Subtitles section Play video
-
Weapons are made for war.
-
It is their purpose, and a weapon that cannot fight is not a useful one.
-
Not all are forged in battle, however: and the forces that drive us apart can equally
-
unite us.
-
The FAL.
-
A classic cold-war rifle used the world over.
-
A design that shed wartime wood for the modern age.
-
So, how did the notion of a NATO-standard rifle come about?
-
What obstacles stood in its way?
-
And in games, why is such a widely-used weapon a relatively rare sight?
-
The year is 1945.
-
War had left millions dead, cities in ruins - and a collective will for a long-lasting
-
peace.
-
It was a time of treaties and unions, with wounded nations shoring support in case of
-
future conflict.
-
The seed of a new European Union was planted in the Treaty of Brussels: a pledge of mutual
-
defence between Britain, France and Benelux - lest the Nazis ever return.
-
As the dust settled, it was clear that Germany was no longer a threat: but the massive manpower
-
and nuclear weapons of the Soviets were another story.
-
Nobody was more concerned by the rise of communism than the United States - and thus the North
-
Atlantic Treaty was drafted, extending the zone of mutual defence to cover the US, Canada,
-
Denmark, Iceland, Italy, Norway and Portugal - with Greece, Turkey and West Germany joining
-
shortly after.
-
With the establishment of NATO, a clear line in the sand was drawn between the first and
-
second world: A deterrence that had a chilling effect on military action - ensuring the Cold
-
War stayed that way.
-
NATO's role was to organise effective co-operation between each member's military: proposing
-
standardisation for procedures, communication, equipment - and ammunition.
-
With most member nations still using bolt-action weapons: if there was to be a collective modernisation
-
- the so-called 'Free World' needed a new firearm.
-
FN Herstal were key innovators in the early 20th century - well noted for their self-loading
-
firearm designs - and for the work of John Browning.
-
After his death in 1926, work continued in the hands of FN's chief weapons designer,
-
Dieudonné Saive.
-
He was the man responsible for finishing the Browning Hi-Power - but he would become better
-
known for his gas-operated rifles.
-
The first was the FN Model 1949, or the SAFN - a ca pable semi-automatic rifle, but its
-
non-progressive design relegated it to a prior era.
-
Saive's next project would shed such conservatism and attempt to define the next generation
-
of small arms.
-
With select-fire capability, removable magazines with a 20-round capacity - and reliable self-loading
-
function regardless of ammunition:
-
Compared to the wooden weapons it would replace, this new 'Light, Automatic Rifle' would be
-
state of the art.
-
Inspired by the 7.92mm 'Kurz' cartridge fired by the German Sturmgewehr, the FAL was originally
-
designed to fire intermediate rounds - just like a modern assault rifle.
-
The experimental .280 British was the prime calibre contender - a small, high velocity
-
round which retained rifle-grade ballistics while lessening recoil and necessary weight.
-
The FAL was to be a truly modern rifle firing the perfect round.
-
What could go wrong?
-
America's 'doctrine demanded power: .30 calibre was their minimum acceptable manstopper, and
-
in their dominant position they dug their heels.
-
And so the new rifle was retooled for the more powerful .308 Winchester round - eventually
-
becoming the NATO standard 7.62mm cartridge.
-
Despite getting their way, America snubbed the foreign-made rifle after testing, instead
-
electing the home-grown M14.
-
The dream of a universal weapon destroyed: the advanced use of intermediate cartridges
-
delayed.
-
Even so, from its first production in 1953 the FAL still saw massive adoption - it has
-
been used by over 90 countries, and over 2 million rifles have been manufactured.
-
It was the NATO equivalent of the AKM through its widespread service, earning it the title:
-
'The right arm of the free world.'
-
The odd thing about the FAL - with regards to its depiction - is its relative rarity.
-
With the huge number manufactured - it's amongst the top ten weapons of all time - it should
-
rub shoulders with the M16 and AK-47:
-
but it doesn't.
-
It's a sideline, a relic from the cold war overlooked in favour of valiant World War
-
2 stories and more relevant tales of modern terrorism.
-
After all, it was a weapon designed for unity, for peace - an uneasy peace, perhaps - but,
-
with few exceptions, its conflicts saw no greater scale than skirmish.
-
It's a relatively unassuming weapon to look at, too - the most prominent feature of its
-
sleek black exterior is its carrying handle.
-
Compared to weapons made just 10 years before, it's a very modern-looking rifle - but its
-
innovations are obscured by those who imitated them.
-
Caught in the middle of two eras: it's no war hero, nor is it particularly tacticool.
-
Designed for duty, and nothing else: the FAL harks to an era before Picatinny rails - where
-
customisation meant spray-painting the weapon with situational camouflage.
-
A primitive hunk of steel, without delicate decoration - you'll aim with sights of iron
-
and you'll like it.
-
It might not fire the round it was originally supposed to, but it still spits its .30 calibre
-
with aplomb.
-
It is unapologetically powerful - as perhaps a battle rifle should be - and leaves no wish
-
for more: but such power is not without detriment.
-
The recoil is significant by modern standards: and while a typical rifleman is no stranger
-
to such force, the bolt-actions of yore lacked the FAL's select fire.
-
Simply put: a relatively lightweight firearm discharging a full-power cartridge full-auto
-
at some seven hundred rounds per minute -
-
is unusable.
-
And so the FAL served primarily in single fire: which, in most circumstances is fine:
-
conserving ammunition and ensuring more accurate shots.
-
Combat was evolving, however - and individual marksmanship was an ever-decreasing factor
-
in modern combined arms doctrine.
-
Towards the end of the 20th century, the benefits of intermediate cartridges were increasingly
-
clear: Compared to modern assault rifles the FAL was too long, too heavy and too difficult
-
for some to handle.
-
Slowly, the rifle intended for universal service - was replaced.
-
The Americans let slip their stubborn grasp on .30 calibre rifles with the M16.
-
The Austrians adopted the AUG, the Belgians the FNC, the British the L85 - all bearing
-
the new standard of the 5.56mm round.
-
However, the FAL endures: like the AKM, it's too common to ever fall entirely out of favour
-
- and it still turns up in all sorts of places.
-
Its time as the prime tool of NATO forces might be over:
-
but its steadfast service is sorely missed.
-
It emerged in a fractured world - one thoroughly weary of war.
-
The start of a new global responsibility:
-
A need not to fight, but to be prepared.
-
Weapons might be made for war:
-
But this one was a product of peace.
-
The FAL:
-
Pacifier;
-
Sentinel;
-
Stalwart friend.
-
Thank you very much for watching - and until next time, farewell.