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Sniper's scope has all-too-real view of Iraq war
The Houston Chronicle ^ | Jan. 2, 2004 | Eric Schmitt

Posted on 01/02/2004 6:03:27 AM PST by Pern

SAMARRA, Iraq -- The intimate horror of the guerrilla war here in Iraq seems most vivid when seen through the sights of a sniper's rifle.

In an age of satellite-guided bombs dropped at featureless targets from 30,000 feet, Army snipers can see the expression on a man's face when the bullet hits.

"I shot one guy in the head, and his head exploded," said Sgt. Randy Davis, one of about 40 snipers in the Army's new 3,600-soldier Stryker Brigade, from Fort Lewis, Wash. "Usually, though, you just see a dust cloud pop up off their clothes, and see a little blood splatter come out the front."

Working in teams of two or three, Army snipers here cloak themselves in the shadows of empty city buildings or burrow into desert sands with camouflage suits, waiting to fell guerrilla gunmen and their leaders with a single shot from as far as half a mile away.

As the counterinsurgency grinds into its ninth month, the Army increasingly is relying on snipers to protect infantry patrols sweeping through urban streets and alleyways, and to kill guerrilla leaders and disrupt their attacks.

"Properly employed, we can break the enemy's back," said Davis, 25, of Murfreesboro, Tenn. "Our main targets are their main command and control elements and other high-value targets."

Soldiering is a violent business, and emotions in combat run high. But commanders say snipers are a different breed of warrior -- quiet, unflappable marksmen who bring a dispassionate intensity to their deadly task.

"The good ones have to be calm, methodical and disciplined," said Lt. Col. Karl Reed, who commands the Stryker Brigade's 5th Battalion, 20th Infantry Regiment, Davis' parent unit.

In the month since he arrived here on his first combat tour, Davis already has eight confirmed kills -- including seven in a single day -- and two "probables."

He and his partner, Spc. Chris Wilson, who has one confirmed kill, do not brag about their feats. Their words reflect a certain icy professionalism instilled in men who say they take no pleasure in killing and try not to see their Iraqi foes as men with families and children.

"You don't think about it," said Wilson, 24, of Muncie, Ind., speaking at an austere base camp near here after a late afternoon mission. "You just think about the lives of the guys to your left and right."

Listening to his partner, Davis nodded in agreement: "As soon as they picked up a weapon and tried to engage U.S. soldiers, they forfeited all their rights to life, is how I look at it."

All soldiers are trained to destroy an opponent, but snipers have honed the art of killing to a fine edge.

At a five-week training course at Fort Benning, Ga., they learn to stalk their prey, conceal their own movements, spot telltale signs of an enemy shooter and take down a target with a lone shot.

To qualify for the school, a soldier must already be an expert marksman, pass a physical examination and undergo a psychological screening ("to make sure they're not training a nut," said Davis). The rigorous course fails more than half of its students.

The demand for snipers is great enough that the Army has sent a team of trainers to Iraq to keep churning out new ones for the war effort here and in other hot spots.

As the Army faces more conflicts in which terrorists use the tight confines of city blocks and rooftops to stage hit-and-run strikes, the sniper school has placed increasing emphasis on urban tactics. That makes sense in places like this city of 250,000 people, a hotbed of Saddam Hussein supporters 65 miles northwest of Baghdad.

The training paid off Dec. 18. Dusk was setting in here, and Davis was wrapping up a counter-sniper mission when he spotted an armed Iraqi on a rooftop about 300 yards away.

He said he knew the gunman was a sniper by the way he snuck along the roofline to track a squad below from Davis' unit -- Company B, 5th Battalion, 20th Infantry Regiment.

"The guy made a mistake when he silhouetted himself against the rooftop," said Davis, who has 20/10 vision. "He was trying to look over to see where the guys were in the courtyard."

As the gunman rose from the shadows to fire, Davis said he saw his head and then the distinctive shape of a Dragonov SVD Russian-made sniper rifle. The sergeant drew a bead on the shooter with his weapon of choice, an M-14 rifle equipped with a special sight that has cross hairs and a red aiming dot.

"I went ahead and engaged him and shot him one time to the chest," he said, matter of factly. "I watched him kick back, his rifle flew back, and I saw a little blood come out of his chest. It was a good hit."

