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FN FAL

The FN FAL (French: Fusil Automatique Léger, English: Light Automatic Rifle) is a battle rifle designed in Belgium in 1953 by Dieudonné Saive and manufactured by FN Herstal.

FN FAL
Hybrid FN FAL incorporating both metric and inch-pattern parts.
TypeBattle rifle
Place of originBelgium
Service history
In service1953–present
Used by90+ countries (See Users)
WarsSee Conflicts
Production history
DesignerDieudonné Saive
Designed1947–1953
Manufacturer
Produced1953–present (Production stopped by FN Herstal in 1988)
No. built7,000,000[1]
VariantsSee Variants
Specifications (FAL 50)
Mass4.25 kg (9.4 lb)
Length1,090 mm (43 in)
Barrel length533 mm (21.0 in)

Cartridge7.62×51mm NATO
.280 British[2]
7mm Liviano
ActionShort-stroke gas piston, closed tilting breechblock[2]
Rate of fire650–700 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity840 m/s (2,755.9 ft/s)
Maximum firing range800 m (2,600 ft)
Feed system20- or 30-round detachable box magazine. 50-round drum magazines are also available.[3]
Sights
  • ramped aperture rear sight (adjustable from 200 m (660 ft) to 600 m (2,000 ft), in 100 m (330 ft) increments)
  • post front sight

During the Cold War the FAL was adopted by many countries of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), with the notable exception of the United States. It is one of the most widely used rifles in history, having been used by more than 90 countries,[4] many of which were engaged in anti-communist proxy conflicts, leading to the rifle becoming popularly known as "the right arm of the free world".[5] It is chambered in 7.62×51mm NATO, although originally designed for the intermediate .280 British. The British Commonwealth variant of the FAL was redesigned from metric units into imperial units and was produced under license as the L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle.

History Edit

 
A British Army patrol crossing a stream during the Mau Mau rebellion, the front soldier carrying an X8E1 (Belgian-made 7.62mm FN FAL)

In 1946, the first FAL prototype was completed. It was designed to fire the intermediate 7.92×33mm Kurz cartridge developed and used by the forces of Germany during World War II with the Sturmgewehr 44 assault rifle. After testing this prototype in 1948, the British Army urged FN to build additional prototypes, including one in bullpup configuration, chambered for their new .280 British (7×43mm) caliber intermediate cartridge.[6] After evaluating the single bullpup prototype, FN decided to return instead to their original, conventional design for future production.[6][why?]

In 1950, the United Kingdom presented the redesigned FN rifle and the British EM-2, both in .280 British calibre, to the United States for comparison testing against the favoured United States Army design of the time—Earle Harvey's T25.[7] It was hoped that a common cartridge and rifle could be standardized for issue to the armies of all NATO member countries. After this testing was completed, U.S. Army officials suggested that FN should redesign their rifle to fire the U.S. prototype ".30 Light Rifle" cartridge. FN decided to hedge their bets with the U.S., and in 1951 even made a deal that the U.S. could produce FALs royalty-free, given that the UK appeared to be favouring their own EM-2. This decision appeared to be correct when the British Army decided to adopt the EM-2 (as Rifle No.9 Mk1) and the .280 British cartridge.[6]

This decision was later rescinded after the Labour Party lost the 1951 General Election and Winston Churchill returned as Prime Minister. It is believed[by whom?] that there was a quid pro quo agreement between Churchill and U.S. President Harry Truman in 1952 that the British accept the .30 Light Rifle cartridge as NATO standard in return for the U.S. acceptance of the FN FAL as NATO standard.[8] The .30 Light Rifle cartridge was later standardized as the 7.62 mm NATO. However, the U.S. insisted on continued rifle tests. The FAL chambered for the .30 Light Rifle went up against the redesigned T25 (now redesignated as the T47), and an M1 Garand variant, the T44. Eventually, the T44 won, becoming the M14. However, in the meantime, most other NATO countries were evaluating and selecting the FAL.[citation needed]

Formally introduced by its designer Dieudonné Saive in 1951, and produced two years later, the FAL has been described as the "Right Arm of the Free World".[9] The FAL battle rifle has its Warsaw Pact counterpart in the AKM, each being fielded by dozens of countries and produced in many of them. A few, such as Israel and South Africa, manufactured and issued both designs at various times. Unlike the Soviet AKM assault rifle, the FAL utilized a heavier full-power rifle cartridge.

Design details Edit

 
Dutch Marine with FN FAL fitted with a rifle grenade.

The FAL operates by means of a gas-operated action, which is very similar to that of the German Gewehr 43 and Russian SVT-40.[citation needed] The gas system is driven by a short-stroke, spring-loaded piston housed above the barrel, and the locking mechanism is what is known as a tilting breechblock. To lock, it drops down into a solid shoulder of metal in the heavy receiver much like the bolts of the Russian SKS carbine and French MAS-49 series of semi-automatic rifles. The gas system is fitted with a gas regulator behind the front sight base, allowing adjustment of the gas system in response to environmental conditions. The piston system can be bypassed completely, using the gas plug, to allow for the firing of rifle grenades and manual operation.[10]

The FAL's magazine capacity ranges from 5 to 30 rounds, with most magazines holding 20 rounds. In fixed stock versions of the FAL, the recoil spring is housed in the stock, while in folding-stock versions it is housed in the receiver cover, necessitating a slightly different receiver cover, recoil spring, bolt carrier, and a modified lower receiver for the stock.[11]

For field stripping, the FAL can be opened. During opening the rifle rotates around a two-piece pivot lock and pin assembly located between the trigger guard and magazine well to give access to the action and piston system. This opening method causes a suboptimal iron sight line as the rear sight element is mounted on the lower receiver and the front sight element of the sight line is mounted on the upper receiver/barrel and hence are fixed to two different movable subassemblies. The sight radius for the FAL 50.00 and FAL 50.41 models is 553 mm (21.8 in) and for the 50.61 and FAL 50.63 models 549 mm (21.6 in).[citation needed]

FAL rifles have also been manufactured in both light and heavy-barrel configurations, with the heavy barrel intended for automatic fire as a section or squad light support weapon. Most heavy barrel FALs are equipped with bipods, although some light barrel models were equipped with bipods, such as the Austrian StG 58 and the German G1, and a bipod was later made available as an accessory.[citation needed]

Among other 7.62×51mm NATO battle rifles at the time, the FAL had relatively light recoil, due to the user-adjustable gas system being able to be tuned via a regulator in fore-end of the rifle, which allowed for excess gas which would simply increase recoil to bleed off. The regulator is an adjustable gas port opening that adjusts the rifle to function reliably with various propellant and projectile specific pressure behavior, making the FAL not ammunition specific. In fully automatic mode, however, the shooter receives considerable abuse from recoil, and the weapon climbs off-target quickly, making automatic fire only of marginal effectiveness.[12] Many military forces using the FAL eventually eliminated full-automatic firearms training in the light-barrel FAL.[citation needed]

Variants Edit

FN production variants Edit

Depending on the variant and the country of adoption, the FAL was issued as either semi-automatic only or select-fire (capable of both semi-automatic and fully automatic firing modes).

LAR 50.41 & 50.42 (FAL HBAR & FALO) Edit

Also known as FALO as an abbreviation from the French Fusil Automatique Lourd, it had a heavy barrel for sustained fire with a 30-round magazine as a squad automatic weapon; Known in Canada as the C2A1, it was their primary squad automatic weapon until it was phased out during the 1980s in favor of the C9, which has better accuracy and higher ammunition capacity than the C2. In the Australian Army, as the L2A1, it was their primary squad automatic weapon in the 1960s. However it was generally disliked and replaced by the F89 Minimi in the late 1980s. The L2A1 or 'heavy barrel' FAL was used by several Commonwealth nations and was found to frequently experience a failure to feed after firing two rounds from a full magazine when in automatic mode. The 50.41 is fitted with a synthetic buttstock, while the 50.42's buttstock is made from wood.

FAL 50.61 (FAL Type 3 PARA) Edit

 
FAL 50.61 variant.

Folding-stock, standard 533 mm (21.0 in) barrel length.

FAL 50.62 (FAL Type 3 Para 18) Edit

Folding-stock, shorter 458 mm (18.03 inch) barrel, paratrooper version and folding stock.

FAL 50.63 (FAL Type 2 Para 16) Edit

Folding-stock, shorter 436 mm (17.16 inch) barrel, paratrooper version, folding charging handle. This shorter version was requested by Belgian paratroopers. The upper receiver was not cut for a carry handle, the charging handle on the 50.63 was a folding model similar to the L1A1 rifles, which allowed the folded-stock rifle to fit through the doorway of their C-119 Flying Boxcar when worn horizontally across the chest.

FAL 50.64 (FAL Para 3) Edit

Folding-stock, standard 533 mm (21.0 in) barrel length, 'Hiduminium' aluminium alloy lower receiver.

Early prototypes Edit

  • The FN Universal Carbine (1947) was an early FAL prototype chambered for the 7.92×33mm Kurz round. The 7.92mm Kurz round was used as a placeholder for the future mid-range cartridges being developed by Britain and the United States at the time.
  • FAL .280 Experimental Automatic Carbine, Long Model (1951): A FAL variant chambered for the experimental .280 British (7×43mm) round. It was designed for a competition at Aberdeen Proving Ground in the US. Although the British bullpup design EM-2 rifle did well, American observers protested that the small-bore .280-caliber round lacked the power and range of a medium-bore .30-caliber round. British observers in return claimed the experimental American .30-caliber T65 round (7.62×51mm) was too powerful to control in automatic fire. Britain was forced to abandon the .280 round and adopt the American-designed .30-caliber T65 as the 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge. The EM-2 couldn't be rechambered for the longer and more powerful cartridge and the Americans didn't yet have a working service rifle of their own. Britain and Canada adopted the Belgian 7.62mm FN FAL instead as the L1 Self-Loading Rifle (SLR).
  • FAL .280 Experimental Automatic Carbine, Short Model (1951): A bullpup-frame version of the FAL chambered in .280 British designed to compete with the British EM-1 and EM-2 bullpup rifles. It also was demonstrated at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds tests, but was never put into full production.

Sturmgewehr 58 Edit

Sturmgewehr 58
 
StG-58 with DSA Type I receiver
TypeBattle rifle
Place of originBelgium and Austria
Service history
In service1958–1985
Used byAustria[13]
Production history
DesignerDieudonné Saive
Designed1956
ManufacturerFabrique Nationale de Herstal and Steyr-Daimler-Puch
Specifications
Mass4.45 kg (9.81 lb) to 5.15 kg (11.35 lb)
Length1,100 mm (43 in)
Barrel length533 mm (21.0 in)

Cartridge7.62×51mm NATO
ActionGas-operated, tilting breechblock
Muzzle velocity823 m/s (2,700 ft/s)
Effective firing range800 m (870 yd)
Feed system20-round detachable magazine
SightsIron sights

The Sturmgewehr 58 (StG 58) is a selective fire battle rifle. The first 20,000 were manufactured by FN Herstal Belgium, but later the StG 58 was manufactured under licence by Steyr-Daimler-Puch (now Steyr Mannlicher), and was formerly the standard rifle of the Österreichisches Bundesheer (Austrian Federal Army). It is essentially a user-customized version of the FAL and is still in use, mainly as a drill weapon, or for ceremonial purposes in the Gardebataillon (Guard Battalion) of the Austrian forces.[citation needed] It was selected in a 1958 competition, beating the Spanish CETME and American Armalite AR-10.

Most StG 58s featured a folding bipod, and differ from the FAL by using a plastic stock rather than wood in order to reduce weight in the later production rifles (although some of the early FN-built production rifles did come with wooden stocks). The rifle can be distinguished from its Belgian and Argentine counterparts by its combination flash suppressor and grenade launcher. The foregrip was a two-part steel pressing.

Steyr-built StG 58s had a hammer forged barrel. Some StG 58s had modifications made to the fire mode selector so that the fully automatic option was removed, leaving the selector with only safe and single-shot positions. The StG 58 was replaced by the Steyr AUG (designated StG 77) in 1977, although the StG 58 served with many units as the primary service rifle through the mid-1980s.[citation needed]

Olin-Winchester FAL Edit

A semi-automatic, twin-barrel variant chambered in the 5.56mm "Duplex" round during Project SALVO. This weapon was designed by Stefan Kenneth Janson who previously designed the EM-2 rifle.[citation needed]

DSA SA58 FAL Edit

American company DSA (David Selvaggio Arms) manufactures a copy of the FAL called the FAL DSA SA58 FAL that is made with the same Steyr-Daimler-Puch production line equipment as the StG-58. It comes with a 406 mm (16 in), 457 mm (18 in) or 533 mm (21 in) barrel, an aluminum-alloy lower receiver, and improved Glass-filled Nylon furniture. Civilian clients are limited only to semi-automatic configuration, but military and law enforcement clients can procure select-fire configuration that is capable of firing in full auto with cyclic rate of fire of around 650–750 rounds per minute. The SA58 FAL can use any metric-measurement FAL magazines, which come in 5, 10-, 20-, or 30-round capacities.

