The Department of Defense will soon chose three finalists in a competition to be the U.S. Army and Air Force's new sidearm. One of the three finalists could go on to outfit all of the services, with total sales of of 500,000 handguns—but not before the Pentagon bureaucracy makes it as long and complicated as possible.
The Modular Handgun System (MHS) is a $17 million dollar effort to replace the aging Beretta M92 handgun. First adopted in the 1980s, the U.S. Army's Berettas are beginning to wear out. The M92 is also a product of another time, and hasn't kept up with recent advances in pistol technology.
The first requirement is that the new handgun surpass the M92 in accuracy, reliability, ergonomics, durability, and maintainability. In a 2006 report on U.S. infantry weapon reliability, the M92 scored at the bottom compared to the M4 carbine, M16 rifle, and M249 squad automatic weapon. In every category, from handling to accuracy to maintainability, the M92 came in dead last—or tied for last. Twenty-six percent of soldiers polled reported their weapon jammed while shooting at the enemy. Forty-six percent reported they didn't have confidence in their pistol's reliability.
The
MHS will also incorporate new advances in infantry small arms. The
pistol will have a modular grip system, a recent development that
involves interchangeable, different-sized grip panels to accommodate
larger or smaller hands. This has become an important feature as the
percentage of women in the military—who tend to have smaller hands—has jumped 50 percent since the 1980s when M92 was adopted.
The handgun will have an integral MIL-STD 1913 Picatinny Rail
underneath the barrel, allowing the attachment of gadgets such as
flashlights and lasers. It will also have a threaded barrel to
accommodate a suppressor and should have low recoil.
Currently there are twelve bidders for the contract, including the Beretta APX, Ceská Zbrojovka's CZ P-09,
FN Herstal's Five-Seven Mk 2, General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical
Systems (GDOTS) and Smith & Wesson's M&P polymer handgun; the
Glock 17 and 22; and Sig Sauer's P320. An updated version of the M9, the
Beretta M9A3, was rejected by the Army and won't be involved in the competition.
The pistol's caliber is still up in the air. Nine-millimeter and .40 Smith & Wesson appear to be the top contenders, with FN's 5.7-millimeter pistol also in the running, shooting a bullet that hadn't been invented when the M92 was first fielded. The venerable .45 ACP round, used for decades with the M1911A1 pistol, appears to have been disregarded due to the round's perceived heavy recoil.
The selection process—beset by the Pentagon bureaucracy—is progressing at a snail's pace. First begun in 2015, the MHS program will chose three semifinalists in August, with a nine month evaluation process to follow. A winner will be picked afterward, with the winning entry to go into "low rate production." That means it will be at least another thirteen months before any pistols are delivered to the military.
The program's complexity has been stifling, prompting complaints from the Army's top general and Congress. The paper outlining the MHS's requirements runs a ridiculous 350 pages. Senator John McCain described the handgun selection process as "byzantine", and Army Chief of Staff General Mark Miley complained in March, "We're not figuring out the next lunar landing. This is a pistol. Two years to test? At $17 million?" Miley claimed he could walk into a Cabelas outdoors store with $17 million dollars and buy a handgun for every person in the military.
Miley
may be exaggerating on how many pistols he could buy—even with a 20
percent bulk discount, $17 million would still only score you 40,000
Glock 17 pistols—but he's not wrong about the guns themselves.
Practically every entrant for the Modular Handgun System is already on
the lucrative civilian market in the United States, owned by
thousands—in some cases, such as the Glock 17—by millions. The selection
should be a fairly easy choice.
For
most gun owners, buying a new handgun is a quick process that takes no
more than a few hours scrutiny. For the Pentagon, it's a process that
requires hundreds of pages of paperwork and years of hand-wringing
before even finalists can be named.