Lt Gen
Mikhail T Kalashnikov, the arms designer credited by the Soviet Union with
creating the AK-47, the first in a series of rifles and machine guns that would
indelibly associate his name with modern war and become the most abundant
firearms ever made, died Monday in Izhevsk, the capital of the Udmurtia
republic, where he lived. He was 94.
Viktor
Chulkov, a spokesman for the republic's president, confirmed the death, the
Itar-Tass news agency reported.
His role in
the rifle's creation, and the attention showered on him by the Kremlin's
propaganda machine, carried him from conscription in the Red Army to senior
positions in the Soviet arms-manufacturing bureaucracy and ultimately to six
terms on the Supreme Soviet.
Tens of
millions of Kalashnikov rifles have been manufactured. Their short
barrels, steep front-sight posts and curved magazines made them a marker of
conflict that has endured for decades. The weapons also became both Soviet and
revolutionary symbols and widespread instruments of terrorism, child-soldiering
and crime.
The general,
who sometimes lamented the weapons' unchecked distribution but took pride in
having invented them and their reputation for reliability, weathered the
collapse of the Soviet Union to assume a
public role as a folk hero and unequivocal Russian patriot.
A Soviet
nostalgist, he also served as the unofficial arms ambassador of the revived
Russian state. He used public appearances to try to cast the AK-47's checkered
legacy in a positive way and to complain that knockoffs were being manufactured
illegally by former Soviet allies and cutting into Russian sales.
The weapon,
he said, was designed to protect his motherland, not to be used by terrorists
or thugs.
"This is a weapon of defense," he said. "It is not a weapon for offense."
Courtesy :The New York
Times News Service
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