History has shown us many interesting phenomena over the past 150 years, one of which is that when the U.S. military adopts a particular piece of combat ordnance, American citizens aren’t far behind. From early Colt revolvers to the first semi-auto 1911 pistol, right on down to the M16, once the military machine cuts a check on a contract for a primary arm, it’s a get-in-line deal among gunnies everywhere. They figure, rightly or wrongly, that if Uncle Sam says the gun’s good to go, it must be the greatest thing since sliced gunpowder.
Which is pretty much the situation with the new M17, selected as the winner of the U.S. Army’s Modular Handgun System (MHS) trials in 2017. A variant of Sig Sauer’s polymer-framed, striker-fired P320 9mm dating back…