Three days earlier, Company B had walked into an ambush in downtown Samarra in which gunmen on motorcycles used children leaving school as cover to attack the patrol. Davis, armed this time with an M-4 rifle, shot seven of the 11 attackers that U.S. commanders say were killed in the 45-minute skirmish.

"We don't have civilian casualties," Davis said of how he avoided the schoolchildren. "Everything you hit, you know exactly what it is. You know where every round is going."

In city or desert, Army snipers spend hours planning and setting up their positions, often under cover of darkness.

"We don't have the capability to survive a sustained firefight," said Davis, noting that snipers fire from distances well beyond their adversaries' weapons. "We use surprise and stealth to accomplish missions."

Davis and Wilson grew up on farms, and both owned their first rifles before they were 10. They fondly remember hunting deer as youngsters.

Both men are married and have children, and say they do not talk much about their work outside their tight-knit clan. "We try to get away from stereotypes that you're a psychotic gun nut running around, like the guy in D.C., or like in the movies, a cool-guy assassin," Davis said.

There are not many targets these men dread, but in the shifting battlefield of Iraq, where seemingly everyone is armed, one candidate emerges. Would they ever shoot a child who aimed at them?

"I couldn't imagine that," said Wilson, a father of five.

But Davis had a different view: "I'd shoot him, otherwise he'd shoot me. But I wouldn't feel good about it."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; US: Washington
KEYWORDS: 1shot1kill; armysnipers; iraq; sniper; strykerbrigade
Davis and Wilson grew up on farms, and both owned their first rifles before they were 10.

In the age of smart bombs, 6000 rnd. a min. Gatling guns, and the 'digital battlefield', I'd feel safer if one of these guys had my back.

The most dangerous predator on the battlefield, a county-boy with a rifle.

1 posted on 01/02/2004 6:03:28 AM PST by Pern
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To: Pern
"As soon as they picked up a weapon and tried to engage U.S. soldiers, they forfeited all their rights to life, is how I look at it."

BUMP.

2 posted on 01/02/2004 6:07:14 AM PST by BureaucratusMaximus (if we're not going to act like a constitutional republic...lets be the best empire we can be...)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
It looks like this story is getting picked up by a number of newspapers.
3 posted on 01/02/2004 6:08:45 AM PST by FreedomPoster (this space intentionally blank)
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To: FreedomPoster
Same story, same author, different titles.
4 posted on 01/02/2004 6:13:02 AM PST by Cannoneer No. 4 (Brave Rifles! You have been baptised in fire and blood and come out steel.)
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To: FreedomPoster
Posted last night

In Iraq's Murky Battle, Snipers Offer U.S. a Precision Weapon

5 posted on 01/02/2004 6:14:59 AM PST by Cannoneer No. 4 (Brave Rifles! You have been baptised in fire and blood and come out steel.)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
Same stupid mistake posting the troopers personal information.
6 posted on 01/02/2004 6:15:16 AM PST by em2vn
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To: Pern
This is the third time I've seen this exact article here in Free Republic. Each time it was atributed to a diferent author and newapaper. I'm not complaining about the multiple posts, I'm just curious how three different authors can write the exact same words.
7 posted on 01/02/2004 6:17:58 AM PST by norwaypinesavage
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
Yep, just a different paper. Interesting to track, though, just to see who all is carrying it.
8 posted on 01/02/2004 6:24:36 AM PST by FreedomPoster (this space intentionally blank)
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To: Pern

"1st Armored Division sniper trainees take aim at targets downrange to zero their rifles at a range near ---- Oct. 22. U.S. Army photo by Spc. R. Smith"

9 posted on 01/02/2004 6:43:23 AM PST by two23
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To: norwaypinesavage
Looks like it may be an article from syndicated news or something. (Another printing here)
http://www.iht.com/articles/123429.html
10 posted on 01/02/2004 6:46:17 AM PST by two23
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To: norwaypinesavage
This is the third time I've seen this exact article here in Free Republic. Each time it was atributed to a diferent author and newapaper. I'm not complaining about the multiple posts, I'm just curious how three different authors can write the exact same words.

Ever heard of Jason Blair?

11 posted on 01/02/2004 7:31:28 AM PST by milan
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To: Pern
That's the way it is.
12 posted on 01/02/2004 7:33:32 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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