—but the lean and fit Yarynich is as jumpy as an informant dodging the KGB. He begins to whisper, quietly but firmly.

"The Perimeter system is very, very nice," he says. "We remove unique responsibility from high politicians and the military." He looks around again.

Yarynich is talking about Russia's doomsday machine. That's right, an actual doomsday device—a real, functioning version of the ultimate weapon, always presumed to exist only as a fantasy of apocalypse-obsessed science fiction writers and paranoid über-hawks. The thing that historian Lewis Mumford called "the central symbol of this scientifically organized nightmare of mass extermination." Turns out Yarynich, a 30-year veteran of the Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces and Soviet General Staff, helped build one.

Chart source: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Natural Resources Defense Council

The point of the system, he explains, was to guarantee an automatic Soviet response to an American nuclear strike. Even if the US crippled the USSR with a surprise attack, the Soviets could still hit back. It wouldn't matter if the US blew up the Kremlin, took out the defense ministry, severed the communications network, and killed everyone with stars on their shoulders. Ground-based sensors would detect that a devastating blow had been struck and a counterattack would be launched.

The technical name was Perimeter, but some called it Mertvaya Ruka, or Dead Hand. It was built 25 years ago and remained a closely guarded secret. With the demise of the USSR, word of the system did leak out, but few people seemed to notice. In fact, though Yarynich and a former Minuteman launch officer named Bruce Blair have been writing about Perimeter since 1993 in numerous books and newspaper articles, its existence has not penetrated the public mind or the corridors of power. The Russians still won't discuss it, and Americans at the highest levels—including former top officials at the State Department and White House—say they've never heard of it. When I recently told former CIA director James Woolsey that the USSR had built a doomsday device, his eyes grew cold. "I hope to God the Soviets were more sensible than that." They weren't.

The system remains so shrouded that Yarynich worries his continued openness puts him in danger. He might have a point: One Soviet official who spoke with Americans about the system died in a mysterious fall down a staircase. But Yarynich takes the risk. He believes the world needs to know about Dead Hand. Because, after all, it is still in place.

The system that Yarynich helped build came online in 1985, after some of the most dangerous years of the Cold War. Throughout the '70s, the USSR had steadily narrowed the long US lead in nuclear firepower. At the same time, post-Vietnam, recession-era America seemed weak and confused. Then in strode Ronald Reagan, promising that the days of retreat were over. It was morning in America, he said, and twilight in the Soviet Union.

Part of the new president's hard-line approach was to make the Soviets believe that the US was unafraid of nuclear war. Many of his advisers had long advocated modeling and actively planning for nuclear combat. These were the progeny of Herman Kahn, author of On Thermonuclear War and Thinking About the Unthinkable. They believed that the side with the largest arsenal and an expressed readiness to use it would gain leverage during every crisis.

The new administration began expanding the US nuclear arsenal and priming the silos. And it backed up the bombs with bluster. In his 1981 Senate confirmation hearings, Eugene Rostow, incoming head of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, signaled that the US just might be crazy enough to use its weapons, declaring that Japan "not only survived but flourished after the nuclear attack" of 1945. Speaking of a possible US-Soviet exchange, he said, "Some estimates predict that there would be 10 million casualties on one side and 100 million on another. But that is not the whole of the population."

Meanwhile, in ways both small and large, US behavior toward the Soviets took on a harsher edge. Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin lost his reserved parking pass at the State Department. US troops swooped into tiny Grenada to defeat communism in Operation Urgent Fury. US naval exercises pushed ever closer to Soviet waters.

The strategy worked. Moscow soon believed the new US leadership really was ready to fight a nuclear war. But the Soviets also became convinced that the US was now willing to start a nuclear war. "The policy of the Reagan administration has to be seen as adventurous and serving the goal of world domination," Soviet marshal Nikolai Ogarkov told a gathering of the Warsaw Pact chiefs of staff in September 1982. "In 1941, too, there were many among us who warned against war and many who did not believe a war was coming," Ogarkov said, referring to the German invasion of his country. "Thus, the situation is not only very serious but also very dangerous."

A few months later, Reagan made one of the most provocative moves of the Cold War. He announced that the US was going to develop a shield of lasers and nuclear weapons in space to defend against Soviet warheads. He called it missile defense; critics mocked it as "Star Wars."

