“What Happens In Vegas, Stays In Vegas.”—Official Las Vegas advertising slogan
It turns out that that slogan is not only applicable to more risqué and naughty nocturnal activities. Thanks to a totally awesome venue known as Battlefield Vegas, the truism also applies to the opportunity to rent and shoot antique firearms that are extremely difficult if not downright impossible to find anywhere else in the country (unless you’re filthy rich and can afford to actually purchase your own).
As luck would have it, during the final week of 2024, Yours Truly happened to be in “Sin City” to witness my beloved USC Trojans win the Las Vegas Bowl, so as one of my pre-Game Day activities, I decided to mosey on down to Battlefield Vegas and take advantage of the opportunity to shoot two antique, historically significant semiautomatic pistols: the Imperial German “Broomhandle” Mauser on the late 19th century and the WWII-era Type 14 8mm Japanese Nambu.
C96 “Broomhandle” 7.63 mm Mauser History & Specifications
Movie buffs will recognize the iconic “Broomhandle” Mauser as the template for the BlasTech DL-44 blaster that Han Solo uses in the Star Wars film franchise.
But this gun’s real-world history is even more remarkable. Patented in 1896 (hence the alphanumeric designation), it was the first military semiautomatic pistol to prove itself both rugged enough and reliable enough for field use. Moreover, it saved the life of none other than a young Winston Churchill during the Battle of Omdurman on September 2, 1898
Dimensions included a barrel length of 5.5 inches, an overall length of 12,3 inches, a weight of 2 pounds 8 ounces, a standard internal magazine capacity of 10 rounds, and firing an original 7.63x25mm Mauser (AKA .30 Mauser) cartridge.
Type 14 8mm Japanese Nambu History & Specifications
The Type 14 Nambu entered production in 1926, an updated version of the Type A Nambu pistol developed in 1902 by Lieutenant General Kijirō Nambu. It was designated the Type 14 because 1926 was the 14th year of the reign of Emperor Taisho (Yoshihito).
Interestingly, the Nambu wasn’t the *official* issue sidearm of the Imperial Japanese Army, as IJA officers were expected to purchase their own pistols.
The gun had such a poor reputation for reliability – due in part to weak magazine springs and weak striker springs – that at least two of my colleagues at The National Interest, Peter Suciu and Kyle Mizokami, include the Nambu on their all-time Worst Guns lists. Also, various test-fire sessions with the Nambu on YouTube are plagued with malfunctions.
As for the 8x22mm cartridge, it’s a rimless bottleneck cartridge with a diameter of 0.320 inch, generating a muzzle velocity of 1,030 feet per second and 242 foot-pounds of muzzle energy with a 102-grain bullet. These ballistics put the 8mm Nambu round roughly on par with the .380 ACP round (which has an 0.355 inch diameter).
Range Report and Shooting Impressions
Battlefield Vegas’s rental Nambu will cost you $25.00 USD for shooting five rounds and $40 for firing ten rounds; their rental C96 Mauser will cost you 29 and 40 bucks respectively for those same round counts. Now, that might sound excessive, even with the cost of more conventional handgun ammo being what it is nowadays. However, from a business standpoint, these prices make perfect sense; after all, these are antique firearms for which spare parts are extremely difficult to come by in case something breaks, so naturally Battlefield Vegas is going to want to maximize their profit margin for each shot fired. (I suppose you could call that “getting more buck for your bang” as opposed to vice versa.)
The shop’s Nambu specimen was the following mini-history:
“This Japanese pistol was brought back to the United States by a US Marine when World War 2 ended and is a genuine piece of world history.”
So then, how did these classic pistols shoot for me?
Well, naturally I had to purchase the 10-round options for each gun in order to do at least a semi-proper evaluation. The ammo for the 7.63mm Mauser was PPU (Prvi Partizan) 85-grain full metal jacket (FMJ), whilst the 8mm Nambu ammo was a generic (no manufacturing specs listed anywhere on the box) 106-grain FMJ.
