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History of SMLE to Iraq
Can anyone point me towards, or supply me with a history of the process by which SMLE mk 3s ended up in Iraq. I'm particularly interested in knowing when these contracts were in place and how these rifles would have been used over there. THANKS.
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12-19-2017 08:22 AM
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Pete,
Look deeper into the trials and tribulations of one Lieutenant T.E. Lawrence, better know as Lawrence of Arabia. He procured a lot of SMLE's into Iraq to assist the Arab Spring. If you start here it may open some other angles for you to seek out what you need: T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia)
On the outbreak of the First World War Lawrence was forced to leave Dahoum as custodian to the Carchemish site. In December 1914 Lawrence was recruited by army intelligence in North Africa and worked as a junior officer in Egypt. In October 1916 he was sent to meet important Arab leaders such as Faisal ibn Ali and Nuri es-Said in Jiddah. After negotiations it was agreed to help Lawrence to lead an Arab revolt against the Turkish Army. From November 1916 onwards Lawrence was permanently attached to Feisal's forces as a liaison officer, advising on strategy and supervising among other things the procurement of arms and delivery of Treasury subsidies. Lawrence of Arabia, as he became known, carried out raids on the Damascus-Medina Railway. His men also captured the port of Aqaba in July 1917. Sympathetic to Arab nationalism he helped established local government in captured towns.
Last edited by Gil Boyd; 12-19-2017 at 08:55 AM.
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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BSA History book data
Paraphrasing from "The Other Battle" (by D.M. Ward July 1946) history of WWII BSA, in 1935 after 17 years of inactive rifle production, the Government approved an order for 16,000 No.1 rifles for Iraq. Retired workers were brought back and the contract took two years and was completed on time.
MK VII posted here records from the Public Records Office, Rifles with normal length butts, no magazine cutoffs were ordered for Iraq in three unexplained groupings. 11,000, 4000, and 700. There seems to be a 700 unit discrepancy between BSA history and PRO. Contract ran from March 198, 1935 through April 12, 1937. Cost was 5 pounds 14/10d each.
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The contract books at the Public Records Office list a contract dated 19.3.35 to BSA Guns Ltd for 'Rifles No.1 Mk III*, normal butts, w/o cut-off' (amongst other items) for "Iraqian [sic] Government", quantity 15,780 at a unit price of £5 14/10d, to be accepted by CISA at their works. The first to be delivered in 17 weeks at 50 per week, rising to 100 / wk in 21 weeks, 200 / wk in 26 weeks, and 300 / wk in 34 weeks. It was completed by 12.4.37
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So in short.................many were used against coalition forces in 2002 on!!
As they always say in the Army, what goes around, comes around.
I wouldn't have agreed that they get them in the first place.
Sadly T.E.Lawrence was just a well meaning Army medler who noone found towed the Regimental line. He was just one of many who thought to appeese the Arab League by supplying them with guns.
Now where have we heard that before.........Mudjahadeen started the ball rolling when they were causing havoc with the Russians, and the British long before that, photos from 1995 below, which show the favoured weapon were the AK47 and the Lee
Last edited by Gil Boyd; 12-20-2017 at 04:24 AM.
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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We watched the vids from the Russian conflict and knew those #1 Mk3s were probably the very same issued during WW1.
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I did see one with brass plating around the stock and beautifully studded with copper studs. Superglue/wood filler/varnish apparently not available in the mountains to solve split wood.
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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The only reason I wanted to go there was to examine the rifles on hand. Love to take notations of wrist markings...
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Slightly different, as discussed before, a friend of mine recovered a No5 "jungle Carbine" in a Taliban arms cache a few years back, recovered and repatriated, he still shoots that rifle today.
Head spaced and proofed and added to his personal FAC of course.
Pics on here if anyone wants to go searching.
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I like the first no1 mk3* with the stock disk, early cocking piece, cutoff and milled sight protectors.
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