To Moscow it was the Death Star—and it confirmed that the US was planning an attack. It would be impossible for the system to stop thousands of incoming Soviet missiles at once, so missile defense made sense only as a way of mopping up after an initial US strike. The US would first fire its thousands of weapons at Soviet cities and missile silos. Some Soviet weapons would survive for a retaliatory launch, but Reagan's shield could block many of those. Thus, Star Wars would nullify the long-standing doctrine of mutually assured destruction, the principle that neither side would ever start a nuclear war since neither could survive a counterattack.

As we know now, Reagan was not planning a first strike. According to his private diaries and personal letters, he genuinely believed he was bringing about lasting peace. (He once told Gorbachev he might be a reincarnation of the human who invented the first shield.) The system, Reagan insisted, was purely defensive. But as the Soviets knew, if the Americans were mobilizing for attack, that's exactly what you'd expect them to say. And according to Cold War logic, if you think the other side is about to launch, you should do one of two things: Either launch first or convince the enemy that you can strike back even if you're dead.

Perimeter ensures the ability to strike back, but it's no hair-trigger device. It was designed to lie semi-dormant until switched on by a high official in a crisis. Then it would begin monitoring a network of seismic, radiation, and air pressure sensors for signs of nuclear explosions. Before launching any retaliatory strike, the system had to check off four if/then propositions: If it was turned on, then it would try to determine that a nuclear weapon had hit Soviet soil. If it seemed that one had, the system would check to see if any communication links to the war room of the Soviet General Staff remained. If they did, and if some amount of time—likely ranging from 15 minutes to an hour—passed without further indications of attack, the machine would assume officials were still living who could order the counterattack and shut down. But if the line to the General Staff went dead, then Perimeter would infer that apocalypse had arrived. It would immediately transfer launch authority to whoever was manning the system at that moment deep inside a protected bunker—bypassing layers and layers of normal command authority. At that point, the ability to destroy the world would fall to whoever was on duty: maybe a high minister sent in during the crisis, maybe a 25-year-old junior officer fresh out of military academy. And if that person decided to press the button ... If/then. If/then. If/then. If/then.

Once initiated, the counterattack would be controlled by so-called command missiles. Hidden in hardened silos designed to withstand the massive blast and electromagnetic pulses of a nuclear explosion, these missiles would launch first and then radio down coded orders to whatever Soviet weapons had survived the first strike. At that point, the machines will have taken over the war. Soaring over the smoldering, radioactive ruins of the motherland, and with all ground communications destroyed, the command missiles would lead the destruction of the US.

The US did build versions of these technologies, deploying command missiles in what was called the Emergency Rocket Communications System. It also developed seismic and radiation sensors to monitor for nuclear tests or explosions the world over. But the US never combined it all into a system of zombie retaliation. It feared accidents and the one mistake that could end it all.

Instead, airborne American crews with the capacity and authority to launch retaliatory strikes were kept aloft throughout the Cold War. Their mission was similar to Perimeter's, but the system relied more on people and less on machines.

And in keeping with the principles of Cold War game theory, the US told the Soviets all about it.

Great Moments in Nuclear Game Theory


Permissive Action Links

When: 1960s
What: Midway through the Cold War, American leaders began to worry that a rogue US officer might launch a small, unauthorized strike, prompting massive retaliation. So in 1962, Robert McNamara ordered every nuclear weapon locked with numerical codes.
Effect: None. Irritated by the restriction, Strategic Air Command set all the codes to strings of zeros. The Defense Department didn't learn of the subterfuge until 1977.


US-Soviet Hotline

When: 1963
What: The USSR and US set up a direct line, reserved for emergencies. The goal was to prevent miscommunication about nuclear launches.
Effect: Unclear. To many it was a safeguard. But one Defense official in the 1970s hypothesized that the Soviet leader could authorize a small strike and then call to blame the launch on a renegade, saying, "But if you promise not to respond, I will order an absolute lockdown immediately."

Missile Defense

When: 1983
What: President Reagan proposed a system of nuclear weapons and lasers in space to shoot down enemy missiles. He considered it a tool for peace and promised to share the technology.
Effect: Destabilizing. The Soviets believed the true purpose of the "Star Wars" system was to back up a US first strike. The technology couldn't stop a massive Soviet launch, they figured, but it might thwart a weakened Soviet response.

Airborne Command Post

When: 1961-1990
What: For three decades, the US kept aircraft in the sky 24/7 that could communicate with missile silos and give the launch order if ground-based command centers were ever destroyed.
Effect: Stabilizing. Known as Looking Glass, it was the American equivalent of Perimeter, guaranteeing that the US could launch a counterattack. And the US told the Soviets all about it, ensuring that it served as a deterrent.