  • The SA58 OSW (Operational Specialist Weapon) is an assault-carbine variant of the paratrooper model of the FAL. It has a side-folding Enhanced PARA polymer stock, shorter 279 mm (11 inch) or 330 mm (13 inch) barrel and an optional full-auto setting.
  • The SA58 CTC (Compact Tactical Carbine) is a carbine variant of the paratrooper model of the FAL. It has a side-folding Enhanced PARA polymer stock, shorter 413 mm (16.25 inch) barrel and an optional full-auto setting. Overall Length: 927 mm (36.5 inches) Weight: 3.74 kg (8.25 lbs).
  • The SA58 SPR (Special Purpose Rifle) is a semi-automatic only configured variant that was submitted for the U.S. Army SASS rifle trials. It features a 19-inch fluted barrel, 10-round magazine and an upgraded speed trigger.
  • The SA58 DMR (Designated Marksman Rifle) is a semi-automatic only variant that features a 16.25 inch fluted heavy barrel.
  • The SA58 Pistol is a semi-automatic only variant that features an 8-inch barrel, intended for the U.S. civilian market.

Early versions of the DSA FAL included a 4140 billet upper receiver, machined from a 19-pound block of 4140 steel, and a lower receiver milled from a block of 7075 T6 aircraft grade aluminum.[14] The barrels were provided by Badger and were double stress relieved, cryogenically treated, and had an 11 degree target crown. These barrels featured broach cut rifling, were lapped by hand, and made from 4140 carbon steel. Barrel twist was 1:11. Rifles produced during the Federal Assault Weapons Ban from 1994 to 2004 included integrally machined muzzle brakes that served to reduce muzzle rise and recoil.[14] Further more, these muzzle brakes added additional length to barrels to achieve the 16.5 inches that would otherwise have been considered short-barreled rifles under the National Firearms Act. As such, DSA FAL barrels that were effectively ~14 inches, could be legally considered 16.5 inches due to the integral muzzle brakes.

Military adoption Edit

 
Argentine soldiers armed with FAL during the Falklands War (1982).

The FAL has been used by over 90 countries, and some seven million have been produced.[1][4] The FAL was originally made by Fabrique Nationale de Herstal (FN) in Liège, Belgium, but it has also been made under license in fifteen countries.[15] As of August 2006, new examples were still being produced by at least four different manufacturers worldwide.[16]

A distinct sub-family was the Commonwealth inch-dimensioned versions that were manufactured in the United Kingdom and Australia (as the L1A1 Self Loading Rifle or SLR), and in Canada as the C1. The standard metric-dimensioned FAL was manufactured in South Africa (where it was known as the R1), Brazil, Israel, Austria and Argentina. Both the SLR and FAL were also produced without license by India.[17][18]

The Dutch company Armtech built the L1A1 SAS, a carbine variant of the L1A1 with a barrel length of 290 mm (11.4 inches).[19]

Argentina Edit

 
Argentine soldiers with FAL rifles.

Argentine FALs saw action during the Falklands War, and in different peacekeeping operations such as in Cyprus and the former Yugoslavia. Argentine FALs are known to have been exported to Bolivia (in 1971),[20] Colombia,[20] Croatia (during the wars in former Yugoslavia during the 1990s), Honduras,[20] Peru,[20] and Uruguay.[20]

Brazil Edit

Along with the IA2, MD-2 and MD-3 assault rifles, Brazil produces the M964A1/Pelopes (Special Operations Platoon), with an 11" barrel, 3-point sling and a Picatinny rail with a tactical flashlight and sight.[21]

Brazilian Army officially used the FAP (Fuzil Automático Pesado, or heavy automatic rifle) as its squad automatic weapon until 2013/2014, when the FN Minimi was adopted to replace it. The Marine Corps and Air Force also adopted the Minimi to replace the FAP.[22]

 
Brazilian Army conscripts using the FAL in Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul.

IMBEL also produced a semi-automatic version of the FAL for Springfield Armory, Inc. (not to be confused with the US military Springfield Armory), which was marketed in the US as the SAR-48 (standard model)[23][24] and SAR-4800 (made after 1989 with some military features removed to comply with new legislation), starting in the mid-1980s.[25] IMBEL-made receivers have been much in demand among American gunsmiths building FALs from "parts kits".

In 2014, IMBEL offered the FAL in 9 versions:[26]

  • M964, the standard length semi-auto and full auto.
  • M964 MD1, short barrel semi-auto and full auto.
  • M964 MD2, standard length semi-auto only.
  • M964 MD3, short barrel semi-auto only.
  • M964A1, folding stock standard barrel semi-auto and full auto.
  • M964A1 MD1, folding stock short barrel semi-auto and full auto.
  • M964A1 MD2, folding stock standard barrel semi-auto only.
  • M964A1 MD3, folding stock short barrel semi-auto only.
  • M964A1/Pelopes, short barrel semi-auto and full auto with Picatinny rail.

Germany Edit

 
Two West German cadets on a joint exercise in 1960. West Germany used the FN FAL designated as G1.

The first German FALs were from an order placed in late 1955 or early 1956, for several thousand FN FAL so-called "Canada" models with wood furniture and the prong flash hider. These weapons were intended for the Bundesgrenzschutz (border guard) and not the newly formed Bundeswehr (army), which at the time used M1 Garands and M1/M2 carbines. In November 1956, however, West Germany ordered 100,000 additional FALs, designated the G1, for the army. FN made the rifles between April 1957 and May 1958. The G1 user modifications included light metal handguards and an integral folding bipod, similarly to the Austrian version.[27] Neither Germany nor Austria adopted the heavy-barreled FAL, instead using the MG3 (the modernized MG42 in 7.62×51mm NATO) as its general purpose machine gun (GPMG).[27]

The Germans were satisfied with the FAL and wished to produce it under license.[27] The Belgians, however, refused. Being subject to two German occupations in the space of two generations (1914–1918 and 1940–1945), the Belgians insisted on the Germans purchasing only FN-made FALs.[27] Under the German occupation during World War II, FN was taken over by the major German arms manufacturer Deutsche Waffen- und Munitionsfabriken (DWM), its directors arrested, and the assembly lines run by slave labour after only 10% of the Belgian factory workers showed up when ordered to do so.[27]

After the Normandy landings, the Germans stripped the FN factories of everything useful and sent it back to augment German industries, destroying what they couldn't carry.[27] FN tried to recoup its losses immediately after liberation near the end of 1944 by refurbishing Allied weapons and producing cheap, easily produced spare parts such as tank tracks.[27] To make matters worse, the Germans tried to destroy the FN factory with V1 flying bombs, achieving two direct hits.[27] The memories of the Nazi occupation were still far too fresh in 1956.[27]

Based on political and economical considerations, but also national pride,[28] the Germans aimed at a weapon they could produce domestically and turned their sights to the Spanish CETME Modelo 58 rifle.[29] Working with the Germans, the Spanish adopted the 7.62x51mm NATO cartridge, and a slightly modified version of the CETME went on to be manufactured in West Germany by Heckler & Koch (H&K) as the G3 rifle, beginning production in 1959. The G3 would become the second most popular battle rifle in the Free World, "used by some 50 nations and license-manufactured in a dozen".[28] Without the G3, the FAL may have completely dominated the militaries of the West during the Cold War.[28]

The G1 featured a pressed metal handguard identical to the ones used on the Austrian Stg. 58, as well as the Dutch and Greek FALs, this being slightly slimmer than the standard wood or plastic handguards, and featuring horizontal lines running almost their entire length. G1s were also fitted with a unique removable prong flash hider, adding another external distinction. Of note is the fact that the G1 was the first FAL variant with the 3 mm (0.12 in) lower sights specifically requested by Germany, previous versions having the taller Commonwealth-type sights also seen on Israeli models. The German FAL had access to high quality Hensoldt Optische Werk F-series scopes with Zeiss-equivalent optics; having 4x magnification, with a 24 mm (0.94 in) objective lens.[30]

The majority of the German G1 rifles were sold as surplus to the Turkish Army in the mid-1960's, and some G1s found their way to Rhodesia and Portugal.[28][31][32]

Israel Edit

 
Israeli Heavy Barrel FAL. Note the hinged butt plate.

After the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) had to overcome several logistics problems which were a result of the wide variety of old firearms that were in service, such as the German Mauser Kar 98k and some British Lee–Enfield rifles. In 1955 the IDF adopted the IMI-produced Uzi submachine gun and the FN FAL in order to standardize their infantry armament;[33] with the FAL being designated Rov've Mitta'enn or Romat (רומ"ט),[33] abbreviation of "Self-Loading Rifle".

The FAL version ordered by the IDF came in two basic variants, both regular and heavy-barrel (squad automatic rifle/ light machine gun), and were chambered in 7.62mm NATO. The Israeli heavy barrel FAL (or FALO) was designated the Makle'a Kal, or Makleon,[33] having a standard handguard improved with a perforated metal sleeve around the heavy barrel, and a wooden handguard with a heat shield.[34] The folding bipod being directly attached to the barrel.[34] The Israeli Makleon was fed by a 20-round magazine.[35]

 
Paratroopers fighting on the outskirts of the town of Karameh during Operation Inferno, 21 March 1968. A paratrooper with a Makleon is in position while a rifle-grenadier is to his right.

Analysing the Israeli campaign of 1956 in the Sinai, during the Suez Crisis, Brigadier General SLA Marshall noted of the Makleon:

By Israeli training practice, when the light machine guns are used as fire base to cover the forward movement of the rest of the section, they should not operate at more than two hundred yards' [183m] maximum range from the target. To cut that distance by half is considered better. In the attack, LMGs are rated as highly expendable items and are shoved far front. When the section rushes the enemy position under cover of the LMG fire, one rifleman stays behind to protect the gunners.[36]

Marshall also notes the advantage of both rifle and LMG ammunition being interchangeable, with the squad carrying sixty 20-round magazines, with 1,200 rounds in total.[36][37]

The Israeli FALs were originally produced as selective-fire rifles, though later light-barrel rifle versions were altered to semi-automatic fire only.[33] The first rifles were Belgian-made, with Israel later licence-producing the weapons and its magazines.[33] The Israeli models are recognizable by a distinctive handguard with a forward perforated sheet metal section. Israeli-made magazines were made in the same FN standard of steel, finished with durable black enamel paint, and bearing two Hebrew characters stamped into the metal on one side.[38]

The IDF always emphasized the used of rifle grenades, integrating its usage into their doctrine of night assaults.[37] Approaching enemy positions within rifle-grenade range, initiating the assault with a volley of grenades onto the enemy positions intended to stun and suppress the defenders, while being immediately followed by the infantry assault while the enemy was shaken.[37]

Israel's infantry prefers the rifle-fired antitank grenade to the bazooka for shock effect on a group or bunker. At night, if the section should run into an ambush, the grenadier fires, and all the others rush straight in, not firing.[36]

 
IDF Paratroopers with FN FAL rifles during a training march, 5 June 1965.