I was provided a single B-27 silhouette target for both pistols. For both guns, I divvied the eval into five rounds of head shots at 7 yards and five rounds of torso shots at 25 yards, “When in Rome, do like a Roman,” as the saying goes, so for the 7-yard stage, I used the old-school one-handed pistol shooting stance that was universally taught to soldiers before the late great Col. Jeff Cooper revolutionized two-handed handgun shooting in the 1950s and 60s; at 25 yards, I reverted to my preferred two-handed Classic Weaver Stance.
Both pistols had tolerable ergonomics and trigger pulls, much better than might be expected of mil-spec pistols; the Type 14’s didn’t have excess slack or creep, whilst the C96’s pull felt rather surprisingly like that of a newer vintage traditional double-action (TDA) pistol . The Japanese gun had the cruder sights of the two, whilst the German gat had tangent sights that could hypothetically (and rather optimistically) be adjusted for accurate fire at hundreds of meters.
Both guns enabled me to connect on all of my head shots, although surprisingly the 8mm gave me the tighter groups. At 25 yards, the Nambu gave me one 10-ring hit (just shy of the tie-breaking X-ring), two low-right in the 9-wing, one low-right in the 8-ring…and one flier way off to the extreme right periphery of the 7-ring. The Mauser gave me the tighter group at the farther distance, printing high-right, with one round just barely clipping the 10-ring and the rest taking the 9-ring.
The “Broomhandle” gave me flawless reliability, whist, unsurprisingly, the Type 14 had a failure to feed at Round #8.
Overall, a fun though all-too-brief range session getting to shoot these two pieces of history. Many thanks/Vielen dank/Domo arigato gozaimasu, Battlefield Vegas!
Christian D. Orr is a Senior Defense Editor for National Security Journal (NSJ). He is a former Air Force Security Forces officer, Federal law enforcement officer, and private military contractor (with assignments worked in Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, Kosovo, Japan, Germany, and the Pentagon). Chris holds a B.A. in International Relations from the University of Southern California (USC) and an M.A. in Intelligence Studies (concentration in Terrorism Studies) from American Military University (AMU). He has also been published in The Daily Torch , The Journal of Intelligence and Cyber Security, and Simple Flying. Last but not least, he is a Companion of the Order of the Naval Order of the United States (NOUS). If you’d like to pick his brain further, you can ofttimes find him at the Old Virginia Tobacco Company (OVTC) lounge in Manassas, Virginia, partaking of fine stogies and good quality human camaraderie.
Image: Wikimedia Commons.
Le 6 janvier, le président turc, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a mis en garde contre toute partition de la Syrie, où Ahmad el-Chareh [alias Abou Mohammed al-Joulani], le chef de l’organisation Hayat Tahrir al-Cham [HTS, ex-Front al-Nosra, autrefois lié à al-Qaïda], a pris le pouvoir avec l’appui de groupes armés pro-turcs réunis au sein de l’Armée...
Cet article Un rapport met en garde contre un possible conflit entre Israël et la Turquie est apparu en premier sur Zone Militaire.
Pour la Base industrielle et technologique de défense [BITD] française, l’année 2023 aura été décevante en termes de prises de commandes, leur montant total s’étant élevé à « seulement » 8,2 milliards d’euros, alors qu’il avait atteint 27 milliards un an plus tôt. Et, au cours de la période 2014-23, seuls les exercices 2017 et 2020 avaient...
Cet article Le montant des exportations françaises d’armement a dépassé les 18 milliards d’euros en 2024 est apparu en premier sur Zone Militaire.
L'Institut de médecine et sciences alliées (IMSA) a lancé ce mardi 7 janvier 2025, la deuxième série de soutenances de masters en psychologie clinique pour l'année académique 2023-2024. Cet événement, qui se déroule sur trois jours, se tient dans les locaux de l'institut situés à Tanghin, à Ouagadougou. Au total, une trentaine d'impétrants sont attendus pour défendre leurs travaux.
Le Pr Kapouné Karfo, fondateur de l'IMSA et également président de certains jurys, a exprimé sa grande satisfaction quant à la qualité des travaux présentés.
« J'ai été très surpris de la qualité des documents que j'ai reçus. Ce sont des travaux d'une haute intensité scientifique et les étudiants ont été à la hauteur », a-t-il déclaré.
