fbpx

Jeb Bush tweets image of gun made by company with Nazi past

Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush tweeted an image of a gun manufactured by a U.S. company with a parent European firm that made firearms for Nazi troops.
[additional-authors]
February 18, 2016

Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush tweeted an image of a gun manufactured by a U.S. company with a parent European firm that made firearms for Nazi troops.

On Tuesday, the former Florida governor posted the image of a handgun engraved with his name following a campaign stop at the FN America gun manufacturing plant in Columbia, South Carolina. The image was retweeted over 22,400 times and prompted widespread commentary, mostly negative, across the Internet.

FN America is owned by FN Herstal, a Belgium-based corporation, the Washington Post reported. During the German occupation of Belgium in World War II, the Nazi military requisitioned the company, then known as Fabrique Nationale d’Armes de Guerre, to produce thousands of its weapons, including the pistols carried by Nazi officers and pilots.

In addition, The Trace reported that FN Herstal’s Five-Seven model gun is a popular weapon used by Mexican drug cartel leaders.

Bush appeared to be unaware of the company’s past. Responding to a question about the gun tweet, he said, according to ABC News: “The purpose was we went to a gun manufacturing facility where lots of jobs are created, high-wage jobs. And I received a gun and I was honored to have it.”

Today, FN Herstal owns the U.S. Repeating Arms Company, which is known for making Winchester rifles, and the Browning Arms Company, a firearms maker based in Morgan, Utah.

In addition to the South Carolina plant, FN Herstal also owns an American plant known as FNH USA in McLean, Virginia. According to the Washington Post, the plant supplies the U.S. military with popular guns such as the M4 carbine and the MK19 automatic grenade launcher.

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

Cerf’s Up!

As the publisher and co-founder of Random House, Bennett Cerf was one of the most important figures in 20th-century culture and literature.

Are We Still Comfortably Numb?

Forgiving someone on behalf of a community that is not yours is not forgiveness. It is opportunism dressed up as virtue.

National Picnic Day

There is nothing like spreading a soft blanket out in the shade and enjoying some delicious food with friends and family.

John Lennon’s Dream – And Where It Fell Short

His message of love — hopeful, expansive, humane — inspired genuine moral progress. It fostered hope that humanity might ultimately converge toward those ideals. In too many parts of the world, that expectation collided with societies that did not share those assumptions.

Journeys to the Promised Land

Just as the Torah concludes with the people about to enter the Promised Land, leaders are successful when the connections we make reveal within us the humility to encounter the Infinite.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.