Yugoslav People's Army in 1970, complementing and later superseding the ZastavaM59/66. The M70 was also used by Republika Srpska in the Bosnian War alongside
Yugoslav People's Army from the early 1950s until its replacement by the ZastavaM59/66, a licensed copy of the Soviet SKS semiautomatic carbine, in the early
mid-1950s, retired from second-line service in the 1980s. Yugoslavia: ZastavaM59/66 variant. Initially, the SKS was a rarity in the US, with the only examples
This can be done by eye, but some rifles, such as the Yugoslavian M59/66 (SKS) and Zastava M70, have built in flip-up ladder sights that allow for accurate