Give a man
a fish and you feed him for a day.
Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.
A skilled sniper will never be unemployed.
12/26/09
from Strategy Page
The Sniper Revolution
December 26, 2009: Over the last five years, sniper training in the U.S. Army
and Marine Corps has undergone tremendous change. Mostly this is because so many
snipers were getting lots of combat experience. That experience comes back to
the sniper training schools. Another change has been increasing communication
between the three primary centers of sniper training (army, marines and army
Special Forces). Each of these schools have long tended to develop in isolation
from the others. But now there are more competitions and gatherings that bring
together snipers from all three, and many valuable exchanges of tactics,
techniques and experience have taken place. Finally, the growth in the number of
snipers led to many more items of sniper weapons and equipment being developed
and produced. This has been driven, in part, by the growth in the number of
civilians taking up sniping as a sport. Some of these civilian snipers are
former military, but most are civilian shooters seeking an edge in their
hunting, or simply to develop some new, and challenging, skills.
It was five years ago that the U.S. Army yet again adopted a successful combat
practice from the U.S. Marine Corps. In this case, the army began training
additional snipers, so that army units would have more than three times as many.
Which is about the same number of snipers the marines have had for a long time.
To do make this happen, the army is tripled the output of its sniper schools.
The army had a five week sniper course, while the marines had a ten week course
that was considered one of the best in the world. These schools turn out
professional snipers who know how to operate independently in two man teams.
Marine regiments (about the same size as army brigades) then had about three
times as many snipers per battalion as did army units. Back then, the army only
has six or eight snipers per infantry battalion. The additional sniper training
sought to provide one sniper in each infantry squad. There are 27 squads in an
infantry battalion.
But both the army and the marines were also taking advantage of the greater
number of veteran troops in their combat units, and the fact that just about
every soldier has a rifle with a scope, and has a lot of target practice behind
them. In the past, infantry commanders were encouraged to find and designate
about ten percent of their men as sharpshooters (sort of sniper lite) and make
use of these guys to take out enemy troops at a distance, with single shots.
This was a trend that had been growing for over a decade, and was becoming a
major feature of American infantry tactics. These sharpshooters, especially the
ones with combat experience, were the prime candidates for sniper school. The
trained snipers, however, also have the special skills required to find the best
shooting position, and how to stay hidden, and get out of harms way if
discovered. Trained snipers have proved to be a powerful weapon in the kinds of
battles encountered in Afghanistan and Iraq. The enemy fighters greatly fear the
snipers, and the presence of snipers restricted the mobility of enemy gunmen.