Il a également tenu à remercier les encadreurs pour leur rigueur et leur engagement dans l'accompagnement de cette promotion. Selon lui, cette série de soutenances témoigne de la compétence des futurs psychologues cliniciens que l'IMSA forme.
Parmi les candidats, Alceyni Diallo, étudiant en psychologie clinique, a présenté son mémoire intitulé « Étude des troubles psychologiques chez les personnes déplacées internes de Kambouinsin ». L'impétrant a expliqué que son choix de l'IMSA a été motivé par les possibilités qu'offre l'institut en matière de formation flexible.
« C'est un de mes amis, médecin, qui m'a parlé de l'institut et m'a expliqué qu'il s'agit d'un jeune institut qui facilite l'accès à l'éducation, notamment pour les travailleurs comme moi. En effet, étant à l'étranger et n'ayant pas la possibilité d'être au Burkina, j'avais besoin d'une option pour suivre des cours en ligne et venir composer les devoirs. L'IMSA m'a donc offert cette opportunité. Bien que le parcours ait été difficile, j'ai obtenu un bon résultat », a-t-il précisé. Ce cadre a été déterminant pour lui, étant donné qu'il n'était pas basé au Burkina Faso au début de son parcours académique.
Son mémoire s'est concentré sur les troubles psychologiques tels que la dépression, le stress post-traumatique et l'anxiété chez les Personnes déplacées internes (PDI), une population particulièrement vulnérable en raison du contexte sécuritaire marqué par le terrorisme. Malgré les difficultés rencontrées pour accéder aux PDI et leur réticence à participer aux enquêtes, Alceyni Diallo a pu mener une étude approfondie et en tirer des conclusions importantes. « Les personnes souffrant de troubles psychologiques sont mal orientées au Burkina, surtout avec le manque de ressources humaines spécialisées », a-t-il souligné.
Avec une note finale de 17/20, Alceyni Diallo a obtenu la mention très bien, marquant ainsi la fin d'un parcours de deux années de formation.
En rappel, créé en 2020, l'Institut de médecine et sciences alliées (IMSA) ambitionne de contribuer au développement de la santé mentale au Burkina Faso en formant des spécialistes compétents. L'institut propose trois filières à savoir la psychologie clinique, l'orthophonie et la psychomotricité. Cette série de soutenances marque la deuxième série des psychologues cliniciens. Pour les orthophonistes et psychomotriciens, les soutenances sont prévues pour juin 2025.
Hanifa Koussoubé
Lefaso.net
Crédit photos : Bonaventure Paré
According to the International Energy Agency, China’s investment in manufacturing has increased by about 600 percent since 2005, and its share of value added in global manufacturing has almost tripled. As a result, China now generates one-third of global value added in manufacturing and has become the top trade partner of over 120 countries; trade to and from China makes up 45 percent of all dry bulk shipping and 30 percent of all container shipping.
China’s role is especially visible—but not limited to—products like solar panels, electric vehicles, and batteries—in addition to essential manufacturing inputs like steel and aluminum. Over 40 percent of all jobs in the world’s nuclear industry are now in China. This poses great and growing challenges for the United States and its allies, especially its economically advanced allies in Europe and Asia. Has China truly peaked, or does it still possess the resources and political structure to sustain its rise? Can the United States under a second Trump administration be counted on as a reliable ally for Japan? And what collective strategies might rival Beijing’s global economic reach?
On January 6, the Center for the National Interest hosted a virtual discussion on “Countering China’s Economic Might” with Mr. Tatsuya Terazawa, Chairman and CEO of the Institute of Energy Economics, Japan (IEEJ). Terazawa is the author of a recent article in The National Interest, “Five Ways to Counter China’s Economic Might.” Prior to his appointment as Chairman and CEO at IEEJ in 2021, he had a long and distinguished career in Japan’s government, including as Vice Minister for International Affairs in Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry and as Executive Secretary to former Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, in the wake of the massive 2011 earthquake and tsunami that devastated portions of eastern Japan. He holds a law degree from the University of Tokyo and an MBA from Harvard University.
Jacob Heilbrunn, editor of The National Interest, moderated the discussion.
Image: Prasit Rodphan / Shutterstock.com.
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