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Still with is garrison they would wear the shiny stuff instead of sewed on rank...lol Reminds me of also the time when me and buddy were in Airborne School and we took our cloths to laundry mat on base, in uniform. I know the Sergeant was trying to square away a couple way ward enlisted men, I forget what was wrong, I think it something to do with out pant legs not being bloused inside the boots. You know when you out of boot camp/AIT and they tell you to dress one way while in the Battalion Barracks and forget to remind that once you leave their sacred grounds others will ream you out. He didn't give us hassle and was very polite, he didn't dog us, but when you week out of AIT, the two of us were scared and worry that we be pushing the floor of that place deeper into Red Georgia Clay. Yes, you may not always agree with Officer or senior NCO, but at time they do have some good ideas that help everyone out, regardless of their personality flaws... |
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there's a command sgt major and an operations sergeant major.
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Our snipers normally operated as a Section when out in Afganistan, and they rotated sniping and spotting duties between themselves to give them all experience. All British snipers should have gone through the relevant course (whether Army, Royal Marines or RAF Regiment) and will generally then act as a spotter or sniper depending on the situation. In the bad old days the spotters weapon was an LSW, for the added range compared to a rifle, but now RAF Regiment sniper Sections go with a balanced range of weapons (four L85s, two L85/UGLs and two LMGs, though our sniper section commander preferred to take GPMGs due to the ranges he expected to work at) plus the four Long Range Rifles, and I imagine that the Army and Royal Marines are similar.
We also used quad bikes to enable our sniper Section to go off and do their own thing, which gave them a lot of autonomy to do OPs without having to be inserted by a patrolling Flight, especially with the addition of a trailer for a few days supplies. |
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We know it as Kim's Game, from the Rudyard Kipling novel Kim where the main character plays it as part of his training. Most soldiers do it during basic training as part of the lessons on judging distances and general observation, but anyone in a job like sniping or recce will do it a lot more.
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I get what you're saying and it sounds pretty much the same as how we operate. Do US snipers normally carry an M16/M4/whatever as well as the sniper rifle itself, or do the spotters and snipers trade weapons back and forth? I know ours tend to carry their L85 and keep the LRR in a valise on their back until they need it.
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Depends on the mission. There were times when I carried the Barrett out, there were times when I carried my M24 in a drag bag and used my M4 predominately, there were times when I carried my M24 only. Bear in mind, I never deployed as a member of a sniper team though, it was all before 9/11 and in a training environment.
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Mission dependent as always, it's the usual answer for anything military! Still, good to know.
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