Initially, Israel manufactured a copy of the Energa rifle grenade, that would be surpassed by more recent designs still in production.[39] Of particular note is the BT/AT 52,[39] an IMI version of the BT rifle grenade derived from the earlier MA/AT 52 model. It can be fired both from 5.56mm and 7.62mm weapons, which share the same-diameter muzzle device, with a maximum range of 300 m (328yd) from 7.62mm guns. The BT/AT 52 is often seen in photographs with the FAL.[40]

The Israeli FAL first saw action in relatively small quantities during the Suez Crisis of 1956, being the standard issue rifle in the Six-Day War in June 1967, the War of Attrition of 1967–1970. During the Yom Kippur War of October 1973, the FAL was still in front-line service as the standard Israeli rifle, though increasing criticism eventually led to the phasing-out of the weapon. Israeli forces were primarily mechanized in nature; the long, heavy FAL slowed deployment drills, and proved exceedingly difficult to maneuver within the confines of a vehicle.[41][42] Additionally, Israeli forces experienced occasional jamming of the FAL due to heavy sand and dust ingress endemic to Middle Eastern desert warfare.[43]

With the soldiers traveling in open-topped halftracks in fast-paced operations, with tank tracks filling the air with clouds of dust filled with fine grit, soldiers would jump from the half-tracks to hit the sand, finding the rifles filthy at the moment of contact.[43] In such lightning-fast mobile warfare, the men would hardly have time to eat, sleep or clean their rifles.[43][42] Though the IDF evaluated a few modified FAL rifles with 'sand clearance' slots in the bolt carrier and receiver (which were already part of the Commonwealth L1A1/C1A1 design), malfunction rates did not significantly improve.[44] The Israeli FAL was eventually replaced from 1972 onwards[33] by the M16 and in 1974 by the Galil.[42][43][44] The FAL remained in production in Israel into the 1980s.[20]

Portugal Edit

During the colonial war in Angola, Guinea and Mozambique (the Ultramar War), the FAL was used by the Portuguese alongside the HK G3 and the AR10. In Portuguese service, the FN FAL was designated Espingarda Automática 7,62 mm FN m/962. Those were Belgian-made FN FAL and German G1 rifles, and they became favoured by special forces units such as the Caçadores Especiais ("Special Hunters/Rangers").[32]

Rhodesia Edit

Like most British dependencies in the postwar era, Southern Rhodesia adopted the Commonwealth pattern L1A1 SLR by the early 1960s.[45] Southern Rhodesia contributed small military contingents to aid British counter-insurgency operations during the Malayan Emergency and the Aden Emergency, and adopted the L1A1 as its standard infantry rifle around that time.[46] As a result of its participation in those conflicts, the Rhodesian Security Forces inherited the British emphasis on long-range marksmanship and the use of riflemen in small units as the primary cornerstone of major counter-insurgency campaigns.[47] The standard small unit of the security forces, which included the Southern Rhodesian Army as well as various paramilitary police and internal security divisions, was the stick; this consisted of four riflemen, each armed with SLRs, and a machine gunner carrying an FN MAG.[48] The United Kingdom continued to export L1A1s to Southern Rhodesia until that country issued a unilateral declaration of independence as Rhodesia in 1965.[45] Rhodesia subsequently became subject to a British arms embargo and the SLRs were largely relegated to reserve army and police units.[49]

During the Rhodesian Bush War, the Rhodesian Security Forces turned to a sympathetic South Africa as a major supplier of arms. South Africa already manufactured a metric-pattern FAL under licence as the R1, and transferred a number of these rifles to Rhodesia.[31] Rhodesia also acquired FAL variants illicitly on the international black market, including original FN rifles from Belgium[50] and G1s from West Germany.[31] Many of the FAL derivatives in Rhodesian service were fitted with custom flash suppressors to reduce recoil on fully automatic fire.[49]

The heavy Rhodesian emphasis on individual marksmanship and the ballistic qualities of the 7.62x51mm round often allowed outnumbered Rhodesian patrols to fight their way through larger groups of insurgents from the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA) or Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA), both of which were equipped primarily with Kalashnikov-pattern automatic rifles such as the AK-47 and AKM.[51] Rhodesian troops were trained to fire directly into the insurgents' cover whenever an ambush was encountered, shooting their FALs in bursts that were deliberately aimed low and graduating their fire upwards.[51] Their 7.62x51mm ammunition could penetrate thick bush and tree trunks more readily than the 7.62x39mm cartridge used in the AK-47, and was more successful at killing the enemy combatants in cover.[51]

Following general elections in 1980 which brought the former insurgent leadership to power, the country finally achieved internationally recognised independence as Zimbabwe, and the Rhodesian Security Forces were amalgamated with ZANLA and ZIPRA.[52] As the Zimbabwean government had inherited vast stockpiles of 7.62x51mm ammunition from the Rhodesian era, it initially ordered the insurgents' small arms to be placed into reserve storage and confirmed the FAL as the standard service rifle of the new Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF).[52] However, a successful sabotage action carried out against the preexisting stockpiles of 7.62x51mm ammunition, possibly by disgruntled Rhodesian service members or South African special forces, negated this factor.[52] The ZDF responded by bringing the insurgent weapons out of storage to complement the FAL, and gradually phased out the weapon type in favour of Kalashnikov rifles to simplify maintenance and logistics.[52]

South Africa Edit

The FAL was produced under licence[53] in South Africa by Lyttleton Engineering Works, where it is known as the R1. After a competition between the German G3 rifle, the Armalite AR-10, and the FN FAL, the South African Defence Force adopted three main variants of the FAL: a rifle with the designation R1, a "lightweight" variant of the FN FAL 50.64 with folding butt, fabricated locally under the designation R2, and a model designed for police use not capable of automatic fire under the designation R3.[54] 200,000 were destroyed in UN-sponsored "Operation Mouflon" in 2001.

A number of other variants of the R1 were built, the R1 HB, which had a heavy barrel and bipod, the R1 Sniper, which could be fitted with a scope and the R1 Para Carbine, which used a Single Point IR sight and had a shorter barrel.[55] R1 was standard issue in the SADF until the introduction of the R4 in the early 1980s. Still used by the SANDF as a designated marksman rifle.[citation needed] The first South African-produced rifle, serial numbered 200001, was presented to the then Prime Minister, Dr Hendrik Verwoerd, by Armscor and is now on view at the South African National Museum of Military History in Johannesburg.[56]

Syria Edit

 
A fighter of the Siddiq Battalions fires a scoped FN FAL at Syrian Armed Forces in the town of Otaybah, eastern Ghouta, 2013.

Syria adopted the FN FAL in 1956. 12,000 rifles were bought in 1957.[57] The Syrian state produced 7.62×51mm cartridges[57] and is reported to have acquired FALs from other sources. During the Syrian Civil War, FALs from various sources, including Israel, were used by governmental forces, rebels, Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and Kurdish forces.[57] The Syrian Arab Army and loyalist paramilitary forces used it as a designated marksman rifle.[58] At the end of 2012, the use of .308 Winchester cartridges may have caused these FALs to malfunction, thus reducing the popularity of the weapon.[59]

United States Edit

 
Century Arms FAL rifle built from an L1A1 parts kit.

Following World War II and the establishment of the NATO alliance, there was pressure to adopt a standard rifle, alliance-wide. The FAL was originally designed to handle intermediate cartridges, but in an attempt to secure US favor for the rifle, the FAL was redesigned to use the newly developed 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge. The US tested several variants of the FAL to replace the M1 Garand. These rifles were tested against the T44, essentially an updated version of the basic Garand design.[60] Despite the T44 and T48 performing similarly in trials,[60] the T44 was, for several reasons, selected and the US formally adopted the T44 as the M14 service rifle.[citation needed]

During the late 1980s and 1990s, many countries decommissioned the FAL from their armories and sold them en masse to United States importers as surplus. The rifles were imported to the United States as fully automatic guns. Once in the U.S., the FALs were "de-militarized" (upper receiver destroyed) to eliminate the rifles' character as an automatic rifle, as stipulated by the Gun Control Act of 1968. GCA 68 currently prohibits the importation of foreign-made full-automatic rifles prior to the enactment of the Gun Control Act. Semiautomatic versions of the same firearm were legal to import, until the Semi-automatic Assault Rifle Ban of 1989.

Thousands of the resulting "parts kits" were sold at generally low prices ($90 – $250) to hobbyists. The hobbyists rebuilt the parts kits to legal and functional semi-automatic rifles on new semi-automatic upper receivers. FAL rifles are still commercially available from a few domestic firms in semi-auto configuration: Enterprise Arms, DSArms, and Century International Arms. Century Arms created a semi-automatic version L1A1 with an IMBEL upper receiver and surplus British Enfield inch-pattern parts, while DSArms used Steyr-style metric-pattern FAL designs. This standard-metric difference means the Century Arms and DSArms firearms are not made from fully interchangeable batches of parts.[citation needed]

Venezuela Edit

Venezuela placed an order for 5,000 FN-made FAL rifles in 1954, in the 7x49.15mm Optimum 2 caliber.[20] This 7×49mm, also known as 7 mm Liviano or 7 mm Venezuelan, is essentially a 7×57mm round shortened to intermediate length and closer to being a true intermediate round than the 7.62x51mm NATO.[20] This unusual caliber was jointly developed by Venezuelan and Belgian engineers motivated by a global move towards intermediate calibers. The Venezuelans, who had been exclusively using the 7×57mm round in their light and medium weapons since the turn of the 20th century, felt it was a perfect platform on which to base a calibre tailored to the particular rigours of the Venezuelan terrain. Eventually the plan was dropped despite having ordered millions of rounds and thousands of weapons on this caliber. As the Cold War escalated, the military command felt it necessary to align with NATO on geopolitical grounds despite not being a member, resulting in the adoption of the 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge. The 5,000 rifles of the first batch were rebarrelled to 7.62×51mm.[20]

When marching victoriously into Havana in 1959, Fidel Castro was carrying an FN-made Venezuelan FAL in 7 mm Liviano.[35]

Until recently, the FAL was the main service rifle of the Venezuelan army, made under license by CAVIM.[61] Venezuela has bought 100,000 AK-103 assault rifles from Russia in order to replace the old FALs.[61] Although the full shipment arrived by the end of 2006, the FAL will remain in service with the Venezuelan Reserve Forces and the Territorial Guard.[citation needed]

Users Edit

 
  Current operators
  Former operators
 
An Indonesian Navy sailor firing shot line from the KRI Sultan Hasanuddin (366), which was part of the UNIFIL Maritime Task Force, to FGS Ludwigshafen am Rhein (F264) in Mediterranean Sea, May 2020
 
An Irish soldier armed with a heavily upgraded FAL, used as a sniper support weapon.

Non-state users Edit

Former users Edit

Conflicts Edit

In the more than 70 years of use worldwide, the FAL has seen use in conflicts all over the world. During the Falklands War, the FN FAL was used by both sides. The FAL was used by the Argentine armed forces and the L1A1 Self Loading Rifle (SLR), a semi-automatic only version of the FAL, was used by the armed forces of the UK and other Commonwealth nations.[106]

1950s Edit

1960s Edit

1970s Edit

 
FAL-armed Portuguese soldiers in Angola.

1980s Edit

 
Members of the Eastern Caribbean Defense Force in Operation Urgent Fury are armed with FN FAL rifles.

1990s Edit

2000s Edit

2010s Edit

2020s Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

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General and cited references Edit

  • Afonso, Aniceto and Gomes, Carlos de Matos (2000). Guerra Colonial.
  • Cashner, Bob (2013). The FN FAL Battle Rifle. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78096-903-9.
  • Chanoff, David; Doan Van Toai. Vietnam, A Portrait of its People at War. London: Taurus & Co, 1996. ISBN 1-86064-076-1.
  • Ezell, Clinton. Small Arms of the World, Stackpole Books, 1983.
  • Hellenic Army General Staff / Army History Directorate (Γενικό Επιτελείο Στρατού / Διεύθυνση Ιστορίας Στρατού) (in Greek). "The Armament of Greek Army 1868–2000" ("Οπλισμός Ελληνικού Στρατού 1868 2000"), Athens, Greece, 2000.
  • Jenzen-Jones, N. R.; Spleeters, Damien (August 2015). Identifying & Tracing the FN Herstal FAL Rifle: Documenting Signs of Diversion in Syria and Beyond (PDF). Churchlands, West Australia: Armament Research Services Pty. Ltd. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-9924624-6-8. (PDF) from the original on 2016-03-20.
  • Pikula, Maj. Sam. The Armalite AR-10, 1998.
  • Sazanidis, Christos (1995). Arms of the Greeks (Τα όπλα των Ελλήνων) (in Greek). Thessaloniki, Greece: Maiandros (Μαίανδρος). ISBN 978-960-90213-0-2.
  • Stevens, R. Blake. The FAL Rifle Classic Edition. Cobourg, Ontario, Canada: Collector Grade Publications, 1993. ISBN 0-88935-168-6.
  • Stevens, R. Blake. More on the Fabled FAL: A Companion to the FAL Rifle. Cobourg, Ontario, Canada: Collector Grade Publications, 2011. ISBN 978-0-88935-534-7.

