I have heard numerous stories of how commercial M9s may have ended up in military inventory. It has lead some to believe this may have occurred by the manufacturer substituting commercials for military to meet production/delivery deadlines, but was never was the case. I recall Homer Brett mentioning M9 bayonets "disappearing" from troopers stating they were "lost in the field", etc. This happened primarily with the first lots of M9 bayonets delivered to the Army, which at that time were designated for issue only to combat units like the Airborne, etc.
Homer stated it became such a common occurrence soldiers were threatened with loss of rank should their M9 end up missing. This resulted in some servicemen purchasing a Buck commercial @ the base PX to substitute for a lost bayonet (or a military one they wanted to swap out). The military-issue M9 was a desired collector's item at the time, since it was new to inventory, and not available to civilians.
Then when the first Iraq war began, the M9 had yet to see widespread issue throughout the Army. This resulted in soldiers headed for the field, whom had not been issued a M9, purchasing a Buck commercial surrogate to accompany them into battle. No doubt many found their way into inventory via this route.
Last edited by pwcosol; 12-17-2009 at 11:34 AM.
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