- Source: M20 recoilless rifle
The M20 recoilless rifle is a U.S. 75 mm caliber recoilless rifle T21E12 that was used during the last months of the Second World War and extensively during the Korean War. It could be fired from an M1917A1 .30 caliber machine gun tripod, or from a vehicle mount, typically a Jeep. Its shaped charge warhead, also known as HEAT, was capable of penetrating 100 mm of armor. Although the weapon proved ineffective against the T-34 tank and most other tanks during the Korean War, it was used primarily as a close infantry support weapon to engage all types of targets including infantry and lightly armored vehicles. The M20 proved useful against pillboxes and other types of field fortifications.
History
During World War II, the U.S. military recognized that, due to advancements in armor technology by enemy forces, a powerful lightweight weapon was needed to defend infantry and light armor units. The Ordnance Department Small Arms Division commenced development of a recoilless rifle and, by 1944, models of a 75 mm recoilless rifle were being tested. Production of the M20 was underway by March 1945; only limited numbers were used by Allied troops in the European and Pacific theaters.
The M20 relied on a perforated artillery shell casing, combined with a rear vented breech using propellant gases from the firing of a shell, to greatly reduce the recoil of the weapon. It is this use of vented propellant gases that eliminated the need for a recoil system, thereby reducing the weight of the launcher and enhancing its use as a light infantry weapon.
The M20 was one of the main anti-tank weapons used by the U.S. military in the early days of the Korean War along with the 2.36-inch bazooka. However, the recoilless rifle failed to destroy any North Korean T-34-85 during the Battle of Osan on July 5, 1950. After the deployment of the 3.5-inch M20 Super Bazooka in mid-July, the M20 recoilless rifle no longer functioned as an anti-tank weapon, and was used as an infantry support weapon. It was a very effective weapon to destroy enemy bunkers and trenches with easy transportation benefitted from light weight while providing great firepower.
Recoilless rifles, such as the M20, were also used successfully in large numbers by both sides in the First Indochina War (1946–54). They were phased out after being replaced by wire guided missiles, which were introduced during the Vietnam War in the 1960s and 1970s. Until stockpiles of ammunition were exhausted in the 1990s, M20 recoilless rifles were used to start controlled avalanches by the U.S. National Forest Service and National Park Service.
The Royal Moroccan Army used M20s during the Western Sahara War against the Polisario Front.
China also produced unlicensed copies, known as the Type 52 and Type 56 (an upgraded version that could fire fin-stabilized HEAT shells). These versions were widely used by the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) and Vietcong guerrillas in the Vietnam War and there are also pictures suggesting its use by guerrillas and militias in the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990), such as the Amal Movement militia.
Operators
Albania: Type 56
Argentina: M20
Brazil: M20
Burkina Faso: Type 52
Burundi: Type 52
Cameroon: Type 52
Colombia: M20
Democratic Republic of the Congo: M20
People's Republic of China: Type 52 and Type 56
El Salvador
Ethiopian Empire: M20s were used by the Kagnew Battalion
France
Guinea-Bissau: Type 52
Indonesia: Type 52 and Type 56 used by Indonesian Marine Corps
Lebanon
Mauritania: M20
Myanmar:Both US M-20 and Chinese Type 52 and Type 56
Netherlands
Niger: M20
Pakistan: Type 52
Paraguay: M20
Philippines: M20
Saudi Arabia: M20
South Korea: The Armed Forces began receiving M20s from the U.S. in 1951, and 601 were in service with the Army by the end of the Korean War.
Tanzania: Type 52
Togo: Type 56
United States
Vietnam: Type 52 and Type 56
South Vietnam: M20
Turkey: M20 617 units.
Yemen: M20
Yugoslavia: M20
Zambia: M20
See also
M18 recoilless rifle – smaller 57mm model of the same era
M40 recoilless rifle
M29 Weasel – the "M29C Type A" variant had a center-mounted M20 as its armament
List of weapons of the Lebanese Civil War
Weapons of the Vietnam War
Weapons of the Cambodian Civil War
Weapons of the Laotian Civil War
Notes
References
TM 9-2300 Artillery Materiel and Associated Equipment. dated May 1949
TM 9-314 operators, and maintenance
SNL C-74 parts
External links
The short film STAFF FILM REPORT 66-21A (1966) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Angkatan Darat Republik Vietnam
- Daftar sistem anti-tank portabel
- Senapan tanpa tolak balik
- M20 recoilless rifle
- M18 recoilless rifle
- M40 recoilless rifle
- Recoilless rifle
- M20
- M67 recoilless rifle
- List of World War II weapons of the United States
- List of military equipment used in the Korean War
- List of equipment of the United States Army during World War II
- Bazooka