External links Edit

  • Additional information, including pictures at Modern Firearms
  • The FN/FAL & L1A1 FAQ
Video
  • Video of operation on YouTube (in Japanese)
  • FN FAL "Paratrooper" Model Presentation (MPEG)

french, fusil, automatique, léger, english, light, automatic, rifle, battle, rifle, designed, belgium, 1953, dieudonné, saive, manufactured, herstal, hybrid, incorporating, both, metric, inch, pattern, parts, typebattle, rifleplace, originbelgiumservice, histo. The FN FAL French Fusil Automatique Leger English Light Automatic Rifle is a battle rifle designed in Belgium in 1953 by Dieudonne Saive and manufactured by FN Herstal FN FALHybrid FN FAL incorporating both metric and inch pattern parts TypeBattle riflePlace of originBelgiumService historyIn service1953 presentUsed by90 countries See Users WarsSee ConflictsProduction historyDesignerDieudonne SaiveDesigned1947 1953ManufacturerFN Herstal IMBELProduced1953 present Production stopped by FN Herstal in 1988 No built7 000 000 1 VariantsSee VariantsSpecifications FAL 50 Mass4 25 kg 9 4 lb Length1 090 mm 43 in Barrel length533 mm 21 0 in Cartridge7 62 51mm NATO 280 British 2 7mm LivianoActionShort stroke gas piston closed tilting breechblock 2 Rate of fire650 700 rounds minMuzzle velocity840 m s 2 755 9 ft s Maximum firing range800 m 2 600 ft Feed system20 or 30 round detachable box magazine 50 round drum magazines are also available 3 Sightsramped aperture rear sight adjustable from 200 m 660 ft to 600 m 2 000 ft in 100 m 330 ft increments post front sightDuring the Cold War the FAL was adopted by many countries of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO with the notable exception of the United States It is one of the most widely used rifles in history having been used by more than 90 countries 4 many of which were engaged in anti communist proxy conflicts leading to the rifle becoming popularly known as the right arm of the free world 5 It is chambered in 7 62 51mm NATO although originally designed for the intermediate 280 British The British Commonwealth variant of the FAL was redesigned from metric units into imperial units and was produced under license as the L1A1 Self Loading Rifle Contents 1 History 2 Design details 3 Variants 3 1 FN production variants 3 1 1 LAR 50 41 amp 50 42 FAL HBAR amp FALO 3 1 2 FAL 50 61 FAL Type 3 PARA 3 1 3 FAL 50 62 FAL Type 3 Para 18 3 1 4 FAL 50 63 FAL Type 2 Para 16 3 1 5 FAL 50 64 FAL Para 3 3 1 6 Early prototypes 3 2 Sturmgewehr 58 3 3 Olin Winchester FAL 3 4 DSA SA58 FAL 4 Military adoption 4 1 Argentina 4 2 Brazil 4 3 Germany 4 4 Israel 4 5 Portugal 4 6 Rhodesia 4 7 South Africa 4 8 Syria 4 9 United States 4 10 Venezuela 5 Users 5 1 Non state users 5 2 Former users 6 Conflicts 6 1 1950s 6 2 1960s 6 3 1970s 6 4 1980s 6 5 1990s 6 6 2000s 6 7 2010s 6 8 2020s 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 General and cited references 9 External linksHistory Edit nbsp A British Army patrol crossing a stream during the Mau Mau rebellion the front soldier carrying an X8E1 Belgian made 7 62mm FN FAL In 1946 the first FAL prototype was completed It was designed to fire the intermediate 7 92 33mm Kurz cartridge developed and used by the forces of Germany during World War II with the Sturmgewehr 44 assault rifle After testing this prototype in 1948 the British Army urged FN to build additional prototypes including one in bullpup configuration chambered for their new 280 British 7 43mm caliber intermediate cartridge 6 After evaluating the single bullpup prototype FN decided to return instead to their original conventional design for future production 6 why In 1950 the United Kingdom presented the redesigned FN rifle and the British EM 2 both in 280 British calibre to the United States for comparison testing against the favoured United States Army design of the time Earle Harvey s T25 7 It was hoped that a common cartridge and rifle could be standardized for issue to the armies of all NATO member countries After this testing was completed U S Army officials suggested that FN should redesign their rifle to fire the U S prototype 30 Light Rifle cartridge FN decided to hedge their bets with the U S and in 1951 even made a deal that the U S could produce FALs royalty free given that the UK appeared to be favouring their own EM 2 This decision appeared to be correct when the British Army decided to adopt the EM 2 as Rifle No 9 Mk1 and the 280 British cartridge 6 This decision was later rescinded after the Labour Party lost the 1951 General Election and Winston Churchill returned as Prime Minister It is believed by whom that there was a quid pro quo agreement between Churchill and U S President Harry Truman in 1952 that the British accept the 30 Light Rifle cartridge as NATO standard in return for the U S acceptance of the FN FAL as NATO standard 8 The 30 Light Rifle cartridge was later standardized as the 7 62 mm NATO However the U S insisted on continued rifle tests The FAL chambered for the 30 Light Rifle went up against the redesigned T25 now redesignated as the T47 and an M1 Garand variant the T44 Eventually the T44 won becoming the M14 However in the meantime most other NATO countries were evaluating and selecting the FAL citation needed Formally introduced by its designer Dieudonne Saive in 1951 and produced two years later the FAL has been described as the Right Arm of the Free World 9 The FAL battle rifle has its Warsaw Pact counterpart in the AKM each being fielded by dozens of countries and produced in many of them A few such as Israel and South Africa manufactured and issued both designs at various times Unlike the Soviet AKM assault rifle the FAL utilized a heavier full power rifle cartridge Design details Edit nbsp Dutch Marine with FN FAL fitted with a rifle grenade The FAL operates by means of a gas operated action which is very similar to that of the German Gewehr 43 and Russian SVT 40 citation needed The gas system is driven by a short stroke spring loaded piston housed above the barrel and the locking mechanism is what is known as a tilting breechblock To lock it drops down into a solid shoulder of metal in the heavy receiver much like the bolts of the Russian SKS carbine and French MAS 49 series of semi automatic rifles The gas system is fitted with a gas regulator behind the front sight base allowing adjustment of the gas system in response to environmental conditions The piston system can be bypassed completely using the gas plug to allow for the firing of rifle grenades and manual operation 10 The FAL s magazine capacity ranges from 5 to 30 rounds with most magazines holding 20 rounds In fixed stock versions of the FAL the recoil spring is housed in the stock while in folding stock versions it is housed in the receiver cover necessitating a slightly different receiver cover recoil spring bolt carrier and a modified lower receiver for the stock 11 For field stripping the FAL can be opened During opening the rifle rotates around a two piece pivot lock and pin assembly located between the trigger guard and magazine well to give access to the action and piston system This opening method causes a suboptimal iron sight line as the rear sight element is mounted on the lower receiver and the front sight element of the sight line is mounted on the upper receiver barrel and hence are fixed to two different movable subassemblies The sight radius for the FAL 50 00 and FAL 50 41 models is 553 mm 21 8 in and for the 50 61 and FAL 50 63 models 549 mm 21 6 in citation needed FAL rifles have also been manufactured in both light and heavy barrel configurations with the heavy barrel intended for automatic fire as a section or squad light support weapon Most heavy barrel FALs are equipped with bipods although some light barrel models were equipped with bipods such as the Austrian StG 58 and the German G1 and a bipod was later made available as an accessory citation needed Among other 7 62 51mm NATO battle rifles at the time the FAL had relatively light recoil due to the user adjustable gas system being able to be tuned via a regulator in fore end of the rifle which allowed for excess gas which would simply increase recoil to bleed off The regulator is an adjustable gas port opening that adjusts the rifle to function reliably with various propellant and projectile specific pressure behavior making the FAL not ammunition specific In fully automatic mode however the shooter receives considerable abuse from recoil and the weapon climbs off target quickly making automatic fire only of marginal effectiveness 12 Many military forces using the FAL eventually eliminated full automatic firearms training in the light barrel FAL citation needed Variants EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message FN production variants Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Depending on the variant and the country of adoption the FAL was issued as either semi automatic only or select fire capable of both semi automatic and fully automatic firing modes LAR 50 41 amp 50 42 FAL HBAR amp FALO Edit Also known as FALO as an abbreviation from the French Fusil Automatique Lourd it had a heavy barrel for sustained fire with a 30 round magazine as a squad automatic weapon Known in Canada as the C2A1 it was their primary squad automatic weapon until it was phased out during the 1980s in favor of the C9 which has better accuracy and higher ammunition capacity than the C2 In the Australian Army as the L2A1 it was their primary squad automatic weapon in the 1960s However it was generally disliked and replaced by the F89 Minimi in the late 1980s The L2A1 or heavy barrel FAL was used by several Commonwealth nations and was found to frequently experience a failure to feed after firing two rounds from a full magazine when in automatic mode The 50 41 is fitted with a synthetic buttstock while the 50 42 s buttstock is made from wood FAL 50 61 FAL Type 3 PARA Edit nbsp FAL 50 61 variant Folding stock standard 533 mm 21 0 in barrel length FAL 50 62 FAL Type 3 Para 18 Edit Folding stock shorter 458 mm 18 03 inch barrel paratrooper version and folding stock FAL 50 63 FAL Type 2 Para 16 Edit Folding stock shorter 436 mm 17 16 inch barrel paratrooper version folding charging handle This shorter version was requested by Belgian paratroopers The upper receiver was not cut for a carry handle the charging handle on the 50 63 was a folding model similar to the L1A1 rifles which allowed the folded stock rifle to fit through the doorway of their C 119 Flying Boxcar when worn horizontally across the chest FAL 50 64 FAL Para 3 Edit Folding stock standard 533 mm 21 0 in barrel length Hiduminium aluminium alloy lower receiver Early prototypes Edit The FN Universal Carbine 1947 was an early FAL prototype chambered for the 7 92 33mm Kurz round The 7 92mm Kurz round was used as a placeholder for the future mid range cartridges being developed by Britain and the United States at the time FAL 280 Experimental Automatic Carbine Long Model 1951 A FAL variant chambered for the experimental 280 British 7 43mm round It was designed for a competition at Aberdeen Proving Ground in the US Although the British bullpup design EM 2 rifle did well American observers protested that the small bore 280 caliber round lacked the power and range of a medium bore 30 caliber round British observers in return claimed the experimental American 30 caliber T65 round 7 62 51mm was too powerful to control in automatic fire Britain was forced to abandon the 280 round and adopt the American designed 30 caliber T65 as the 7 62 51mm NATO cartridge The EM 2 couldn t be rechambered for the longer and more powerful cartridge and the Americans didn t yet have a working service rifle of their own Britain and Canada adopted the Belgian 7 62mm FN FAL instead as the L1 Self Loading Rifle SLR FAL 280 Experimental Automatic Carbine Short Model 1951 A bullpup frame version of the FAL chambered in 280 British designed to compete with the British EM 1 and EM 2 bullpup rifles It also was demonstrated at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds tests but was never put into full production Sturmgewehr 58 Edit Sturmgewehr 58 nbsp StG 58 with DSA Type I receiverTypeBattle riflePlace of originBelgium and AustriaService historyIn service1958 1985Used byAustria 13 Production historyDesignerDieudonne SaiveDesigned1956ManufacturerFabrique Nationale de Herstal and Steyr Daimler PuchSpecificationsMass4 45 kg 9 81 lb to 5 15 kg 11 35 lb Length1 100 mm 43 in Barrel length533 mm 21 0 in Cartridge7 62 51mm NATOActionGas operated tilting breechblockMuzzle velocity823 m s 2 700 ft s Effective firing range800 m 870 yd Feed system20 round detachable magazineSightsIron sightsThe Sturmgewehr 58 StG 58 is a selective fire battle rifle The first 20 000 were manufactured by FN Herstal Belgium but later the StG 58 was manufactured under licence by Steyr Daimler Puch now Steyr Mannlicher and was formerly the standard rifle of the Osterreichisches Bundesheer Austrian Federal Army It is essentially a user