Mud-soaked soldiers, field-stripping jammed guns in the fading light. Businessmen-turned-bureaucrats locking horns with Pentagon officials over red tape. A self-taught engineer striving to keep his invention intact amid old-school prejudice. The story of the M16 is as dramatic as they come.

This isn’t just about a gun. It’s a tale of human drive, error, ingenuity, and survival. Though it’s a story from decades past, it resonates with today’s technological and political conflicts.

Quest for the Ultimate Military Firearm

Most historians see the Korean War as a turning point in military firepower. Unfortunately, U.S. infantry, armed with WWII-era M1 Garands and M1 carbines, quickly found themselves outmanned and outgunned.

M16 2
A Marine Corps weapons company section sets up their mortar to target communist positions near the Chosin Reservoir. (Marine Corps photo / DVIDS)

With lessons learned from Korea and Vietnam, the Army knew it needed something better. But defining what “better” was and how to achieve it was a challenge. The goal was an all-in-one weapon that could replace the M1 rifle, carbine, grease gun, .45-caliber submachine gun, and the BAR.

Rethinking Range and Caliber

Researchers at Aberdeen Proving Ground’s Ballistics Research Laboratories (BRL) had been analyzing ammunition lethality since 1938. This was groundbreaking work at the time.

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A U.S. Marine Corps recruit from Bravo Company, 1st Recruit Training Battalion, lays out rifles ahead of an M16A4 service rifle issue at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego on October 31, 2022. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Jacob Hutchinson / DVIDS)

In 1952, BRL engineer Donald Hall’s study revealed some surprising facts about the modern battlefield:

  • Rifle fire rarely exceeded 500 yards.
  • It was most effective at about 120 yards or less.
  • The most lethal bullet was high-velocity but small-caliber.

A few months later, Johns Hopkins University’s Operations Research Office (ORO) released the Hitchman Report, confirming these findings:

  • Military rifles were effective only at 300 yards or less.
  • Most kills happened at less than 100 yards.
  • Small-caliber ammunition was most effective.

Further ORO research showed that most soldiers only aimed their first shot. Despite aiming, battle wounds were randomly distributed, suggesting a need for a weapon that fired many small-caliber, high-velocity rounds.

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