Owoowl:And the answer would be "none". These would either be whatever was issued and was at hand. Or in case of real combat - it would not be a handgun to begin with. People don't go into combat with pistols for at least a century. If they ever get used in combat its a rare case of "everything went wrong already".
You two nail it on the head. I carried a HP on three tours to Afghanistan and never fired it in combat. Other than freeing me up from carrying a rifle in more secure settings, and giving me some level of defensive redundancy, it was little more than a particularly heavy millstone to lug around. We went through all nature of ammunition and munitions in combat, but I never heard of 9mm ever really being consumed outside of on the range. What I think is lost on a lot of people is that pistols to soldiers are almost purely defensive weapons, a backup that that in dire straights might give you a chance to get to a real weapon.
As to the the OP's question, although I love all steel pistols (1911s, CZ75s, etc), their weight make them pretty poorly suited for the role, when one considers how much weight a soldier is expected to shoulder. I love shooting my Shadow at the range, and a 1911 is a fine home defence pistol. But I'd hate to have to lug either one around in theatre. I'd want something light (so polymer), high capacity (so no 1911s, orher single stacks, revolvers or HPs), reliable and accurate. Plenty of modern handguns meet these criteria.€
Just my two cents.
Thank you for your experienced comments...



















































