I was thinking about this last night and have some speculative conclusions.
First, some facts:
1) Marstar has acquired 70,000 SKS carbines overseas.
2) these are different from the Chicom military SKS carbine sthey are about to concurrently offer.
3) You cannot import Russian or Chinese SKS rifles to the USA.
4) When Marstar bought up vast stocks of Yugo SKs carbines, most of their inventory was shipped to the US at wholesale - a smaller quantity was retailed in Canada.
Speculation:
1) Canada cannot absorb another 70,000 SKS carbines at current price point, and perhaps not even at half the present price.
2) Marstar intends to sell some portion of these 70,000 carbines in another market, probably the US.
Conclusions drawn by me:
1) The carbines cannot be primarily russian or Chinese as John would not pay the expense to pin and ship the rifles from overseas if he had to move all 70,000 units in Canada.
2) This means they must be made in one of the following countries:
- Albania
- East Germany
- Yugoslavia
- North Korea
- Romania
- Vietnam
Of the above possibilities, I am discounting the Karabiner S from East Germany because it is so rare that it would have leaked by now, and because the East Germans scrapped nearly all carbines in inventory rather publicly in the 1980's.
I am also going to discount Vietnam since they didn't make very many and most were used to the point of destruction in the Vietnam War, after which they switched to the AK.
Albania is also unlikely as they did not make very many at all. Probably less than 70,000 carbine stotal.
That leaves Romania, North Korea and Yugoslavia. We know the guns in Yugoslavia are gone, but they exported A LOT of Mausers to African countries - maybe some SKS as well? Definitely a possibility.
North Korea is also likely since African countries are some of the very few place sthat will do business with that regime and they always need hard currency in NK.
Romania is less likely because the US importers bought pretty much all remaining guns from there in the 1990's.
My vote is for primarily export model Yugo SKS's mixed with some well used Russian and Chinese guns.
Thoughts?
First, some facts:
1) Marstar has acquired 70,000 SKS carbines overseas.
2) these are different from the Chicom military SKS carbine sthey are about to concurrently offer.
3) You cannot import Russian or Chinese SKS rifles to the USA.
4) When Marstar bought up vast stocks of Yugo SKs carbines, most of their inventory was shipped to the US at wholesale - a smaller quantity was retailed in Canada.
Speculation:
1) Canada cannot absorb another 70,000 SKS carbines at current price point, and perhaps not even at half the present price.
2) Marstar intends to sell some portion of these 70,000 carbines in another market, probably the US.
Conclusions drawn by me:
1) The carbines cannot be primarily russian or Chinese as John would not pay the expense to pin and ship the rifles from overseas if he had to move all 70,000 units in Canada.
2) This means they must be made in one of the following countries:
- Albania
- East Germany
- Yugoslavia
- North Korea
- Romania
- Vietnam
Of the above possibilities, I am discounting the Karabiner S from East Germany because it is so rare that it would have leaked by now, and because the East Germans scrapped nearly all carbines in inventory rather publicly in the 1980's.
I am also going to discount Vietnam since they didn't make very many and most were used to the point of destruction in the Vietnam War, after which they switched to the AK.
Albania is also unlikely as they did not make very many at all. Probably less than 70,000 carbine stotal.
That leaves Romania, North Korea and Yugoslavia. We know the guns in Yugoslavia are gone, but they exported A LOT of Mausers to African countries - maybe some SKS as well? Definitely a possibility.
North Korea is also likely since African countries are some of the very few place sthat will do business with that regime and they always need hard currency in NK.
Romania is less likely because the US importers bought pretty much all remaining guns from there in the 1990's.
My vote is for primarily export model Yugo SKS's mixed with some well used Russian and Chinese guns.
Thoughts?
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