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'Marksman' Or 'Expert' Rating No Big Deal In Army, Soldiers Point Out
Tacoma News Tribune | October 25, 2002 | Michael Gilbert and Eijiro Kawada

Posted on 10/28/2002 12:38:49 PM PST by Stand Watch Listen

Qualifying as an "expert marksman" is no extraordinary achievement for soldiers in the Army.

In basic training and usually once a year, soldiers have to qualify with their service weapon. To earn their "expert" badge, they've got to hit 36 out of 40 targets from distances of 50 to 300 meters, officials said.

Soldiers and former soldiers said it's not a particularly tough test. And they said it shouldn't be read as any indication that D.C. sniper suspect John Muhammad achieved any unusual level of proficiency during his time in the Army.

"This expert badge this guy got is completely meaningless," said Gene Econ, a retired infantry major who trains soldiers in marksmanship. "The public needs to know that in the Army, that's pretty much meaningless."

Shooting a rifle, using camouflage and concealment are among the fundamental skills that all soldiers learn in their nine weeks of basic training, soldiers, veterans and Army officials said.

"You shoot from different positions at different targets," Spc. Vicente Hidalgo said Thursday after a haircut at Bell's Barber Shop II in Tillicum. "You learn aiming, breathing and holding the weapon steady."

He said 95 percent of soldiers pass the basic rifle marksmanship course. Others said about one in five qualify as expert.

"They train you on that a lot," said Hidalgo, who works in the pharmacy at Madigan Army Medical Center. "There are a few people who are too nervous to do it."

After the course, he said, anybody would be able to shoot a target 100 yards away - the range from which the D.C. sniper is reported to have shot his victims.

Don Kell, 63, an Army and Vietnam veteran from Tillicum, agreed, saying he can hit "a nickel or even a dime from 100 yards away."

While in the Army, Kell said, he qualified with several firearms including M-1 and M-16 rifles.

The Pentagon said Muhammad, a combat engineer, qualified expert on the M-16 and with hand grenades. He was last stationed at Fort Lewis in 1994.

Qualifying as an expert marksman and becoming a sniper are "apples and oranges," said Lt. Col. Stephen Barger, the Fort Lewis spokesman.

Sniper training involves a lot more than shooting, officials said. Candidates are put through a five-week course, screened for psychiatric and emotional problems, and must have advanced infantry skills.

Soldiers with disciplinary problems are kicked out of the program, officials said.

Muhammad did not receive sniper training in the Army, the Pentagon said in a news release.

"This guy's ability to point a rifle barrel, hit a 20-inch-by-30-inch target from 100 yards, firing with the barrel stabilized with a tripod ... there's no marksmanship ability involved in that at all," said Econ, who helps train snipers at Fort Lewis. "There is a sick, demented, murdering brain that will never be cured."



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: banglist
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1 posted on 10/28/2002 12:38:49 PM PST by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Does anyone know what Moose was referring to by saying "The Duck is in the Noose"?
2 posted on 10/28/2002 12:41:31 PM PST by Bugbear
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: Stand Watch Listen
Considering that during a 26 year career I fired for record on 25 meter range at scaled targets in good to excellent conditions from a foxhole supported position its a crock.

The pressure on units to "keep the numbers up" is tremendous. That leads to the use of a .223/5.56 MM pencil all too often.
4 posted on 10/28/2002 12:51:15 PM PST by FRMAG
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Others said about one in five qualify as expert.

That's about right. The news that qualifying "expert" is somehow a gimme would come as a surprise to a great many soldiers seeking additional promotion points, or the Expert Infantry Badge. 36 of 40 is tough, and usually requires many trips to the range and several hundred rounds.

The DC shooter wasn't a "sniper" - but he was a competent marskman. Every "expert" that climbs on the "my grandma can shoot better" bandwagon is doing a disservice to the training profession.

If it's that easy, we certainly don't need "experts" to train our soldiers or police, they can get all the training they need from reading Soldier Of Fortune.

This article is cr*p.

5 posted on 10/28/2002 12:55:46 PM PST by xsrdx
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To: Stand Watch Listen
That article is partly crap and partly true.

I spent 9 years in the army. I always fired expert. In fact in Basic Training I fired a perfect 40. And I'm mighty proud of it, too. In order to do that I had to hit about 4 (if I remember right) targets that were 300 meters distant.

The part that is true about the article is that the expert badge is meaningless. I know for a fact that there was quite a bit of cheating at the range. Since range scores translate directly to promotion points, a good score is important. And since scoring is done by your buddy, a good score is easily achievable.

But to make a blanket statement that the expert badge is meaningless, bothers me to a certain extent. Many of the expert badges out there are meaningless because they're not genuine. My badge is genuine and therefor I take exception to the comment.

How many are phony? I don't know, but I bet it's a high percentage.

I have a nephew in the army now, he says that some of the ranges have electronic scoring.

6 posted on 10/28/2002 1:00:47 PM PST by sparkomatic
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To: FRMAG
25m alternate qualification requires 38 hits in 40 attempts. Alternate qualification is (supposed to be) utilized only when appropriate 300yd range facilities aren't available. Ft. Lewis soldiers train to the 300m standard.
7 posted on 10/28/2002 1:06:44 PM PST by xsrdx
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To: sparkomatic
I have a nephew in the army now, he says that some of the ranges have electronic scoring.

I was wondering what you mean by your buddy scores for you. The only time I saw manual scoring was when zeroing ranges were used to qualify.

