Estonian M14 TP Sniper “Täitsa Paska”

Enter to win this awesome Black Hawk Down M14 Clone!
https://www.fanathem.com/forgottenweapons
Deadline to enter is 9/27/2024 @ 11:59 PM PST

When Estonia took its independence in 1991, it had to form a new military essentially from scratch. Keeping the structure that existed before Soviet occupation in 1940, two separate forces were reinstituted. One was the Defense Forces – the formal Army, with a cadre of professional soldiers and annual classes of recruits serving their obligatory military service. They purchased Galil rifles from Israel as their primary infantry rifle. The other part of the Estonian armed forces was the Defense League, a volunteer territorial sort of organization, somewhat akin to the US National Guard. Arms for the Defense League were a bit less standardized, and included a large number (in excess of 40,000) M14 rifles provided by the United States.

A small number (thankfully small…) were made into sniper rifles circa 2000; the M14 TP (“Täpsuspüss” or Precision Rifle). This was done with locally made plywood stocks designed to look like sniper chassis, local production bipods, B-Square scope mounts, and “Hawke” brand 2.5-10x Chinese optics. The result was not good. Awful, really. The scopes and mounts did not hold zero at all, and the guns gained various alternative nicknames like “Täitsa Paska” (“total shit”).

The M14TP was replaced by the far superior M14TP2 in 2008, and those are likely to be replaced now by new LMT R20L precision rifles.

Thanks to the Supply Battalion of the Estonian Defense Forces Support Command for giving me access to film this relic, even though it is rather embarrassing to them!

1 Comment

  1. You know, Bubba doesn’t have unlimited funding like the DoD does, but he’s still proud of his trailer park’d SKS, because it’s his. It may be dripping in TAPCO, but he owns it, and little by little he’s gonna figure out what works. These guys were thrilled to be out from under the Soviet thumb, and some decisions were based mostly on enthusiasm.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*