customized version of the FAL and is still in use mainly as a drill weapon or for ceremonial purposes in the Gardebataillon Guard Battalion of the Austrian forces citation needed It was selected in a 1958 competition beating the Spanish CETME and American Armalite AR 10 Most StG 58s featured a folding bipod and differ from the FAL by using a plastic stock rather than wood in order to reduce weight in the later production rifles although some of the early FN built production rifles did come with wooden stocks The rifle can be distinguished from its Belgian and Argentine counterparts by its combination flash suppressor and grenade launcher The foregrip was a two part steel pressing Steyr built StG 58s had a hammer forged barrel Some StG 58s had modifications made to the fire mode selector so that the fully automatic option was removed leaving the selector with only safe and single shot positions The StG 58 was replaced by the Steyr AUG designated StG 77 in 1977 although the StG 58 served with many units as the primary service rifle through the mid 1980s citation needed Olin Winchester FAL Edit A semi automatic twin barrel variant chambered in the 5 56mm Duplex round during Project SALVO This weapon was designed by Stefan Kenneth Janson who previously designed the EM 2 rifle citation needed DSA SA58 FAL Edit American company DSA David Selvaggio Arms manufactures a copy of the FAL called the FAL DSA SA58 FAL that is made with the same Steyr Daimler Puch production line equipment as the StG 58 It comes with a 406 mm 16 in 457 mm 18 in or 533 mm 21 in barrel an aluminum alloy lower receiver and improved Glass filled Nylon furniture Civilian clients are limited only to semi automatic configuration but military and law enforcement clients can procure select fire configuration that is capable of firing in full auto with cyclic rate of fire of around 650 750 rounds per minute The SA58 FAL can use any metric measurement FAL magazines which come in 5 10 20 or 30 round capacities The SA58 OSW Operational Specialist Weapon is an assault carbine variant of the paratrooper model of the FAL It has a side folding Enhanced PARA polymer stock shorter 279 mm 11 inch or 330 mm 13 inch barrel and an optional full auto setting The SA58 CTC Compact Tactical Carbine is a carbine variant of the paratrooper model of the FAL It has a side folding Enhanced PARA polymer stock shorter 413 mm 16 25 inch barrel and an optional full auto setting Overall Length 927 mm 36 5 inches Weight 3 74 kg 8 25 lbs The SA58 SPR Special Purpose Rifle is a semi automatic only configured variant that was submitted for the U S Army SASS rifle trials It features a 19 inch fluted barrel 10 round magazine and an upgraded speed trigger The SA58 DMR Designated Marksman Rifle is a semi automatic only variant that features a 16 25 inch fluted heavy barrel The SA58 Pistol is a semi automatic only variant that features an 8 inch barrel intended for the U S civilian market Early versions of the DSA FAL included a 4140 billet upper receiver machined from a 19 pound block of 4140 steel and a lower receiver milled from a block of 7075 T6 aircraft grade aluminum 14 The barrels were provided by Badger and were double stress relieved cryogenically treated and had an 11 degree target crown These barrels featured broach cut rifling were lapped by hand and made from 4140 carbon steel Barrel twist was 1 11 Rifles produced during the Federal Assault Weapons Ban from 1994 to 2004 included integrally machined muzzle brakes that served to reduce muzzle rise and recoil 14 Further more these muzzle brakes added additional length to barrels to achieve the 16 5 inches that would otherwise have been considered short barreled rifles under the National Firearms Act As such DSA FAL barrels that were effectively 14 inches could be legally considered 16 5 inches due to the integral muzzle brakes Military adoption EditSee also L1A1 Self Loading Rifle Production and use nbsp Argentine soldiers armed with FAL during the Falklands War 1982 The FAL has been used by over 90 countries and some seven million have been produced 1 4 The FAL was originally made by Fabrique Nationale de Herstal FN in Liege Belgium but it has also been made under license in fifteen countries 15 As of August 2006 new examples were still being produced by at least four different manufacturers worldwide 16 A distinct sub family was the Commonwealth inch dimensioned versions that were manufactured in the United Kingdom and Australia as the L1A1 Self Loading Rifle or SLR and in Canada as the C1 The standard metric dimensioned FAL was manufactured in South Africa where it was known as the R1 Brazil Israel Austria and Argentina Both the SLR and FAL were also produced without license by India 17 18 The Dutch company Armtech built the L1A1 SAS a carbine variant of the L1A1 with a barrel length of 290 mm 11 4 inches 19 Argentina Edit nbsp Argentine soldiers with FAL rifles Argentine FALs saw action during the Falklands War and in different peacekeeping operations such as in Cyprus and the former Yugoslavia Argentine FALs are known to have been exported to Bolivia in 1971 20 Colombia 20 Croatia during the wars in former Yugoslavia during the 1990s Honduras 20 Peru 20 and Uruguay 20 Brazil Edit Along with the IA2 MD 2 and MD 3 assault rifles Brazil produces the M964A1 Pelopes Special Operations Platoon with an 11 barrel 3 point sling and a Picatinny rail with a tactical flashlight and sight 21 Brazilian Army officially used the FAP Fuzil Automatico Pesado or heavy automatic rifle as its squad automatic weapon until 2013 2014 when the FN Minimi was adopted to replace it The Marine Corps and Air Force also adopted the Minimi to replace the FAP 22 nbsp Brazilian Army conscripts using the FAL in Santa Maria Rio Grande do Sul IMBEL also produced a semi automatic version of the FAL for Springfield Armory Inc not to be confused with the US military Springfield Armory which was marketed in the US as the SAR 48 standard model 23 24 and SAR 4800 made after 1989 with some military features removed to comply with new legislation starting in the mid 1980s 25 IMBEL made receivers have been much in demand among American gunsmiths building FALs from parts kits In 2014 IMBEL offered the FAL in 9 versions 26 M964 the standard length semi auto and full auto M964 MD1 short barrel semi auto and full auto M964 MD2 standard length semi auto only M964 MD3 short barrel semi auto only M964A1 folding stock standard barrel semi auto and full auto M964A1 MD1 folding stock short barrel semi auto and full auto M964A1 MD2 folding stock standard barrel semi auto only M964A1 MD3 folding stock short barrel semi auto only M964A1 Pelopes short barrel semi auto and full auto with Picatinny rail Germany Edit nbsp Two West German cadets on a joint exercise in 1960 West Germany used the FN FAL designated as G1 The first German FALs were from an order placed in late 1955 or early 1956 for several thousand FN FAL so called Canada models with wood furniture and the prong flash hider These weapons were intended for the Bundesgrenzschutz border guard and not the newly formed Bundeswehr army which at the time used M1 Garands and M1 M2 carbines In November 1956 however West Germany ordered 100 000 additional FALs designated the G1 for the army FN made the rifles between April 1957 and May 1958 The G1 user modifications included light metal handguards and an integral folding bipod similarly to the Austrian version 27 Neither Germany nor Austria adopted the heavy barreled FAL instead using the MG3 the modernized MG42 in 7 62 51mm NATO as its general purpose machine gun GPMG 27 The Germans were satisfied with the FAL and wished to produce it under license 27 The Belgians however refused Being subject to two German occupations in the space of two generations 1914 1918 and 1940 1945 the Belgians insisted on the Germans purchasing only FN made FALs 27 Under the German occupation during World War II FN was taken over by the major German arms manufacturer Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfabriken DWM its directors arrested and the assembly lines run by slave labour after only 10 of the Belgian factory workers showed up when ordered to do so 27 After the Normandy landings the Germans stripped the FN factories of everything useful and sent it back to augment German industries destroying what they couldn t carry 27 FN tried to recoup its losses immediately after liberation near the end of 1944 by refurbishing Allied weapons and producing cheap easily produced spare parts such as tank tracks 27 To make matters worse the Germans tried to destroy the FN factory with V1 flying bombs achieving two direct hits 27 The memories of the Nazi occupation were still far too fresh in 1956 27 Based on political and economical considerations but also national pride 28 the Germans aimed at a weapon they could produce domestically and turned their sights to the Spanish CETME Modelo 58 rifle 29 Working with the Germans the Spanish adopted the 7 62x51mm NATO cartridge and a slightly modified version of the CETME went on to be manufactured in West Germany by Heckler amp Koch H amp K as the G3 rifle beginning production in 1959 The G3 would become the second most popular battle rifle in the Free World used by some 50 nations and license manufactured in a dozen 28 Without the G3 the FAL may have completely dominated the militaries of the West during the Cold War 28 The G1 featured a pressed metal handguard identical to the ones used on the Austrian Stg 58 as well as the Dutch and Greek FALs this being slightly slimmer than the standard wood or plastic handguards and featuring horizontal lines running almost their entire length G1s were also fitted with a unique removable prong flash hider adding another external distinction Of note is the fact that the G1 was the first FAL variant with the 3 mm 0 12 in lower sights specifically requested by Germany previous versions having the taller Commonwealth type sights also seen on Israeli models The German FAL had access to high quality Hensoldt Optische Werk F series scopes with Zeiss equivalent optics having 4x magnification with a 24 mm 0 94 in objective lens 30 The majority of the German G1 rifles were sold as surplus to the Turkish Army in the mid 1960 s and some G1s found their way to Rhodesia and Portugal 28 31 32 Israel Edit nbsp Israeli Heavy Barrel FAL Note the hinged butt plate After the 1948 Arab Israeli War the Israeli Defense Forces IDF had to overcome several logistics problems which were a result of the wide variety of old firearms that were in service such as the German Mauser Kar 98k and some British Lee Enfield rifles In 1955 the IDF adopted the IMI produced Uzi submachine gun and the FN FAL in order to standardize their infantry armament 33 with the FAL being designated Rov ve Mitta enn or Romat רומ ט 33 abbreviation of Self Loading Rifle The FAL version ordered by the IDF came in two basic variants both regular and heavy barrel squad automatic rifle light machine gun and were chambered in 7 62mm NATO The Israeli heavy barrel FAL or FALO was designated the Makle a Kal or Makleon 33 having a standard handguard improved with a perforated metal sleeve around the heavy barrel and a wooden handguard with a heat shield 34 The folding bipod being directly attached to the barrel 34 The Israeli Makleon was fed by a 20 round magazine 35 nbsp Paratroopers fighting on the outskirts of the town of Karameh during Operation Inferno 21 March 1968 A paratrooper with a Makleon is in position while a rifle grenadier is to his right Analysing the Israeli campaign of 1956 in the Sinai during the Suez Crisis Brigadier General SLA Marshall noted of the Makleon By Israeli training practice when the light machine guns are used as fire base to cover the forward movement of the rest of the section they should not operate at more than two hundred yards 183m maximum range from the target To cut that distance by half is considered better In the attack LMGs are rated as highly expendable items and are shoved far front When the section rushes the enemy position under cover of the LMG fire one rifleman stays behind to protect the gunners 36 Marshall also notes the advantage of both rifle and LMG ammunition being interchangeable with the squad carrying sixty 20 round magazines with 1 200 rounds in total 36 37 The Israeli FALs were originally produced as selective fire rifles though later light barrel rifle versions were altered to semi automatic fire only 33 The first rifles were Belgian made with Israel later licence producing the weapons and its magazines 33 The Israeli models are recognizable by a distinctive handguard with a forward perforated sheet metal section Israeli made magazines were made in the same FN standard of steel finished with durable black enamel paint and bearing two Hebrew characters stamped into the metal on one side 38 The IDF always emphasized the used of rifle grenades integrating its usage into their doctrine of night assaults 37 Approaching enemy positions