Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

TBILISI: Analyst: Armenian-Modified Grenade thrown During Bush Addre

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • TBILISI: Analyst: Armenian-Modified Grenade thrown During Bush Addre

    Analyst: Armenian-Modified Grenade thrown During Bush Address

    Civil Georgia, Georgia
    May 21 2005

    Georgian Military Analyst Irakli Aladashvili wrote in May 16-22 issue
    of Kviris Palitra weekly, that a hand-grenade thrown during George
    W. Bush public address in Tbilisi was not a Soviet-made RGD-5, as
    reported earlier, but its slightly bigger, modified version which
    was produced during and after the Nagorno-Karabakh war in Armenia.

    The newspaper publishes the pictures of the grenade, with bear a
    timestamp of May 10, 2005, 16:58. The grenade itself has a marking:
    D-100-403. According to the analyst, if the producers of the modified
    piece used the soviet system of marking, the last two digits indicate
    the year of production - 2003. The grenade thrown in Tbilisi weighs 310
    grams without a fuse, the original RGD-5 weighs the same with the fuse.

    The grenade, according to the author, failed to detonate because of
    a faulty fuse. Fuse of the grenade contains a trigger with a spring,
    which, when released, hits a capsule-detonator, which in turn explodes
    a grenade.

    Aladashvili says, initial investigation shows that the trigger has
    worked, as there is a characteristic denture left at the centre of
    the detonating capsule by the trigger. The detonating capsule of the
    type KD-8M has a copper casing and contains quicksilver as a detonating
    agent. This very capsule has failed to detonate, as author speculates,
    either because it was faulty, or because the spring of the trigger
    proved too light.
Working...
X