The
Soviet military have not fielded a squad-level, intermediate caliber, belt-fed machine gun since the retirement of the
RPD machine gun in the early 1960s. Since the rejection of the
PU-21 (IP-2) project and adoption of the PKM, the Russian military has not indicated any desire for a belt-fed, intermediate caliber machine gun. The
MVD solicited designs for a similar machine gun in the beginning of 2011, for use by counter-terror teams, though it did not follow through with any actual orders. There have, however, been competitions to replace the RPK-74, leading to the selection of the
RPK-16 for field trials. Kalashnikov Concern has provided video of the RPL-20 being handled and fired, demonstrating that they have at least completed a fully-functioning prototype RPL-20. Based on feedback from these field trials, Kalashnikov Concern independently began development of the RPL-20. The RPL-20 was unveiled at the Army-2020 event in late August, 2020. If adopted, the RPL-20 will become the first light machine gun to be used by Russian forces since the
RPD machine gun that isn't magazine-fed or of the standard Kalashnikov pattern.
Adoption The RPL-20 is anticipated to serve as a
squad automatic weapon in Russian military use, supplementing the heavier-caliber
PK machine guns currently used for suppressive fire while still providing a higher practical rate of fire than the RPK series. As of January 2024, Kalashnikov Concern completed preliminary tests of the RPL-20 machine gun, and Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation plans to conduct state trials of the machine gun in 2024. The first serial batch was produced in May 2025 and shipped to the Russian military the following month. The RPL-20 was ordered in
MultiCam camouflage pattern. ==Design details==