Tag Archives: norinco cq

Drones Give and Take in Unusual Ways These Days

A few interesting stories that help add color to what warfare is in 2025.

In Poland, Soldiers of the 15th Giżycko “Zawiszy Czarnego” Mechanized Brigade have been “testing new technologies for MEDEVAC procedures, notification systems, and modern teleinformation tools for planning and managing medical evacuations during both operations and emergencies.”

This includes using a large quadcopter UAV with a Stokes litter slung underneath for casevac.

Looks fun unless you are in the litter…

The Poles, who are continually keeping active tabs on what is going on in Ukraine, are all in on drones moving forward.

Drone troops are the future of the Polish army, the future of all types of armed forces. They will have hundreds of thousands of drones: flying, ground, surface, and underwater – said Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of National Defence Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz on Wednesday during the annual task and settlement briefing of the management of the Ministry of National Defence and the command staff of the Polish Army.

Now, flash to the Sinai along the Israeli-Egyptian border, where the IDF recently intercepted and captured a UAV entering Israeli airspace. After downing the drone (which still looks intact, so it was probably via a soft kill ECM device) 10 M-16 style rifles and ammunition were recovered, no doubt being smuggled to Palestinian militant groups.

The rifles appear to be ChiCom Norinco CQs, which have been widely used and are available for sale in Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Sudan, and Libya. The Iranians even make a variant of the CQ domestically (as the Sayyad 5.56) for the Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).

And from the wastes of the Mojave Desert, where the 11th “Blackhorse” Armored Cavalry Regiment has been routinely beating the tracks off folks as the OPFOR at the National Training Center in Fort Irwin for the past 30 years, drones are well in hand to shake things up.

According to the Blackhorse’s social media team, they have been integrating FPV drones of the type often seen in use as simple munitions droppers and unmanned kamikazes in Ukraine and Syria, drone-deployed minefields, and their own legacy systems to lay waste to visiting units and making it look easy.

A copy, of a copy, of a copy…

Looks like a M16, yeah? Well about that...

Looks like a M16, yeah? Well about that…

The “Terab”, the standard-issue rifle of the Sudanese armed forces, is a copy of the Chinese Type 311 rifle (Norinco CQ/CQ-A), which in turn is a blatant and unlicensed copy of the American Colt M16A2, which was originally designed as an improvement of the M16 which in turn began life as the Armalite AR-15. It is manufactured by the Military Industry Corporation of Sudan and is more or less identical to the standard M16, with small modifications made in regards to the stock, handguard and iron sights (in other words, you can bet nothing is in spec to a U.S. AR). The Terab has replaced the aging Armalite-designed and Dutch-built AR-10 in Sudanese service– which is the predecessor to the AR-15, and in a way makes this all about even.

Hattip augfc