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RGD-5

The RGD-5 (РГД-5) is a Soviet-developed offensive anti-personnel hand grenade introduced in 1954, featuring a smooth, egg-shaped steel body filled with 110 grams of TNT and designed to produce around 350 fragments upon detonation. It employs the UZRGM impact-delay fuze with a 3.2- to 4-second delay, weighs 310 grams fully assembled, and can be thrown approximately 40 meters by an average soldier. Intended as a replacement for World War II-era offensive grenades, its low-fragmentation design minimizes risk to the thrower, enabling safe use at longer ranges compared to defensive types like the F-1. The RGD-5 remains in service with numerous armed forces, including those of Russia, former Soviet states, and export recipients such as Iraq and various African nations, due to its simple construction, reliability in diverse conditions, and ease of production. Variants have been manufactured in countries like Bulgaria, China, and Poland, adapting the original design for local needs while retaining core characteristics.

History

Development

The RGD-5 hand grenade was developed in the during the early 1950s as a post-World War II offensive intended to supersede earlier designs such as the , which had been widely used during the conflict but required modernization for evolving . The initiative reflected broader Soviet efforts to refine hand grenades for offensive operations, where troops needed to advance closely behind the thrown device without excessive risk from their own munitions. Engineering priorities emphasized a smooth, egg-shaped body with minimal external fragmentation features, prioritizing blast over to enable safe use in confined or urban assault scenarios typical of Cold War-era doctrines. This design choice stemmed from the recognition that high-fragmentation grenades, effective for defensive positions, posed undue hazards to attackers advancing within the lethal radius. The grenade was officially adopted for service in , marking the culmination of development focused on reliability, ease of throw, and compatibility with existing systems.

Production and Adoption

The RGD-5 hand grenade was officially adopted by the in 1954 after completing field trials, marking its integration as a standard offensive fragmentation device to supersede older World War II-era models. Mass production commenced immediately in Soviet state munitions factories, leveraging the grenade's straightforward sheet-metal body and pre-fragmented liner for efficient assembly lines capable of high output volumes. This scalability enabled the accumulation of vast stockpiles for the Soviet military, partners, and export to aligned nations, with the design's minimal material requirements and absence of complex machining supporting cost-effective proliferation across forces. The grenade's economical manufacture facilitated its routine issuance in training exercises and reserve units, ensuring broad familiarity among conscript armies during the era. In recent years, has revived production of RGD-5 analogs domestically, with the Ministry of Defense codifying and authorizing their use in September 2024 to address wartime munitions demands amid shortages of imported ordnance. These locally manufactured versions maintain core performance traits of the original while adapting to contemporary constraints.

Design and Specifications

Components and Mechanism

The RGD-5 body is egg-shaped, formed from two sheet-steel halves crimped together along a circumferential seam, resulting in a smooth exterior with a lateral ridge at the join and no external fragmentation grooves. This design enhances aerodynamic stability during flight. Internally, a pre-fragmented liner produces approximately 350 fragments upon , optimized for an offensive role with limited fragment velocity to confine the primary casualty radius and minimize hazard to the thrower. The grenade has a total weight of 310 grams, including 110 grams of as the fill pressed into the body. The casing hermetically seals a central well, with the fragmentation liner surrounding the charge. Activation begins with withdrawal of the , which secures a spring-loaded against the body. Upon release of the —typically by throwing the grenade—the rotates freely under tension to strike the primer, commencing the internal mechanism leading to . The average throwing distance achievable by a is 40 to 50 meters.