within rifle grenade range initiating the assault with a volley of grenades onto the enemy positions intended to stun and suppress the defenders while being immediately followed by the infantry assault while the enemy was shaken 37 Israel s infantry prefers the rifle fired antitank grenade to the bazooka for shock effect on a group or bunker At night if the section should run into an ambush the grenadier fires and all the others rush straight in not firing 36 nbsp IDF Paratroopers with FN FAL rifles during a training march 5 June 1965 Initially Israel manufactured a copy of the Energa rifle grenade that would be surpassed by more recent designs still in production 39 Of particular note is the BT AT 52 39 an IMI version of the BT rifle grenade derived from the earlier MA AT 52 model It can be fired both from 5 56mm and 7 62mm weapons which share the same diameter muzzle device with a maximum range of 300 m 328yd from 7 62mm guns The BT AT 52 is often seen in photographs with the FAL 40 The Israeli FAL first saw action in relatively small quantities during the Suez Crisis of 1956 being the standard issue rifle in the Six Day War in June 1967 the War of Attrition of 1967 1970 During the Yom Kippur War of October 1973 the FAL was still in front line service as the standard Israeli rifle though increasing criticism eventually led to the phasing out of the weapon Israeli forces were primarily mechanized in nature the long heavy FAL slowed deployment drills and proved exceedingly difficult to maneuver within the confines of a vehicle 41 42 Additionally Israeli forces experienced occasional jamming of the FAL due to heavy sand and dust ingress endemic to Middle Eastern desert warfare 43 With the soldiers traveling in open topped halftracks in fast paced operations with tank tracks filling the air with clouds of dust filled with fine grit soldiers would jump from the half tracks to hit the sand finding the rifles filthy at the moment of contact 43 In such lightning fast mobile warfare the men would hardly have time to eat sleep or clean their rifles 43 42 Though the IDF evaluated a few modified FAL rifles with sand clearance slots in the bolt carrier and receiver which were already part of the Commonwealth L1A1 C1A1 design malfunction rates did not significantly improve 44 The Israeli FAL was eventually replaced from 1972 onwards 33 by the M16 and in 1974 by the Galil 42 43 44 The FAL remained in production in Israel into the 1980s 20 Portugal Edit During the colonial war in Angola Guinea and Mozambique the Ultramar War the FAL was used by the Portuguese alongside the HK G3 and the AR10 In Portuguese service the FN FAL was designated Espingarda Automatica 7 62 mm FN m 962 Those were Belgian made FN FAL and German G1 rifles and they became favoured by special forces units such as the Cacadores Especiais Special Hunters Rangers 32 Rhodesia Edit Like most British dependencies in the postwar era Southern Rhodesia adopted the Commonwealth pattern L1A1 SLR by the early 1960s 45 Southern Rhodesia contributed small military contingents to aid British counter insurgency operations during the Malayan Emergency and the Aden Emergency and adopted the L1A1 as its standard infantry rifle around that time 46 As a result of its participation in those conflicts the Rhodesian Security Forces inherited the British emphasis on long range marksmanship and the use of riflemen in small units as the primary cornerstone of major counter insurgency campaigns 47 The standard small unit of the security forces which included the Southern Rhodesian Army as well as various paramilitary police and internal security divisions was the stick this consisted of four riflemen each armed with SLRs and a machine gunner carrying an FN MAG 48 The United Kingdom continued to export L1A1s to Southern Rhodesia until that country issued a unilateral declaration of independence as Rhodesia in 1965 45 Rhodesia subsequently became subject to a British arms embargo and the SLRs were largely relegated to reserve army and police units 49 During the Rhodesian Bush War the Rhodesian Security Forces turned to a sympathetic South Africa as a major supplier of arms South Africa already manufactured a metric pattern FAL under licence as the R1 and transferred a number of these rifles to Rhodesia 31 Rhodesia also acquired FAL variants illicitly on the international black market including original FN rifles from Belgium 50 and G1s from West Germany 31 Many of the FAL derivatives in Rhodesian service were fitted with custom flash suppressors to reduce recoil on fully automatic fire 49 The heavy Rhodesian emphasis on individual marksmanship and the ballistic qualities of the 7 62x51mm round often allowed outnumbered Rhodesian patrols to fight their way through larger groups of insurgents from the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army ZANLA or Zimbabwe People s Revolutionary Army ZIPRA both of which were equipped primarily with Kalashnikov pattern automatic rifles such as the AK 47 and AKM 51 Rhodesian troops were trained to fire directly into the insurgents cover whenever an ambush was encountered shooting their FALs in bursts that were deliberately aimed low and graduating their fire upwards 51 Their 7 62x51mm ammunition could penetrate thick bush and tree trunks more readily than the 7 62x39mm cartridge used in the AK 47 and was more successful at killing the enemy combatants in cover 51 Following general elections in 1980 which brought the former insurgent leadership to power the country finally achieved internationally recognised independence as Zimbabwe and the Rhodesian Security Forces were amalgamated with ZANLA and ZIPRA 52 As the Zimbabwean government had inherited vast stockpiles of 7 62x51mm ammunition from the Rhodesian era it initially ordered the insurgents small arms to be placed into reserve storage and confirmed the FAL as the standard service rifle of the new Zimbabwe Defence Forces ZDF 52 However a successful sabotage action carried out against the preexisting stockpiles of 7 62x51mm ammunition possibly by disgruntled Rhodesian service members or South African special forces negated this factor 52 The ZDF responded by bringing the insurgent weapons out of storage to complement the FAL and gradually phased out the weapon type in favour of Kalashnikov rifles to simplify maintenance and logistics 52 South Africa Edit The FAL was produced under licence 53 in South Africa by Lyttleton Engineering Works where it is known as the R1 After a competition between the German G3 rifle the Armalite AR 10 and the FN FAL the South African Defence Force adopted three main variants of the FAL a rifle with the designation R1 a lightweight variant of the FN FAL 50 64 with folding butt fabricated locally under the designation R2 and a model designed for police use not capable of automatic fire under the designation R3 54 200 000 were destroyed in UN sponsored Operation Mouflon in 2001 A number of other variants of the R1 were built the R1 HB which had a heavy barrel and bipod the R1 Sniper which could be fitted with a scope and the R1 Para Carbine which used a Single Point IR sight and had a shorter barrel 55 R1 was standard issue in the SADF until the introduction of the R4 in the early 1980s Still used by the SANDF as a designated marksman rifle citation needed The first South African produced rifle serial numbered 200001 was presented to the then Prime Minister Dr Hendrik Verwoerd by Armscor and is now on view at the South African National Museum of Military History in Johannesburg 56 Syria Edit nbsp A fighter of the Siddiq Battalions fires a scoped FN FAL at Syrian Armed Forces in the town of Otaybah eastern Ghouta 2013 Syria adopted the FN FAL in 1956 12 000 rifles were bought in 1957 57 The Syrian state produced 7 62 51mm cartridges 57 and is reported to have acquired FALs from other sources During the Syrian Civil War FALs from various sources including Israel were used by governmental forces rebels Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL and Kurdish forces 57 The Syrian Arab Army and loyalist paramilitary forces used it as a designated marksman rifle 58 At the end of 2012 the use of 308 Winchester cartridges may have caused these FALs to malfunction thus reducing the popularity of the weapon 59 United States Edit Main article T48 rifle nbsp Century Arms FAL rifle built from an L1A1 parts kit Following World War II and the establishment of the NATO alliance there was pressure to adopt a standard rifle alliance wide The FAL was originally designed to handle intermediate cartridges but in an attempt to secure US favor for the rifle the FAL was redesigned to use the newly developed 7 62 51mm NATO cartridge The US tested several variants of the FAL to replace the M1 Garand These rifles were tested against the T44 essentially an updated version of the basic Garand design 60 Despite the T44 and T48 performing similarly in trials 60 the T44 was for several reasons selected and the US formally adopted the T44 as the M14 service rifle citation needed During the late 1980s and 1990s many countries decommissioned the FAL from their armories and sold them en masse to United States importers as surplus The rifles were imported to the United States as fully automatic guns Once in the U S the FALs were de militarized upper receiver destroyed to eliminate the rifles character as an automatic rifle as stipulated by the Gun Control Act of 1968 GCA 68 currently prohibits the importation of foreign made full automatic rifles prior to the enactment of the Gun Control Act Semiautomatic versions of the same firearm were legal to import until the Semi automatic Assault Rifle Ban of 1989 Thousands of the resulting parts kits were sold at generally low prices 90 250 to hobbyists The hobbyists rebuilt the parts kits to legal and functional semi automatic rifles on new semi automatic upper receivers FAL rifles are still commercially available from a few domestic firms in semi auto configuration Enterprise Arms DSArms and Century International Arms Century Arms created a semi automatic version L1A1 with an IMBEL upper receiver and surplus British Enfield inch pattern parts while DSArms used Steyr style metric pattern FAL designs This standard metric difference means the Century Arms and DSArms firearms are not made from fully interchangeable batches of parts citation needed Venezuela Edit Venezuela placed an order for 5 000 FN made FAL rifles in 1954 in the 7x49 15mm Optimum 2 caliber 20 This 7 49mm also known as 7 mm Liviano or 7 mm Venezuelan is essentially a 7 57mm round shortened to intermediate length and closer to being a true intermediate round than the 7 62x51mm NATO 20 This unusual caliber was jointly developed by Venezuelan and Belgian engineers motivated by a global move towards intermediate calibers The Venezuelans who had been exclusively using the 7 57mm round in their light and medium weapons since the turn of the 20th century felt it was a perfect platform on which to base a calibre tailored to the particular rigours of the Venezuelan terrain Eventually the plan was dropped despite having ordered millions of rounds and thousands of weapons on this caliber As the Cold War escalated the military command felt it necessary to align with NATO on geopolitical grounds despite not being a member resulting in the adoption of the 7 62 51mm NATO cartridge The 5 000 rifles of the first batch were rebarrelled to 7 62 51mm 20 When marching victoriously into Havana in 1959 Fidel Castro was carrying an FN made Venezuelan FAL in 7 mm Liviano 35 Until recently the FAL was the main service rifle of the Venezuelan army made under license by CAVIM 61 Venezuela has bought 100 000 AK 103 assault rifles from Russia in order to replace the old FALs 61 Although the full shipment arrived by the end of 2006 the FAL will remain in service with the Venezuelan Reserve Forces and the Territorial Guard citation needed Users EditSee also L1A1 Self Loading Rifle Users nbsp Current operators Former operators nbsp An Indonesian Navy sailor firing shot line from the KRI Sultan Hasanuddin 366 which was part of the UNIFIL Maritime Task Force to FGS Ludwigshafen am Rhein F264 in Mediterranean Sea May 2020 nbsp An Irish soldier armed with a heavily upgraded FAL used as a sniper support weapon nbsp Angola 62 nbsp Argentina Produced under license It is the regular rifle of the Argentine Armed Forces and is used by the Army and Air Force and as a secondary rifle in the Navy The FAL M5 modernized variant was intended to be widely fielded though the project stalled some of the delivered units are in use 53 The modernization program was restarted and three new variants were designed all based on components manufactured by american gunmaker DSArms 63 These are the FAMA Fusil Argentino Modelo Asalto a compact version intended mainly for paratrooper use the FAMCa Fusil Argentino Modelo Carabina intended for general use and the FAMTD Fusil Argentino Modelo Tirador Destacado intended for marksmen and available in a light