Rifles barked again; a Soviet submachine gun added its note to the din.
Business suffered when, post-Cold War, millions of Soviet guns hit the open market.
A few well-placed shots later, the Soviet unmanned gun was in flames and the tanks had retreated.
Others were knocked out by dug-in Soviet anti-tank guns.
On 7 June, hundreds of Soviet guns opened up all across the seven-mile Narva front.
However, with rare exceptions, all Soviet guns and howitzers at this time were towed rather than self-propelled.
When I got back, away from the war itself, I realized our Soviet guns killed people, too.
It had been wiped out by Soviet guns in the war.
The significance of the 1-K lies in the fact that it was the first Soviet anti-tank gun.
M-42 was a 45-mm Soviet light semi-automatic anti-tank gun.