The first mention of a doomsday machine, according to P. D. Smith, author of Doomsday Men, was on an NBC radio broadcast in February 1950, when the atomic scientist Leo Szilard described a hypothetical system of hydrogen bombs that could cover the world in radioactive dust and end all human life. "Who would want to kill everybody on earth?" he asked rhetorically. Someone who wanted to deter an attacker. If Moscow were on the brink of military defeat, for example, it could halt an invasion by declaring, "We will detonate our H-bombs."

A decade and a half later, Stanley Kubrick's satirical masterpiece Dr. Strangelove permanently embedded the idea in the public imagination. In the movie, a rogue US general sends his bomber wing to preemptively strike the USSR. The Soviet ambassador then reveals that his country has just deployed a device that will automatically respond to any nuclear attack by cloaking the planet in deadly "cobalt-thorium-G."

"The whole point of the doomsday machine is lost if you keep it a secret!" cries Dr. Strangelove. "Why didn't you tell the world?" After all, such a device works as a deterrent only if the enemy is aware of its existence. In the movie, the Soviet ambassador can only lamely respond, "It was to be announced at the party congress on Monday."

In real life, however, many Mondays and many party congresses passed after Perimeter was created. So why didn't the Soviets tell the world, or at least the White House, about it? No evidence exists that top Reagan administration officials knew anything about a Soviet doomsday plan. George Shultz, secretary of state for most of Reagan's presidency, told me that he had never heard of it.

In fact, the Soviet military didn't even inform its own civilian arms negotiators. "I was never told about Perimeter," says Yuli Kvitsinsky, lead Soviet negotiator at the time the device was created. And the brass still won't talk about it today. In addition to Yarynich, a few other people confirmed the existence of the system to me—notably former Soviet space official Alexander Zheleznyakov and defense adviser Vitali Tsygichko—but most questions about it are still met with scowls and sharp nyets. At an interview in Moscow this February with Vladimir Dvorkin, another former official in the Strategic Rocket Forces, I was ushered out of the room almost as soon as I brought up the topic.

So why was the US not informed about Perimeter? Kremlinologists have long noted the Soviet military's extreme penchant for secrecy, but surely that couldn't fully explain what appears to be a self-defeating strategic error of extraordinary magnitude.

The silence can be attributed partly to fears that the US would figure out how to disable the system. But the principal reason is more complicated and surprising. According to both Yarynich and Zheleznyakov, Perimeter was never meant as a traditional doomsday machine. The Soviets had taken game theory one step further than Kubrick, Szilard, and everyone else: They built a system to deter themselves.

By guaranteeing that Moscow could hit back, Perimeter was actually designed to keep an overeager Soviet military or civilian leader from launching prematurely during a crisis. The point, Zheleznyakov says, was "to cool down all these hotheads and extremists. No matter what was going to happen, there still would be revenge. Those who attack us will be punished."

And Perimeter bought the Soviets time. After the US installed deadly accurate Pershing II missiles on German bases in December 1983, Kremlin military planners assumed they would have only 10 to 15 minutes from the moment radar picked up an attack until impact. Given the paranoia of the era, it is not unimaginable that a malfunctioning radar, a flock of geese that looked like an incoming warhead, or a misinterpreted American war exercise could have triggered a catastrophe. Indeed, all these events actually occurred at some point. If they had happened at the same time, Armageddon might have ensued.

Perimeter solved that problem. If Soviet radar picked up an ominous but ambiguous signal, the leaders could turn on Perimeter and wait. If it turned out to be geese, they could relax and Perimeter would stand down. Confirming actual detonations on Soviet soil is far easier than confirming distant launches. "That is why we have the system," Yarynich says. "To avoid a tragic mistake. "

The mistake that both Yarynich and his counterpart in the United States, Bruce Blair, want to avoid now is silence. It's long past time for the world to come to grips with Perimeter, they argue. The system may no longer be a central element of Russian strategy—US-based Russian arms expert Pavel Podvig calls it now "just another cog in the machine"—but Dead Hand is still armed.

To Blair, who today runs a think tank in Washington called the World Security Institute, such dismissals are unacceptable. Though neither he nor anyone in the US has up-to-the-minute information on Perimeter, he sees the Russians' refusal to retire it as yet another example of the insufficient reduction of forces on both sides. There is no reason, he says, to have thousands of armed missiles on something close to hair-trigger alert. Despite how far the world has come, there's still plenty of opportunity for colossal mistakes. When I talked to him recently, he spoke both in sorrow and in anger: "The Cold War is over. But we act the same way that we used to."