or heavy barrel configuration Reportedly 63 only the FAMCa has seen significant adoption mainly in special forces units and quick reaction forces though sources claim delivery of rifles has stopped 64 nbsp Bahrain 62 page needed nbsp Bangladesh 62 Withdrawn from service In reserve citation needed nbsp Barbados 62 page needed nbsp Belize 62 page needed nbsp Bolivia 62 page needed nbsp Brazil Produced under license between 1959 and 1984 53 Now being replaced by IMBEL IA2 nbsp Burundi 62 page needed nbsp Cambodia 62 page needed nbsp Cameroon 62 page needed nbsp A Kurdish YPG fighter with scoped FAL 2016 nbsp Central African Republic 65 nbsp Chad 62 page needed nbsp Colombia 62 page needed nbsp Comoros 62 page needed nbsp Congo Kinshasa 62 page needed nbsp Costa Rica 62 page needed nbsp Cyprus 62 page needed nbsp Djibouti 62 page needed nbsp Dominican Republic 62 page needed nbsp Ecuador 62 page needed nbsp Egypt FN FALs were used by Unit 777 during the raid on Larnaca International Airport 66 nbsp Eswatini 62 nbsp Gambia 62 page needed nbsp Ghana 62 page needed nbsp Greece 62 page needed nbsp Guyana 62 page needed nbsp Haiti 62 page needed nbsp Honduras 62 page needed nbsp India License produced copy of the UK 7 62 mm L1A1 variant still in use by some Police Units 67 68 nbsp Indonesia Used by KKO now used aboard naval vessels for line throwers 69 70 nbsp Israel FN made and locally made under license by Israel Military Industries in FAL and FALO versions Known locally as the Romat 33 nbsp Iraq Iraqi insurgents 71 nbsp Ireland 62 Used as the service rifle of the Irish Defence Forces from 1961 until 1989 when it was replaced by the Steyr AUG However it remained in use with the Irish reserve forces until the early 2000s In 2011 the Irish Army re introduced an upgraded and modified version of the FN FAL as a sniper support weapon 72 The Irish Naval Service still use the FN FAL for line throwing In January 2021 the Irish Defence Forces stated they were looking for a replacement sniper support weapon 73 nbsp Ivory Coast 74 nbsp Kenya 62 page needed nbsp Kuwait 62 page needed nbsp Lesotho 75 nbsp Liberia 62 nbsp Libya 76 nbsp Malawi 62 page needed nbsp Mexico Produced under license 53 nbsp Morocco 62 page needed nbsp Mozambique 62 nbsp Myanmar 62 used surplus ex German G1s 77 nbsp Nepal 62 nbsp Nigeria 62 Licensed by DICON Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria in Nigeria as the NR 1 78 79 80 nbsp Niger 81 nbsp Oman 62 nbsp Pakistan Used by the Pakistan Army In service with small numbers used during the Cold War 82 nbsp Panama 62 nbsp Paraguay 62 nbsp Peru 62 nbsp Philippines A few units of FALs were used by the AFP and Police during the 1970s went into the hands of the MNLF rebels as seen during the 2013 siege of Zamboanga City 83 nbsp Qatar 84 nbsp Rwanda 62 nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 62 nbsp Saudi Arabia 82 nbsp Somalia 85 nbsp South Africa 53 nbsp Syria 62 nbsp Suriname 62 nbsp Tanzania 62 nbsp Thailand Used by Royal Thai Police since the 1960s designated Rifle Type 05 1962 82 nbsp Togo 62 nbsp Tunisia Used by Tunisian National Guard 62 nbsp Turkey Used by Turkish Land Forces as G1 between 1960s 1980s 86 nbsp Uganda 62 nbsp United Arab Emirates 62 nbsp Ukraine An unknown quantity seen in the hands of Ukrainian forces during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 87 88 nbsp Uruguay 62 nbsp Venezuela Produced under license 53 nbsp Yemen 62 nbsp Zambia 62 nbsp Zimbabwe 62 Non state users Edit nbsp Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda 89 nbsp Free Syrian Army 57 nbsp ISIL 57 Maute Group 90 nbsp Moro Islamic Liberation Front 62 nbsp Lord s Resistance Army 91 nbsp Provisional Irish Republican Army Used Irish Army FALs and captured British L1A1 rifles 92 a number were seized during a raid on the apartment of IRA members in Amsterdam 93 ex Libyan FALs can be traced to Algeria Chad Egypt Lebanon Niger Syria and Tunisia 94 Former users Edit nbsp Austria Produced under license StG 58 variants used by the Austrian Army from 1958 until 1977 Replaced by Steyr AUG 53 nbsp Belgium Used by the Belgian Army from 1956 until 1995 Replaced by FN FNC 62 nbsp Botswana 62 Being replaced as of 2017 with the SAR 21 95 nbsp Chile 62 nbsp Croatia 70 000 FAL and FALO rifles supplied by Argentina during the Croatian War of Independence 96 often called Falovka citation needed nbsp Cuba Used during the Bay of Pigs Invasion 97 nbsp Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Used in unknown quantities by Special Operations Unit Serbia citation needed nbsp Israel Produced under license as the lightened ROMAT M1953 Used by the Israeli Army from 1955 until 1972 Officially replaced by IMI Galil and M16 53 nbsp Katanga 98 nbsp Lebanon Adopted in 1956 as the standard rifle of the Lebanese army 99 100 nbsp Luxembourg 62 Used Belgian FALs from 1957 to 1996 replaced by Steyr AUG nbsp Netherlands The Royal Netherlands Army adopted the rifle with a bipod and in semi automatic form in 1961 In service it was called Het licht automatisch geweer but usually known as the FAL The rifles had unique sights hooded at the front and the German style sheet metal front handguard A sniper version Geweer Lange Afstand was also used standard with a scope of Dutch origin produced by the Artillerie Inrichtingen and without the bipod The scope was designated Kijker Richt Recht AI 62 The heavy barrel FAL 50 42 version was also adopted later as a squad automatic weapon as the Het zwaar automatisch geweer 101 nbsp Portugal In 1960 the Army issued quantities of light barrel FN and West German G1 FAL rifles to several of its elite commando forces including the Companhias de Cacadores Especiais Special Hunter Ranger companies 102 The latter often expressed a preference for the lighter FAL over the Portuguese manufactured version of the Heckler amp Koch G3 rifle when on ambush or patrol 103 nbsp Rhodesia Bought as surplus from Germany and South Africa because of trade embargo in the country in the 1960s and 1970s 104 nbsp South Africa nbsp United Kingdom used some Belgian made FN FALs 45 nbsp West Germany Used by the German Army from 1956 until the early 1960s Replaced by the Heckler amp Koch G3 105 Conflicts EditIn the more than 70 years of use worldwide the FAL has seen use in conflicts all over the world During the Falklands War the FN FAL was used by both sides The FAL was used by the Argentine armed forces and the L1A1 Self Loading Rifle SLR a semi automatic only version of the FAL was used by the armed forces of the UK and other Commonwealth nations 106 1950s Edit Mau Mau rebellion 1952 1960 107 British FN made prototypes 45 Cuban Revolution 1953 1959 108 Calderonista invasion of Costa Rica 1955 Vietnam War 1955 1975 1960s Edit Rhodesian Bush War 1964 1979 109 31 Congo Crisis 1960 1965 110 Portuguese Colonial War 1961 1974 51 Bay of Pigs Invasion 1961 2 Araguaia Guerrilla War 1966 1975 111 South African Border War 1966 1990 112 Six Day War 1967 113 114 War of Attrition 1967 1970 citation needed Nigerian Civil War 1967 1970 115 Moro conflict 1969 2019 116 The Troubles 92 1970s Edit nbsp FAL armed Portuguese soldiers in Angola Bangladesh Liberation War 1971 117 Yom Kippur War 1973 113 Cyprus Peace Operation Invasion of Cyprus 1974 Operation Independence 1975 1977 Lebanese Civil War 1975 1990 99 118 119 Western Sahara War 1975 1991 120 Angolan Civil War 1975 2002 121 Shaba II 1978 122 Salvadoran Civil War 1979 1992 123 1980s Edit nbsp Members of the Eastern Caribbean Defense Force in Operation Urgent Fury are armed with FN FAL rifles Falklands War 1982 2 Bougainville Civil War 1988 1998 124 1990s Edit Gulf War 1990 1991 125 Rwandan Civil War 1990 1994 126 Croatian War of Independence 1991 1995 96 Burundian Civil War 1993 2005 127 Cenepa War 1995 First Congo War 1996 1997 128 2000s Edit Kivu conflict 2004 present citation needed Insurgency in Paraguay 2005 present Mexican Drug War 2006 present 129 Boko Haram insurgency 2009 present 81 2010s Edit Rio de Janeiro security crisis 2010 124 Militias Comando Vermelho conflict 2010 Present 130 Libyan Civil War 2011 131 132 Syrian Civil War 2011 present 57 133 Iraqi insurgency 2011 2013 134 South Sudanese Civil War 2013 2020 citation needed Yemeni Civil War 2014 present citation needed Saudi Arabian led intervention in Yemen 2015 present citation needed 2020s Edit 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 87 135 See also EditDesarrollos Industriales Casanave SC 2005 the Peruvian pattern upgrade of the FAL FN 49 predecessor to the FAL FN CAL an unsuccessful FN 5 56mm NATO assault rifle that externally resembles the FAL Heckler amp Koch G3 a German 7 62 battle rifle designed in the 1950s KAL1 general purpose infantry rifle Howa Type 64 IMBEL MD97 IMBEL IA2 ParaFALReferences EditCitations Edit a b Aldis Anne 2005 Soft Security Threats amp Europe Routledge p 83 a b c d Bishop Chris Guns in Combat Chartwell Books Inc 1998 ISBN 0 7858 0844 2 page needed Fabrique Nationale FN FAL Battle Rifle 1953 MilitaryFactory Archived from the original on 2 August 2014 Retrieved 23 November 2014 a b Hogg Ian 2002 Jane s Guns Recognition Guide 1st ed Glasgow HarperCollins p 290 ISBN 000712760X The FN FAL Right Arm Of The Free World American Rifleman Retrieved 7 September 2023 a b c FN FAL Belgium Archived from the original on 17 November 2014 Retrieved 14 November 2014 Earl Harvey s T 25 powmadeak47 com Archived from the original on 25 March 2012 The FN FAL Was Almost America s Battle Rifle War is Boring 5 October 2014 Archived from the original on 6 May 2018 Retrieved 28 April 2019 Cashner 2013 p 5 Tuning the FAL s Gas System Archived from the original on 12 January 2014 Retrieved 14 November 2014 Popeneker Maxim amp Williams Anthony 2005 Assault Rifle The Crowood Press Ltd ISBN 1 86126 700 2 J Dougherty Martin 2011 Small arms visual encyclopedia London Amber Books p 222 ISBN 978 1 907446 98 6 OCLC 751804871 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The StG58 Austria s Select Fire FAL www smallarmsreview com Archived from the original on 2019 02 24 Retrieved 2019 02 23 a b GunsMagazine com August 2002 Bourne Mike 2007 Arming Conflict The Proliferation of Small Arms Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan pp 66 67 ISBN 978 0 230 01933 1 Multiplying the Sources Licensed and Unlicensed Military Production PDF Geneva Small Arms Survey 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 23 December 2016 Retrieved 21 September 2016 Legacies of War in the Company of Peace Firearms in Nepal PDF Geneva Small Arms Survey May 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 8 July 2014 Retrieved 21 September 2016 Graduate Institute of International Studies 2003 Small Arms Survey 2003 Development Denied Oxford Oxford University Press pp 97 113 ISBN 978 0 19 925175 9 Armtech FAL SAS Archived from the original on 18 May 2013 Retrieved 14 November 2014 a b c d e f g h i Cashner 2013 p 18 BASTOS Carlos Stephani FAL M964A1 Pelopes 7 62 Aproveitando melhor o que se tem Archived 2016 10 12 at the Wayback Machine in Portuguese Federal University of Juiz de Fora FN MINIMI EB aposenta o FAP e adota a FN Mini Mitrailleuse 2013 10 20 Archived from the original on 2016 10 12 Retrieved 2016 10 11 via DefesaNet Full Auto FAL The Select Fire Springfield SAR 48 30 December 2021 Archived from the original on May 14 2023 The FN FAL Rifle December 2001 Archived from the original on September 22 2021 Springfield s SAR 4800 FAL in 5 56mm 20 November 2019 Archived from the original on December 2 2022 Administrator Fuzil 7 62 M964 FAL Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 14 November 2014 a b c d e f g h i Cashner 2013 p 16 a b c d Cashner 2013 p 17 Europe web prm ox ac uk Archived from the original on 2017 04 27 Retrieved 2017 06 26 Cashner 2013 p 29 a b c d Cashner 2013 p 43 a b Cashner 2013 pp 46 47 a b c d e f g Cashner 2013 p 21 a b Cashner 2013 p 67 a b Cashner 2013 p 66 a b c Marshall S L A 1958 Sinai victory command decisions in history s shortest war Israel s hundred hour conquest of Egypt east of Suez autumn 1956 Nashville Battery Press p 241 ISBN 0 89839 085 0 OCLC 13515139 a b c Cashner 2013 p 48 Cashner 2013 p 24 a b Cashner 2013 p 49 Images of Israeli use of rifle grenades from 1956 onwards 24 October 2014 Archived from the original on September 23 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2017 NEWSLETTER JUNE 2006 Johannesburg South African Military History Society Title page samilitaryhistory org Archived from the original on May 9 2021 Retrieved 2022 10 01 a b c Bodinson Holt Century s Golani Sporter The Israeli designed AK Hybrid is a Solid Performer Guns July 2007 a b c d Cashner 2013 p 50 a b Weapons Wizard Israeli Galili Soldier of Fortune March 1982 a b c d Cashner 2013 p 15 Wood JRT 2008 Malkasian Carter Marston Daniel eds Counterinsurgency in Modern Warfare Oxford Osprey Publishing pp 189 342 ISBN 978 1 84603 281 3 Cashner 2013 p 35 Cashner 2013 p 42 a b Chris Cocks 2002 04 03 Fireforce One Man s War in the Rhodesian Light Infantry