The simple reason for this is that the St. Petersburg conference of 1869 banned the use of dumdum (named after the factory in India) and other expanding/explosive rounds in warfare between Europeans (after the Crimean war). This ban did not then extend to 'non-civilized' powers, but was written into the first Geneva conference, and has remained with us ever since.The_Zergling said:Hmm. Color me uninformed, but could you explain exactly why hollowed bullets are illegal for use in war? I mean, any bullet's role is to kill by punching a nasty hole in the unfortunate target.
Also, could someone explain what exactly are full-metal jackets, lead points, hollow points, soft points(?) and why there are these distinctions, and what the effect is?