Airsoft Action 06 - Feb 2012 | Page 79

COLD WAR WARRIOR had relied heavily on Korean War-era steel helmets and flak jackets (and even flak shorts for some troops) and consequently suffered from the age-old compromise between protection and mobility. Early 1983 saw the introduction of the Personal Armour System for Ground Troops (known as PASGT), consisting of both body armour and the ‘Fritz’ Kevlar helmet – so called for its similarity to the WWII German helmet. Both these items were lighter and more comfortable than their predecessors, offered better protection from enemy fire and came with camouflage covers that matched the 1981 BDU. It is also interesting to note that our paratrooper has adopted the common airborne affectation of covering his helmet cover with a net to make attaching local foliage easier, and an elasticised band with two luminous ‘cats eyes’ which make staying in formation during night patrols easier. Lastly, and of interest to airsofters wanting to keep their impression looking authentic, the US Army realised that a high proportion of battle casualties were eye injuries that could easily be avoided with basic protection. To this end the protective additional kit. Clipped to the front of the web suspenders is a compass pouch (commonly used to carry a variety of items) and slung on the soldier’s left side are his respirator bag for his M17 gas mask and the (airsoft-safe plastic) bayonet for his rifle. Most soldiers did not carry a sidearm, although this was more common among regular soldiers in the US Army than in other NATO forces – but here our man carries one as a practical back-up for airsoft skirmishing. Of perhaps equal importance is the soldier’s main personal weapon. The original M16 was (at its inception) one of the worst military rifles ever produced. Early models were fragile, prone to stoppages, and wasteful, with their full-auto capability and short 20-round magazines. Learning the lessons of Vietnam, the M16A2 of the early 1980s was better engineered, more robust and had deleted the capability for fully-automatic fire in favour of a three-round burst option. With the aforementioned side arm and the M72 LAW anti tank rocket launcher slung over his shoulder our paratrooper is ready for anything! ■ “Perhaps the most important revision was the inclusion of the US Woodland camouflage 1981 pattern uniform” wraparound ‘eye armour’ glasses were trialled and issued to some frontline troops, to help minimise painful and disabling eye injuries as early as 1982. Our airborne soldier is fully kitted out for a fighting patrol; his webbing looks superficially the same as the Vietnam-era M56 webbing but is in fact the improved nylon All Purpose Lightweight Load Carrying Equipment (or ALICE) that was developed in the 1970s to replace the M56 and M67 sets. At the time, US ALICE webbing was cutting edge technology and was even popular with British soldiers, as the clip-on pouches easily fitted in alongside Britain’s own 58 pattern webbing. Our soldier here carries the standard layout of twin ammo pouches for his M16 (each pouch can carry a ready to use fragmentation grenade clipped to each side), a water bottle, entrenching tool and the ever-popular ‘butt pack’ haversack for storing Next issue: The Soviet Motor Rifles of the 3rd Shock Army www.airsoftactionmagazine.com 079