Fuze System and Performance Characteristics

The RGD-5 utilizes the UZRGM mechanical fuze, which incorporates a pyrotechnic delay element to arm the mechanism 3.2 to 4.2 seconds after the safety lever () is released during throwing, preventing premature from accidental drops or mishandling. This delay ensures the remains safe during the initial flight phase, after which it becomes sensitive to for main charge via a percussion primer and booster leading to the filler. The fuze lacks a standard capability in its baseline configuration, relying instead on the delay for operational safety, though with armed UZRGM fuzes can remain hazardous for extended periods due to potential delayed functioning from residual tension. Performance characteristics include fragment velocities of 700–800 m/s upon detonation, contributing to an effective casualty radius of approximately 5 meters, with fragments capable of reaching up to 25–35 meters under optimal conditions. The TNT explosive charge detonates at velocities consistent with its composition, producing around 350 irregularly shaped steel fragments from the grenade body. The fuze demonstrates environmental reliability across a temperature range of -50°C to +50°C, allowing consistent operation in extreme cold or heat without significant degradation in delay timing or initiation sensitivity, as evidenced by field recoveries in diverse climates. Empirical data from explosive ordnance disposal operations indicate the UZRGM's vulnerability to failure modes such as inconsistent delay burns from manufacturing variability or environmental exposure, with observed rates necessitating extended standoff times (up to 30 minutes) for armed but undetonated grenades to mitigate risks of spontaneous initiation. Sensitivity to post-arming tampering, including attempts to wrap or insulate the head, has been documented in incident analyses, where such modifications can disrupt the striker's freedom or delay element, leading to non-function despite proper throwing mechanics. Overall reliability remains high in standard use, though archived military assessments note occasional variability in affecting arming precision.

Variants

Domestic Adaptations

The RGD-5 was adapted for rifle-launched delivery through a cup-type muzzle discharger screwed onto the AK-47's barrel, enabling propulsion via blank cartridge to achieve a maximum effective range of approximately 150 meters when the rifle butt-stock is grounded for stability. This infrequently employed Soviet modification preserved the grenade's standard UZRGM fuze and fragmentation body while extending standoff distance beyond the typical 35-40 meter hand-throw limit of an average soldier. The cylindrical, soup-can-like discharger accommodated the grenade's egg-shaped form without requiring structural alterations to the projectile itself. A dedicated training adaptation, the URG-N (Uchebnaya Ruchnaya Granata Nastupatelnaya), replicates the RGD-5's dimensions, weight, and handling using construction for durability and reusability, paired with a specialized delivering a low-yield charge to mimic detonation effects safely. Introduced as part of standardization efforts, the URG-N facilitated non-destructive instruction in employment, booby-trapping, and mechanics without expending live . No substantive post-adoption alterations to the base RGD-5's fill, casing, or delay mechanism were documented in Soviet service, maintaining its 110-gram charge and 3.2-4 second timing for consistency across applications.

Foreign Copies and Modifications

The RGD-5 has been reverse-engineered and produced under in multiple countries, primarily former Soviet allies and recipients of . China developed the Type 59 grenade as a direct copy, featuring a similar ovoid body, pre-fragmented liner, and time-delay system for offensive fragmentation effects. manufactures faithful replicas through firms such as Armaco JSC, using filler and standard 3.2-4 second delay mechanisms compatible with the original UZRGM . Production of RGD-5 copies extended to Albania and Georgia during the Cold War era, with these versions maintaining core specifications like a 110-gram TNT charge and 55-meter throw range to support infantry assaults. In Ukraine, domestic manufacturing of an RGD-5 analog commenced in 2024 amid ongoing conflict demands, with the Ministry of Defense codifying its use as a remote-action offensive grenade equivalent to the Soviet design for rapid deployment. These foreign iterations proliferated via Soviet technical assistance and exports, enabling local adaptations such as substituted fuzes or fillers to address supply constraints while preserving the grenade's low-weight (310 grams total) and minimal fragmentation radius suited for enclosed spaces.

Operators

Current Operators

The RGD-5 hand grenade remains in active service with as of 2025, forming part of standard infantry equipment alongside modern alternatives, with production and stockpiles sustained through ongoing military requirements. Ukraine has codified and deployed domestically produced analogs of the RGD-5 since September 2024, authorizing their and integration into army units to supplement Soviet-era stocks amid heightened demand. Several former Soviet states, including , continue to employ the RGD-5 from inherited inventories, supported by interoperability with Russian-supplied munitions in joint exercises and regional security operations. Middle Eastern nations such as and retain operational RGD-5 stocks, often as surplus from historical Soviet aid, with confirmed presence in active militaries despite partial modernization efforts. African recipients of post-Soviet surplus, including , have integrated the grenade into their forces, though usage levels vary by ongoing insurgencies and aid flows.

