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Black-market weapon prices surge in Iraq

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  • paradox
    Veteran Member
    • Jan 2006
    • 3588

    Black-market weapon prices surge in Iraq



    SULAIMANIYA, Iraq: The Kurdish security contractor placed the black plastic box on the table. Inside was a new Glock 19, one of the 9-millimeter pistols that the United States issued by the tens of thousands to the Iraqi Army and police.

    This pistol was no longer in the custody of the Iraqi Army or police. It had been stolen or sold, and it found its way to an open-air grocery stand that does a lively black-market business in police and infantry arms. The contractor bought it there.

    He displayed other purchases, including a short-barreled Kalashnikov assault rifle with a collapsible stock that makes it easy to conceal under a coat or fire from a car. "I bought this for $450 last year," he said of the rifle. "Now it costs $650. The prices keep going up."

    The market for this American-issued pistol and the ubiquitous assault rifle illustrated how fear, mismanagement and malfeasance are shaping the small-arms market in Iraq.

    ...
    * Freedom is the human right to live your life however you damn well please, so long as you don't interfere with another's right to do the same.
    * "Don't believe them, don't fear them, don't ask anything of them." --Alexander Solzhenitsyn
  • #2
    S.F. 1357
    Junior Member
    • Oct 2005
    • 65

    At least there's no 10-day wait.

    Comment

    • #3
      NSR500
      Banned
      • Aug 2006
      • 19530

      I wonder if they have to DROS?

      Comment

      • #4
        m1371
        Senior Member
        • Oct 2005
        • 1118

        Originally posted by paradox
        http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/12/...210weapons.php

        SULAIMANIYA, Iraq: The Kurdish security contractor placed the black plastic box on the table. Inside was a new Glock 19, one of the 9-millimeter pistols that the United States issued by the tens of thousands to the Iraqi Army and police.

        This pistol was no longer in the custody of the Iraqi Army or police. It had been stolen or sold, and it found its way to an open-air grocery stand that does a lively black-market business in police and infantry arms. The contractor bought it there.

        He displayed other purchases, including a short-barreled Kalashnikov assault rifle with a collapsible stock that makes it easy to conceal under a coat or fire from a car. "I bought this for $450 last year," he said of the rifle. "Now it costs $650. The prices keep going up."

        The market for this American-issued pistol and the ubiquitous assault rifle illustrated how fear, mismanagement and malfeasance are shaping the small-arms market in Iraq.

        ...
        All depends on who you talk to. Go to a gun bazaar in the city and you're going to shell out some bucks.

        Go to some farmer out in the boonies who "knows" where to get stuff and you can usually start bartering until everybody's happy with the deal.

        And yes, the IPs and other so-called "law enforcement personnel" here will sell you a Glock if you talk to the right guy.
        Learning without thought is labor lost, thought without learning is perilous. -Foamy

        Comment

        • #5
          jumbopanda
          Calguns Addict
          • Aug 2006
          • 8382

          Funny, I always imagined that you could get AKs for a couple of chickens and a bag of M&Ms in those parts...
          Mo' BBs.

          Comment

          • #6
            Scope
            Member
            • Jan 2006
            • 300

            Originally posted by jumbopanda
            Funny, I always imagined that you could get AKs for a couple of chickens and a bag of M&Ms in those parts...
            LOL! Thats the funniest thing I've read in weeks.
            Scope

            Comment

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