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It’s great to know there are some
real men in Sniping with the .50 BMG in
New long-distance record set!
(The
following is from the Canadian newspaper National
Post. The shooters were using .50 BMG rifles that had Lilja
barrels on them outfitted with Nightforce 5.5-22x NXS scopes.) Wait
due to 'Canadian protocol' By
Michael Smith and Chris Wattie
The
five snipers spent 19 days fighting alongside the scout platoon of the United
States Army's 187th "Rakkasan" brigade last month, clearing out
diehard fighters from the mountains near Gardez in eastern The
Americans were so impressed by the Canadian snipers that they recommended them
for medals after the battle. Sources
told the Post that U.S. General Warren Edwards had already signed the
recommendation for five Bronze Stars for the sniper teams, drawn from 3rd
Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, last month. Gen.
Edwards, deputy commanding general of coalition land forces in The
Canadian military told their Spokesmen
for the Department of National Defence would not comment on the award last
night, but a source within the department said the medals are on hold while the
military decides whether or not to award the men a similar Canadian decoration. However,
Dr. David Bercuson, director of the Centre of Military and Strategic Studies at
the "Canadians
don't kill -- they don't even use the word kill; that's the problem," he
said. "I think the military is not sure that the government is prepared to
accept the fact, let alone celebrate the fact ... that Canadian soldiers do
sometimes end up killing people." Many
of the The
snipers themselves, all of whom spoke on condition their names not be printed,
have said they would prefer to receive a medal from their peers in the field
rather than from National Defence Headquarters in Dr.
Bercuson said there should be no objection to Canadians receiving a He
said the medals would be a badly needed boost to the morale of the almost 900
Canadian soldiers on the ground in "Absolutely
they should get it," Dr. Bercuson said. "It would be good for the
morale of the guys and good for the morale of the whole unit, and they need a
morale boost right now." Canadian
snipers were reportedly outstanding in the fighting around the mountainous
al-Qaeda bastion east of Gardez, code-named Operation Anaconda. One
member of the team, a corporal from When
he hit his first target, an enemy gunman at a distance of 1,700 metres, he said
all that ran through his mind was locating his next target. A
master corporal from By
daylight, after coming under enemy machine-gun fire, he managed to ease his
rifle barrel between two rocks and quickly located an enemy sniper hiding
behind a small piece of corrugated steel between two trees. He guessed the
distance at 1,700 metres and fired one shot through the metal, killing the man
instantly. He
said afterward he remembered thinking: "That's one less bullet that's
gonna be coming at us, one less person we have to think about." During
the next four days of fighting, the The
days of crawling, shooting and long hours waiting in cover left the Canadian
snipers exhausted. "You don't realize what you've done to your body and
how tired you are till it's all done. I think we slept 14 or 15 hours when we
got back," the master corporal said. Three
of them, along with They
also participated in Operation Harpoon, with Canadian troops on "the
whale," a mountain overlooking the Shah-e-Kot valley where al-Qaeda
fighters were putting up stiff resistance. Operation
Harpoon, carried out in conjunction with Operation Anaconda, consisted of 500
Canadian and 100 Lieutenant
Justin Overbaugh, of the American scout platoon to which the Canadian snipers
were attached, said it was a pleasure to work with the Canadian troops.
"Their professionalism was amazing," Lieut. Overbaugh said. "The
Canadians were a very large asset to the mission. I would have loved to have 12
Canadian sniper teams out there. I'd have no problems fighting alongside of
them again." He
said the Canadian snipers had equipment far superior to theirs. Their rifles
had longer range than the Senior
military officials in |
- RE: [TruthTalk] [Fwd: atta-boy Canadians] ShieldsFamily
- Re: [TruthTalk] [Fwd: atta-boy Canadians] Lance Muir
- RE: [TruthTalk] [Fwd: atta-boy Canadians] ShieldsFamily
- Re: [TruthTalk] [Fwd: atta-boy Canadians] Lance Muir
- RE: [TruthTalk] [Fwd: atta-boy Canadians] ShieldsFamily