8 posted on 10/28/2002 1:09:18 PM PST by briant
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To: sparkomatic; *bang_list
he says that some of the ranges have electronic scoring.

Active installation qualification ranges should all be automated ERETS (Enhanced Remote Electronic Target System) ranges that count hits/misses automatically, via computerized sensors.

Your score cannot be "doctored" without WILDLY obvious tampering.

9 posted on 10/28/2002 1:10:18 PM PST by xsrdx
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Oh and hitting a nickel or dime at 100 yards is crap, too. The M-16 is not a less than 1 moa rifle. In fact, almost no rifle is a less than 1 moa rifle. I think the M-16 is probably closer to a 2 moa rifle. If a guy shoots a 3 round group there's a pretty good chance the guy can hit the nickel or dime. But he's not going to hit it every time. The rifle just simply isn't that good.
10 posted on 10/28/2002 1:11:59 PM PST by sparkomatic
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To: briant
I spent almost all of my time at Fort Bragg, NC through the 80's. The qualification ranges were set up so that two shooters go to a lane. I think the ranges had about 40 lanes or something like that. Anyhow, one guy does all the shooting and the scorer (the other guy) records the hits/misses with a pencil. Hence the .223/5.56mm pencil comment the other poster made on this thread. When that shooter has fired all 40 rounds then you switch and the other guy shoots while you score.
11 posted on 10/28/2002 1:16:15 PM PST by sparkomatic
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To: sparkomatic
I understand what your saying, but, as a fellow soldier (ARNG), I have also shot the gamut from Marksman to Expert.

While, I'll agree that shooting expert (which I've not done all that often) is, by no means, "Not a big deal", it does not indicate mastery of the weapon, techniques, concealment, and mindset to the degree that would equate an "Expert" shooter to a sniper.

12 posted on 10/28/2002 1:24:44 PM PST by freedombird
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To: Bugbear
This post explains the story behind that:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/775215/posts
13 posted on 10/28/2002 1:29:24 PM PST by Peace4EarthNow
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To: Bugbear
The duck in the noose was the sniper's phrase. It refers a folk tale in which the duck flys off with its captor and drops it from the air. I'm still waiting...
14 posted on 10/28/2002 1:31:09 PM PST by js1138
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To: Stand Watch Listen
The media, being gun stupid, spreads the stupidity around.

Here's for mandatory firearms training in ALL schools.

It's more important than knowing how to roll a condom on a bannana.

15 posted on 10/28/2002 1:37:19 PM PST by Thumper1960
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To: Stand Watch Listen
a friend of mine who's marine infantry was laughing about the army's "expert" rating for shooting at 300 meters---the marines have to hit the mark from 500 meters. time for the army to raise it's standards imho...
16 posted on 10/28/2002 1:37:40 PM PST by abraxas_sandiego
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To: xsrdx
>>36 of 40 is tough, and usually requires many trips to the range and several hundred rounds.

You obviously don't go to the range with the kind of people I do. That bunch will go through a few thousand on a good *day* at the range (single trip).

A thousand rounds of milsurp .223 is only a couple hundred bucks. That's very little for the gov't to spend, and a few range trips are an awfully small price to pay in time, for someone who makes their living as a soldier.

For professional soldiers in combat arms MOS's, the level of shooting ability to obtain an expert badge should be damn near a requirement. Or at least for anyone close to infantry.

17 posted on 10/28/2002 1:39:14 PM PST by FreedomPoster
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To: sparkomatic
I was trained as a unit armorer while with 1Bn 52nd Inf. Learned there that it is acceptable for a M16 to be as much as a 5 MOA after 2000 rds. Considering the weapon actually rattles when shacken, I would say that your assessment of 2 MOA is kind.

My turn to brag:

My Remmington 700 VS (Varmit Synthetic - closest thing to the M24 on the civilan market) came with 1/2 MOA out of the box and I have since tuned it to 1/10 MOA from bench. I have to shoot at 200 yards to be able to make an accurate measure of the MOA.

The down side is that it leaves me no excuse when I miss 'cause the rifle is far more accurate than I'll ever be.

For those that think my claims to be unrealistic, or those that wish to "tune" their rifle, I highly recommend the following product:

http://rifle-accuracy.com/

While I was not able to acheive the .08 MOA in the product advertisements, It did greatly improved the accuracy of my gun. I had it installed in the above mentioned Rem 700 in .308 and it is now a true tack driver.
18 posted on 10/28/2002 1:39:23 PM PST by taxcontrol
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To: sparkomatic
,i>...Anyhow, one guy does all the shooting and the scorer (the other guy) records the hits/misses with a pencil...

I only saw the pop-up ranges that were scored electroically (except when 25m zeroing ranges were used. Anyway, people could still cheat by saving some of their practice rounds and adding them to your 30 round magazine that should have had 20 rounds in it. (They usually gave you a pratice session in prone and foxhole positions.)

19 posted on 10/28/2002 1:40:55 PM PST by briant
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To: sparkomatic
...Anyhow, one guy does all the shooting and the scorer (the other guy) records the hits/misses with a pencil...

I only saw the pop-up ranges that were scored electroically (except when 25m zeroing ranges were used. Anyway, people could still cheat by saving some of their practice rounds and adding them to your 30 round magazine that should have had 20 rounds in it. (They usually gave you a pratice session in prone and foxhole positions.)

20 posted on 10/28/2002 1:41:59 PM PST by briant
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