Former Operators

The German Democratic Republic utilized the RGD-5 hand grenade as part of its standard Warsaw Pact-aligned inventory during the Cold War. Following German reunification in 1990, East German military stocks, including RGD-5 grenades, were largely decommissioned or absorbed into Bundeswehr inventories but subsequently replaced by NATO-standard munitions such as the DM series to ensure interoperability and modernization. Czechoslovakia, a founding member, employed the RGD-5 alongside training variants like the URG-N. After the country's dissolution into the and in 1993, and subsequent accession in 1999, the initiated phase-out of Soviet-era grenades. In 2018, Česká Zbrojovka secured a CZK 200 million contract to supply new offensive and defensive hand grenades, which are smaller, lighter, and equipped with improved 4-5 second time delays, effectively retiring legacy models like the RGD-5 in favor of domestically produced alternatives compatible with contemporary operational requirements. Post-Cold War stockpile reductions in former Soviet and states contributed to surplus RGD-5 s entering global illicit markets, further diminishing their frontline roles in transitioning militaries seeking Western integration or indigenous designs.

Operational History

Use in Major Conflicts

The RGD-5 was a standard-issue hand for Soviet forces during the Soviet-Afghan War (1979–1989), employed alongside the F-1, RGN, and RGO in anti-personnel roles against fighters. Its 110 grams of filling and pre-fragmented body enabled effective casualty infliction in open ambushes and offensive maneuvers, with a throw range of 35–45 meters supporting rapid deployment. However, the grenade's fragmentation radius of up to 15–25 meters increased risks to throwers in confined or close-quarters scenarios, such as cave clearances or urban skirmishes, contributing to the wartime development of lower-collateral alternatives like the RGN under Project BAZALT. In the First and Second Chechen Wars (1994–1996 and 1999–2009), as well as subsequent insurgencies, Russian forces utilized the RGD-5 in urban , leveraging its 3.2–4.2 second delay for room-entry tactics and suppression of fortified positions. The design's simplicity and consistent performance in harsh conditions, including low dud rates under field stress, made it suitable for massed assaults amid Grozny's and mountain ambushes, though operational reports emphasized the need for coordinated throws to mitigate self-injury from fragments. Since the 2022 , the RGD-5 has seen prolific deployment by Russian troops in trench offensives and urban assaults, such as in and , due to its straightforward production and issuance to conscripts and regulars alike. Ukrainian forces have similarly drawn from Soviet-era stockpiles for defensive counterattacks, with documented effectiveness in repelling advances through fragmentation kills at short ranges of 5–15 meters. In September 2024, Ukraine codified domestic analogs to sustain supply amid , underscoring the grenade's role in high-intensity, resource-constrained scenarios where simplicity enables widespread distribution over specialized munitions.

Notable Incidents and Assassination Attempts

On May 10, 2005, during a joint speech by U.S. President George W. Bush and Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili in Tbilisi's Freedom Square, Vladimir Arutyunian, an ethnic Armenian Georgian national, hurled an RGD-5 hand grenade wrapped in a red tartan cloth toward the podium from a distance of approximately 30 meters. The device landed unnoticed amid the crowd but failed to detonate due to the cloth interfering with the fuze mechanism, preventing the safety lever from disengaging fully and initiating the delay sequence. FBI analysis subsequently confirmed the grenade was live and functional, attributing the non-detonation to the improvised wrapping rather than any inherent defect in the ordnance itself. Arutyunian fled the scene and evaded capture for two months, during which his family assisted in concealing him; on July 21, 2005, Georgian security forces located him in a village near , leading to a shootout in which he fatally wounded Zurab Kvlividze before surrendering. In a subsequent confession broadcast on Georgian television, Arutyunian admitted intending to kill both leaders with from the blast. He was convicted on January 11, 2006, of , attempted of the presidents, and the officer's killing, receiving a life sentence without . This incident highlighted potential arming vulnerabilities in the RGD-5's UZRGM-series when subjected to external bindings, as the cloth likely restrained the striker pin release despite the pin being pulled.

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