July 1 2001 ed Covos Day pp 139 141 ISBN 1 919874 32 1 Wood J R T April 2008 A matter of weeks rather than months The Impasse between Harold Wilson and Ian Smith Sanctions Aborted Settlements and War 1965 1969 Victoria British Columbia Trafford Publishing p 191 ISBN 978 1 4251 4807 2 a b c d Cashner 2013 p 46 a b c d Nelson Harold 1983 Zimbabwe a country study The American University Washington D C ISBN 0 16 001598 7 a b c d e f g h Berrigan Frida Ciarrocca Michelle November 2000 Report Profiling the Small Arms Industry World Policy Institute Archived from the original on 2018 08 23 Retrieved 2018 08 29 Ezell 1988 p 328 Small Arms Illustrated 2010 History of the FN F A L Rifle in South Africa Southern African Arms and Ammunition Collectors Association Archived from the original on 23 November 2015 Retrieved 23 November 2015 a b c d e f Jenzen Jones amp Spleeters 2015 p 7 La 104eme brigade de la Garde republicaine syrienne troupe d elite et etendard du regime de Damas France Soir in French 20 March 2017 Archived from the original on 19 October 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Jenzen Jones amp Spleeters 2015 p 23 a b Stevens R Blake The FAL Rifle Collector Grade Publications ISBN 0 88935 168 6 ISBN 978 0 88935 168 4 1993 a b Pablo Dreyfus A Recurrent Latin American Nightmare PDF Federation of American Scientists Archived PDF from the original on 2010 06 13 Retrieved 2010 04 01 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be Jones Richard D 2009 Jane s Infantry Weapons 2009 2010 35th edition Jane s Information Group ISBN 978 0 7106 2869 5 a b La necesaria modernizacion del FAL Evolucion del kit FAMCa y las variantes para tirador destacado 2023 08 18 Archived from the original on 2023 08 18 Retrieved 2023 08 18 Actualidad y futuro de las miras de combate en el Ejercito Argentino 2023 08 18 Archived from the original on 2023 08 18 Retrieved 2023 08 18 Small Arms Survey 2005 The Central African Republic A Case Study of Small Arms and Conflict PDF Small Arms Survey 2005 Weapons at War Oxford University Press p 313 ISBN 978 0 19 928085 8 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 08 08 Retrieved 2018 08 29 Small Arms Survey 2005 Archived from the original on 2018 08 30 Retrieved 2018 08 29 Katz Sam 24 Mar 1988 Arab Armies of the Middle East Wars 2 Men at Arms 128 Osprey Publishing p 8 ISBN 978 0 85045 800 8 Rifle 7 62mm 1A1 Archived from the original on 2020 02 23 OFB 7 62 mm 1A1 and 1C rifles India Rifles Archived from the original on 2013 01 28 Di Laut Mediterania Kri Sultan Iskandar Muda Latihan Bersama Kapal Perang Jerman koarmada2 tnial mil id in Indonesian 12 July 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Asah Profesionalisme KRI Sultan Hasanuddin 366 Laksanakan Latihan Mailbag Transfer tni mil id in Indonesian 27 May 2020 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Small Arms Survey 2012 p 320 Lavery Don 2011 11 06 Irish Independent Article Archived from the original on 2011 11 08 Retrieved 2011 11 06 Moss Matthew 2 February 2021 Irish Defence Force Seeks New Designated Marksman Rifle The Firearm Blog Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Anders Holger June 2014 Identifier les sources d approvisionnement Les munitions de petit calibre en Cote d Ivoire PDF in French Small Arms Survey and United Nations Operation in Cote d Ivoire p 15 ISBN 978 2 940 548 05 7 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 10 09 Retrieved 2018 09 05 Berman Eric G March 2019 Beyond Blue Helmets Promoting Weapons and Ammunition Management in Non UN Peace Operations PDF Small Arms Survey MPOME p 43 Archived from the original PDF on June 3 2019 Jenzen Jones N R McCollum Ian April 2017 Small Arms Survey ed Web Trafficking Analysing the Online Trade of Small Arms and Light Weapons in Libya PDF Working Paper No 26 pp 77 79 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 10 09 Retrieved 2018 08 30 Scarlata Paul May 2012 The military rifle cartridges of Burma Myanmar Shotgun News Archived from the original on 2018 11 28 Retrieved 2018 11 27 Licensed and unlicensed production of FN Herstal products to August 2006 PDF Small Arms Survey Archived from the original PDF on 2010 07 05 Retrieved 2010 04 10 Nigeria Arms Procurement and Defense Industries June 1991 Archived from the original on 2008 12 07 Retrieved 2010 04 10 DOSSIER The Question of Arms in Africa Agenzia Fides Archived from the original on 2009 03 18 Retrieved 2010 04 10 a b Savannah de Tessieres January 2018 At the Crossroads of Sahelian Conflicts Insecurity Terrorism and Arms Trafficking in Niger PDF Report Small Arms Survey p 58 ISBN 978 2 940548 48 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2018 06 05 a b c The History of the FAL LAR Archived from the original on 2013 09 30 The Situation In Zamboanga FN FAL Identification Needed The Firearm Blog 24 September 2013 Archived from the original on 4 November 2016 Retrieved 2 November 2016 Jenzen Jones amp Spleeters 2015 p 21 Small Arms Survey 2012 Surveying the Battlefield Illicit Arms In Afghanistan Iraq and Somalia PDF Small Arms Survey 2012 Moving Targets Cambridge University Press p 338 ISBN 978 0 521 19714 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 07 Retrieved 2018 08 30 Small Arms Survey 2012 Archived from the original on 2018 08 31 Retrieved 2018 08 30 Modern Firearms 27 October 2010 Archived from the original on 11 November 2014 Retrieved 14 November 2014 a b Trinko Miroslave Die ukrainischen Soldaten begannen automatische FN FAL Gewehre zu verwenden eine der bekanntesten und am weitesten verbreiteten Waffen der Welt gagadget com in German Archived from the original on 8 October 2022 Retrieved 2022 10 09 Ukrainian military received FN FAL PARA rifles Militarnyi Archived from the original on 31 January 2023 Retrieved 2022 10 09 Small Arms Survey 2015 Waning Cohesion The Rise and Fall of the FDLR FOCA PDF Small Arms Survey 2015 weapons and the world PDF Cambridge University Press p 202 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 20 Retrieved 2018 08 29 Small Arms Survey 2015 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2018 01 28 Retrieved 2018 08 29 Maute guns recovered from Lake Lanao PhilStar Global November 13 2017 Retrieved November 20 2020 Small Arms Survey 2006 Fuelling Fear The Lord s Resistance Army and Small Arms Small Arms Survey 2006 Unfinished Business Oxford University Press p 283 ISBN 978 0 19 929848 8 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 08 30 Retrieved 2018 08 29 a b The Rifles of the IRA Magill magill ie Archived from the original on October 23 2022 Retrieved 2022 10 23 Inside The Ira Weapons amp Technology The Ira amp Sinn Fein FRONTLINE PBS www pbs org Archived from the original on January 28 2023 Retrieved 2022 10 23 Jenzen Jones amp McCollum 2017 p 49 Binnie Jeremy de Cherisey Erwan 2017 New model African armies PDF Jane s Archived from the original PDF on 22 June 2017 a b Defensa com 2013 07 31 Lo que Croacia se llevo de la Argentina Noticias Defensa Documentos Defensa com in Spanish Archived from the original on December 9 2022 Retrieved 2022 11 26 de Quesada Alejandro 10 Jan 2009 The Bay of Pigs Cuba 1961 Elite 166 pp 60 61 ISBN 978 1 84603 323 0 Abbott Peter 20 February 2014 Modern African Wars 4 The Congo 1960 2002 Men at Arms 492 Osprey Publishing p 14 ISBN 978 1 78200 076 1 a b Military rifle cartridges of Lebanon Part 2 from independence to Hezbollah Free Online Library www thefreelibrary com Archived from the original on April 24 2023 Retrieved 2022 11 18 Jenzen Jones amp Spleeters 2015 p 20 Ezell 1988 p 276 Afonso Aniceto and Gomes Carlos de Matos Guerra Colonial 2000 ISBN 972 46 1192 2 pp 183 184 358 359 Afonso Aniceto and Gomes Carlos de Matos Guerra Colonial 2000 ISBN 972 46 1192 2 pp 358 359 The military rifle cartridges of Rhodesia Zimbabwe from Cecil Rhodes to Robert Mugabe Archived from the original on 13 November 2014 Retrieved 14 November 2014 Sovremennoe strelkovoe oruzhie mira Avtomaty i shturmovye vintovki Archived from the original on 17 November 2014 Retrieved 14 November 2014 Top Ten Combat Rifles Military Channel Archived from the original on 27 January 2013 Retrieved 12 February 2013 Contre les Mau Mau Encyclopedie des armes Les forces armees du monde in French Vol XII Atlas 1986 pp 2764 2766 Cashner 2013 p 66 McNab Chris 2002 20th Century Military Uniforms 2nd ed Kent Grange Books p 196 ISBN 1 84013 476 3 Cashner 2013 pp 41 42 A GUERRILHA DO ARAGUAIA A LUTA ARMADA NO CAMPO E SUAS CONSEQUENCIAS HISToRICAS Brasil Escola Monografias Brasil Escola in Brazilian Portuguese Archived from the original on October 23 2022 Retrieved 2022 10 22 McNab 2002 p 204 a b Cashner 2013 p 47 McNab 2002 p 140 McNab 2002 p 185 Schroeder Matt 2013 Captured and Counted Illicit Weapons in Mexico and the Philippines Small Arms Survey 2013 Everyday Dangers Cambridge University Press p 303 ISBN 978 1 107 04196 7 Archived from the original PDF on August 24 2013 Arms for freedom 29 December 2017 Archived from the original on February 1 2018 Retrieved 2019 08 31 Jureidini McLaurin and Price Military operations in selected Lebanese built up areas 1979 Appendix A table A 8 Jenzen Jones amp Spleeters Identifying amp Tracing the FN Herstal FAL Rifle Documenting signs of diversion in Syria and beyond 2015 pp 20 21 Abdalahe M Beirik Ahmed October 2015 Santana Perez Juan Manuel ed El Nacionalismo Saharaui de Zemla a la Organizacion de la Unidad Africana PDF PhD in Spanish Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es p 335 Archived PDF from the original on 2018 04 19 Retrieved 2018 12 20 Fitzsimmons Scott November 2012 Callan s Mercenaries Are Defeated in Northern Angola Mercenaries in Asymmetric Conflicts Cambridge University Press p 155 doi 10 1017 CBO9781139208727 005 ISBN 978 1 107 02691 9 Sicard Jacques November 1982 Les armes de Kolwezi La Gazette des armes in French No 111 pp 25 30 Archived from the original on 2018 10 19 Retrieved 2018 10 18 Cashner 2013 pp 66 68 a b Dom Rotheroe Director 2001 The Coconut Revolution Documentary Stampede Event occurs at 16 47 Rottman Gordon L 1993 Armies of the Gulf War Elite 45 Osprey Publishing p 58 ISBN 978 1 85532 277 6 A Rwandan government soldier checks the identity papers of a passer Small Arms Survey 2007 Armed Violence in Burundi Conflict and Post Conflict Bujumbura PDF The Small Arms Survey 2007 Guns and the City Cambridge University Press p 204 ISBN 978 0 521 88039 8 Archived from the original on 2018 08 27 Retrieved 2018 08 29 Small Arms Survey 2005 p 318 admin Mexican Drug War Fighters Archived from the original on March 6 2022 Recent images of Rio s drug war The Firearm Blog 2017 10 04 Archived from the original on February 13 2023 Retrieved 2022 10 27 Up Close With Mustafa Abud Al Jeleil Leader Of Libyan Rebels World Crunch com com Archived from the original on 2011 04 03 Retrieved 2011 03 12 Gaddafi forces intercept arms from Qatar 2011 07 05 Archived from the original on 2011 08 18 Retrieved 2011 07 05 Syrian Rebel with Israeli FAL Rifle The Firearm Blog 2012 05 30 Archived from the original on October 22 2022 Retrieved 2022 10 22 Baker Aryn 20 January 2014 A Nightmare Returns Time p 31 Ukrainian military received FN FAL PARA rifles Militarnyi Archived from the original on January 30 2023 Retrieved 2022 10 09 General and cited references Edit Afonso Aniceto and Gomes Carlos de Matos 2000 Guerra Colonial Cashner Bob 2013 The FN FAL Battle Rifle Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 78096 903 9 Chanoff David Doan Van Toai Vietnam A Portrait of its People at War London Taurus amp Co 1996 ISBN 1 86064 076 1 Ezell Clinton Small Arms of the World Stackpole Books 1983 Hellenic Army General Staff Army History Directorate Geniko Epiteleio Stratoy Diey8ynsh Istorias Stratoy in Greek The Armament of Greek Army 1868 2000 Oplismos Ellhnikoy Stratoy 1868 2000 Athens Greece 2000 Jenzen Jones N R Spleeters Damien August 2015 Identifying amp Tracing the FN Herstal FAL Rifle Documenting Signs of Diversion in Syria and Beyond PDF Churchlands West Australia Armament Research Services Pty Ltd p 7 ISBN 978 0 9924624 6 8 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 03 20 Pikula Maj Sam The Armalite AR 10 1998 Sazanidis Christos 1995 Arms of the Greeks Ta opla twn Ellhnwn in Greek Thessaloniki Greece Maiandros Maiandros ISBN 978 960 90213 0 2 Stevens R Blake The FAL Rifle Classic Edition Cobourg Ontario Canada Collector Grade Publications 1993 ISBN 0 88935 168 6 Stevens R Blake More on the Fabled FAL A Companion to the FAL Rifle Cobourg Ontario Canada Collector Grade Publications 2011 ISBN 978 0 88935 534 7 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to FN FAL Additional information including pictures at Modern Firearms The FN FAL amp L1A1 FAQVideoVideo of operation on YouTube in Japanese FN FAL Paratrooper Model Presentation MPEG Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FN FAL amp oldid 1176561309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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