SPG-9
The SPG-9 is a Soviet 73mm tripod-mounted recoilless gun. It is known for giving a small crew a longer-ranged anti-armor and fire-support weapon than shoulder-fired launchers, using both high-explosive anti-tank and fragmentation ammunition.
HISTORY
The SPG-9 was developed in the Soviet Union in the early Cold War and entered service in the 1960s as a crew-served recoilless weapon. It fires fin-stabilized projectiles from a breech-loaded smoothbore launcher, with ammunition types intended for armor, personnel, and field fortifications. The weapon is normally fired from a tripod or vehicle mount, making it less portable than a shoulder-fired rocket launcher but more stable and longer ranged.
During the Vietnam War era, the SPG-9 was part of the wider family of Soviet and Eastern Bloc infantry support weapons supplied to allied forces. It was suited to ambushes, defensive positions, and attacks on fortified points or vehicles where a crew could prepare a firing position. Its later global use on tripods and vehicle mounts shows why it remained a common light support weapon after the war.
Sources
- SPG-9 (& close derivatives) | Small Arms Survey
- SPG-9 Kopye | U.S. Army ODIN
- Central Intelligence Bulletin, 10 January 1972 | Central Intelligence Agency