How I Almost Got Married Because of SIG 552 - Swiss Rifles History

Vladimir Onokoy
by Vladimir Onokoy

There are very few guns that are universally liked by everyone. The Swiss SIG 550 series is probably one of the best examples of such a weapon. Just like Swiss watches, to me, Swiss rifles were always a symbol of quality and refinement. But I never had a chance to shoot one and only saw this rifle in books and movies.

Until one day, when we went to the range with the father of my then-girlfriend. I met her at a shooting match, we were both range officers, and her father had a fascinating gun collection. That day, we were planning to test some new electronic reactive targets, and I had no idea which gun he would bring to the range.

When he opened his bag, I was speechless. He had a SIG 552 “Commando”, a short and compact variant, my favorite one. I put it on the grass and took a few photos. He also had a standard SIG 550 in his collection, but that day he was planning to shoot from inside the vehicle, so the compact weapon made more sense.

We spent the next few hours blazing through a labyrinth of shooting bays in his Land Cruiser. I was driving, and he was riding shotgun and shooting the targets through an open passenger window. We both had a blast. Once the driving part was over, I finally had a chance to shoot the SIG 552.

The gun was the perfect size for me, using the safety felt natural, and the recoil was tame. Needless to say, I was beyond excited. He noticed that, smiled and said, “If you marry my daughter, one day this SIG might be yours”.

I was 24 years old and had no plans to get married, and my then-girlfriend was even younger and never even mentioned marriage. But the thought of owning a SIG 552 made me think about the idea. At the end, common sense prevailed, and I never got that SIG.

But since then, the gun fascinated me even more. Many argue whether the SIG 550 is an AK variant. I think it is not, but there are certain similarities: a gas system and a bolt, so probably Swiss engineers tested an AK and had some takeaways. Or did they?

I tried to find the answers, but, to my surprise, the history of SIG 550 wasn’t really covered in detail anywhere, at least in English. The only book I found was about Swiss rifles manufactured before 1958. Even my friends who traveled to Switzerland to do some weapon history research did not find much information about the development history of the SIG 550 series.

But recently, the French author Thomas Anderson announced a book about the history of Swiss rifles called “Guardians of Neutrality – Swiss Rifles Through the Ages”. He has a channel called Le Feu aux Poudres, where he talks about weapon history.

The UK publisher of the book, Safar Publishing, announced the pre-order on Kickstarter and achieved the first goal within 24 hours. If you’re interested in the history of Swiss weapons, you can support the project on Kickstarter or wait until the book is available on their website.

I am looking forward to reading it - with current prices and availability, I don’t know when I will be able to afford buying a SIG rifle, but at least I can enjoy a book about its history.

Vladimir Onokoy
Vladimir Onokoy

Vladimir Onokoy is a small arms subject matter expert and author of "From Balkans to Babylon: Zastava AKs of Yugoslavia, Serbia, and Iraq", the first English-language book about the history of M70 and Tabuk AKs. Over the years he worked in over 20 different countries as a security contractor, armorer, field analyst, product manager, and consultant. His articles were published in Recoil magazine, Small Arms Review, Small Arms Defense Journal, Overt Defense and Silah Report. He also worked as the historical consultant for movies and weapon history books, namely "Vickers Guide: Kalashnikov" series, and Ian McColum's "Small Arms of WW2: Soviet Union". You can contact him here vonokoybooks@proton.me

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  • Joe170011117 Joe170011117 on Mar 02, 2026

    Years ago, i was sent to a special class at a not to be mentioned facility where we were allowed to fire many different rifle and sub gun platforms. One was a short barrel, select fire, Sig 552. We were provided unlimited pre-loaded mags. They had two or three of each weapon system at each station and rotated them to keep the barrels cool and allow quick cleaning when needed. They only had two of the Sig rifles, which slowed down my fun. Like you, I fell in love. I unapologetically hogged that station, ignoring other more popular weapons. The Sig rifles were an absolute dream! Flawless functionality, superb accuracy, easy management with low recoil, and just plain fun. On full auto, trigger control was fantastic. Could easily fire one, two, three, or more round bursts. Accuracy and controllability were great, even during mag dumps. I have been searching for one I could afford ever since. I wrote numerous proposals to replace existing platforms, or that new ones should be the Sig 55X series. Unfortunately, it never happened, and I understand why. Cheaper, more common, more modular, and more familiar platforms were purchased and issued. Vlad, my friend, you should have married the girl, lol!

    • Vlad Vlad on Mar 07, 2026

      Thanks for sharing your story, I had similar emotions when I shot it.

      Hopefully, I can buy a SIG one day by myself, as a strong and independent man, not relying on any woman to get what I want.


  • Ste85110733 Ste85110733 on Mar 14, 2026

    Safar Publishing, eh? I've heard of them; their motto is: "Safar, so good".


    Thank you, folks, thank you. Come again, I'm here all week.


    PS: For those not in on my little pun; "safar" is "publisher" in Hebrew and the image below is the greatest Hebrew punster of them all, Henny Youngman; king of the one-liners.

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