Yarynich, likewise, is committed to the principle that knowledge about nuclear command and control means safety. But he also believes that Perimeter can still serve a useful purpose. Yes, it was designed as a self-deterrent, and it filled that role well during the hottest days of the Cold War. But, he wonders, couldn't it now also play the traditional role of a doomsday device? Couldn't it deter future enemies if publicized?

The waters of international conflict never stay calm for long. A recent case in point was the heated exchange between the Bush administration and Russian president Vladimir Putin over Georgia. "It's nonsense not to talk about Perimeter," Yarynich says. If the existence of the device isn't made public, he adds, "we have more risk in future crises. And crisis is inevitable."

As Yarynich describes Perimeter with pride, I challenge him with the classic critique of such systems: What if they fail? What if something goes wrong? What if a computer virus, earthquake, reactor meltdown, and power outage conspire to convince the system that war has begun?

Yarynich sips his beer and dismisses my concerns. Even given an unthinkable series of accidents, he reminds me, there would still be at least one human hand to prevent Perimeter from ending the world. Prior to 1985, he says, the Soviets designed several automatic systems that could launch counterattacks without any human involvement whatsoever. But all these devices were rejected by the high command. Perimeter, he points out, was never a truly autonomous doomsday device. "If there are explosions and all communications are broken," he says, "then the people in this facility can—I would like to underline can—launch."

Yes, I agree, a human could decide in the end not to press the button. But that person is a soldier, isolated in an underground bunker, surrounded by evidence that the enemy has just destroyed his homeland and everyone he knows. Sensors have gone off; timers are ticking. There's a checklist, and soldiers are trained to follow checklists.

Wouldn't any officer just launch? I ask Yarynich what he would do if he were alone in the bunker. He shakes his head. "I cannot say if I would push the button."

It might not actually be a button, he then explains. It could now be some kind of a key or other secure form of switch. He's not absolutely sure. After all, he says, Dead Hand is continuously being upgraded.

Senior editor Nicholas Thompson (nicholas_thompson@wired.com) is the author of The Hawk and the Dove: Paul Nitze, George Kennan, and the History of the Cold War.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

The Legion strikes back!

Saturday, October 10th 2009 the Iron Legion deployed to the conflict zone by train.
We fortified our positions and defeated the enemy successfully. After the battle casaulties were transported to the rear and the victourious Mountaineers took this photo as a trophy.


Friday, October 9, 2009

Patchizzz!

Our patches are done and on the way to our Headquarters! Watch out for us at the next game...


Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Supplies from the Motherland!

Товарищи! We just got new supplies which were needed for our troops. Thanks to our comrades we can now keep up our fight against our enemies.


10x 6ш5 (6sh5/Slings) dated '85, 1 dated '91, Soviet Flag dated '78 and dust goggles

Москва the "orignal" Adidas Clones

Those are copies of the Adidas "Gazelle" which were availble from 1968 on. First introduced in the 80s the Москва saw use from the Soviet-Afghan war until today. This pair shows a different logo on them than others which are known. (Which are/were more similar to the Adidas Logo)


Sunday, October 4, 2009

Realsword SVD "Version 2"

Land Warrior Airsoft LTD has now the Realsword SVD back in stock, and this one is the Version 2!
The differences between the first and second version are, that the second version has another designed tappet plate (for better upgrade capability) and a built in switch to unlock the gearbox after it locked in single auto fire. With this switch (located in the magwell) you can turn the SVD to fullauto which will unlock the gearbox (you need a tool to reach the switch and you can just reach it when the magazine is taken out, so it will not be possible to fire the gun fullauto with an attached magazine).


Monday, September 28, 2009

The Truth behind 14 gw. GSD

Project: Irbis / Snow Leopard (Soviet mountaineering troops)

History


After the war in 1945 most of the Soviet divisions were disbanded, with them a big part of the soviet „mountain rifle divisions“. The last designated mountain divisions were disbanded in 1967, after this some motorized rifle divisions got a special „winter and mountain training“ although trainedlike mentioned before, they were at best insufficient prepared and equipped for mountain warfare.

The reason for this developement was the expected scenario for a conflict with the NATO, which was expected to be a mainly mechanized conflict.

In the Soviet-Afghan War (1979-1989) the Soviets realized, beside other mistakes in their doctrine, their need for units spezialised in mountain warfare. Such a unit was then established in 1982 based in Kirghistan 68-я окрема Горнострелковая Бригада ("68th independent/seperated mountain rifle brigade") – disbanded Dec. 1991. Until the fall of the Soviet Union 1991 this was the only military formation which had been a designated mountain rifle unit. Its one and only commander was Vassiliy Diaur (Василий Дьяур) who is now a high ranking officer in the Kirghisian Army.

In 2004, V. Putin gave the order to establish units specialised for mountain warfare. Some were founded by FSB, GRU, MVD and VDV, also the ground forces got the order to establish such units. So the 33rd and 34th independent/seperated motorized rifle brigade (mountain) were established. The setting up of those units and their bases are currently ongoing. It seems that they are built after their Soviet counterparts and not as mountain warfare unit known by western standards.

Sadly no details about the soviet 68th are known by now. The russian 33rd is based in the mountains of Dagestan, close to the Chechen border and the russian 34th is based at Zelenchukskaya in Karachaevo-Cherkessia, near Sochi and the Abkhaz border. Regarding to this article ( http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=32634 ) they might just have a overall defensive role.





The story (fictional) of 14-я Гвардейская Горнострелковая Дивизия (14th Guards Mountain Rifle Division)

железный легион (Iron Legion)


1991 – the August-coup in Moscow was successful. Prime Minister of the Soviet Union Valentin Sergeyevich Pavlov (Валентин Сергеевич Павлов ) becomes the new president of the Soviet Union. The West is concerned about the developements in Russia. The US, under president Bush's leadership, stops the disarmament and increases their effort in airborne reconnaisance- and intelligence missions to reveal the actual situation in the Soviet Union. Incidents including US spyplanes and secret agents of western countries caused the relations between the western and eastern world to cool down. These incidents accumulated until 1995 the Soviet rearmament starts finally, the bear has awoken.....
Divisions that had been transformed to storage units get reactivated and restocked, strategic bomber fleets and ICBM's are made operational. Large exercises are held close to the western borders. Noticeably the Eastern European Countries are orientating theirselves again to Moscow, fearing an Intervention from the Motherland.

After years of disagreement and lacking information the West is deploying newly formed divisions in the eastern part of Germany. Motivated by the regained strength of the Motherland, a group of ex GDR Officials led my Erich Fritz Emil Mielke tried to reestablish a socialist government in Eastern Germany in 2003. Since this coup lacked of proper preparation and the support of the East German people it could be thwarted by units of the US Army and the Bundeswehr. This caused the Soviet Union to strengthen their troops in Eastern Europe. They couldn't accept such a slap in Socialism's face.

First armoured formations of the Red Army crossed the German Border in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Brandenburg. Quickly they advanced forward into central Germany and pushed the NATO units back to Thüringen, Nordrhein-Westfalen and Hessen. Because of the lacking supplies, the people's resistance and the fact that the NATO units were able to fortify themselves after they recieved reinforcements, mainly French and British forces, the Soviet advance was stalling and halted completely. Units based in Czechoslovakia (mainly Czech and other forces from Eastern Block countries) tried to relief the northern front but failed. Based on this miscarriage, the Soviets decided to send some divisions to fortify the border in Czechoslovakia to prevent NATO troops to break out.

At the same time the main attack was carried out in Northern Germany, an offensive in Central and South Europe was started. It was meant to pull the front forward in all Europe at once, led by the main attack from the north. The Red Army overruns big parts of Austria almost at once but the stationary fortifications in austria delayed the Soviet advance so that parts of the military equipment and the government of austria can be moved into western parts of the country or neighbour countries.

Soviet mountain brigades, formed in the mid 80s in Afghanistan were deployed to secure the advance. Unfortunately these Brigades were too few in number, compared to their western counterparts, so it was imposssible to advance, all they can do now is secure their own lines. For the new offensive, Mountain Divisions are set up, consisting of old veterans from Afghanistan and new recruits. They are trained hastily but as best as possible to form the spearhead of the new Attack against the imperialistic NATO. One of these units is 14th Guards Mountain Rifle Division.

Снайперская винтовка Драгунова

The Realsword SVD and Scope with Bipod on a one piece KLMK, RD54 and Type II bayonet, served on a Плащ-палатка garnished with a Soviet Flag.


Avrora

The Realsword SVD is worth every buck you pay for it. Quite expensive but once you held it in your hands you will never want to put it away again. Since i got mine i just used her anymore, no other guns ever satisfied me that much. Of course, people have controversial opinions about it's performance, it is not a 100% Sniper rifel but you outrange at least most of the other Guns by 10m or more. It's accuracy is quite good at this ranges and the beneift of a semi automatic gun and a scope is worth a lot in "hot situations".
My k/d ratio improved immediately to my benefit. If you can get your hand on one of those, take it. You will not regret it.

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