Author Topic: UK Sniper kills two taliban (head shots) with one bullet from 200 meters  (Read 1153 times)

Soul Crusher

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Dead Men Risen: The snipers' story
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/8376808/Dead-Men-Risen-The-snipers-story.html

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Operating from a remote patrol base in Helmand, two British snipers were responsible for killing 75 Taliban fighters in just 40 days. In one remarkable feat of marksmanship, two insurgents were dispatched with a single bullet.

Most of the kills were at a range of 1,200 metres using the 7.62 mm L96 sniper rifle.

The snipers used suppressors, reducing the sound of the muzzle blast. Although a ballistic crack could be heard, it was almost impossible to work out where the shot was coming from. With the bullet travelling at three times the speed of sound, a victim was unlikely to hear anything before he died.

Walkie-talkie messages revealed that the Taliban thought they were being hit from helicopters. The longest-range shot taken was when Potter killed an insurgent at 1,430 metres away. But the most celebrated shot of their tour was by Osmond at a range of just 196 metres.

On September 12th, a known Taliban commander appeared on the back of a motorcycle with a passenger riding pillion. There was a British patrol in the village of Gorup-e Shesh Kalay and under the rules of engagement, the walkie-talkie the Taliban pair were carrying was designated a hostile act. As they drove off, Osmond fired warning shots with his pistol and then picked up his L96, the same weapon – serial number 0166 – he had used in Iraq and on the butt of which he had written, ‘I love u 0166’.

Taking deliberate aim, he fired a single shot. The bike tumbled and both men fell onto the road and lay there motionless. When the British patrol returned, they checked the men and confirmed they were both dead, with large holes through their heads.

The 7.62 mm bullet Osmond had fired had passed through the heads of both men. He had achieved the rare feat of ‘one shot, two kills’ known in the sniping business as ‘a Quigley’. The term comes from the 1990 film Quigley Down Under in which the hero, played by Tom Selleck, uses an old Sharps rifle to devastating effect.

Potter and Osmond’s working day would begin around 7 am and end a dozen or so hours later at last light. Up to about 900 metres, they would aim at an insurgent’s head, beyond that at the chest.

Often, Potter would take one side of a compound and Osmond the other. Any insurgent moving from one side to the other was liable to be shot by the second sniper if the first had not already got him. Each used the scopes on the rifles to spot for the other man, identifying targets with nicknames to do with their appearance.

A fighter wearing light blue was dubbed ‘the Virgin Mary’ and one clad in what looked like sackcloth was referred to as ‘Hesco man’, after the colour of the base’s Hesco barriers. Both the Virgin Mary and Hesco man were killed.

Others were given a nickname because of their activities, like Hashish man, a Taliban who doubled up as a drug dealer. Occasionally, insurgents got posthumous monikers. If one target presented himself, both snipers aimed at him simultaneously in a coordinated shoot.

“Everybody you hit they drop in a different way,’ says Potter. ‘We did a co-ord shoot on to the one bloke and he just looked like he just fell through a trap door. So we called him Trapdoor Man.”

Major Mark Gidlow-Jackson, their company commander, describes Potter and Osmond as the “epitome of the thinking riflemen” that his regiment sought to produce. “They know the consequences of what they’re doing and they are very measured men. They are both highly dedicated to the art of sniping. They’re both quiet, softly spoken, utterly charming, two of the nicest men in the company, if the most dangerous.”

Serjeant Potter and Rifleman Osmond are identified by pseudonyms for security reasons.

Dead Men Risen, published by Quercus Publishing at £18.99 RRP, is available from Telegraph Books at £14.99 + £1.25 p&p. Call 0844 871 1515 or visit books.telegraph.co.uk

dario73

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They are nasty.

andreisdaman

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Fucking Awesome!!!!

George Whorewell

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This thread is offensive. The Taliban fighters are just trying to protect their families and way of life from the evil imperialist occupiers.

dario73

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This thread is offensive. The Taliban fighters are just trying to protect their families and way of life from the evil imperialist occupiers.

True. I am ashamed that I did not recognize this for the racist thread that it really is.

Racist thread reported.

LurkerNoMore

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Maybe we should mail walkie talkies to all Taliban members.   :-*

Soul Crusher

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The longest-range shot taken was when Potter killed an insurgent at 1,430 metres away.


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Do you guys have any clue how hard that is?   

Between wind, drop, etc, thats an insane hit.   

Straw Man

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The longest-range shot taken was when Potter killed an insurgent at 1,430 metres away.


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Do you guys have any clue how hard that is?   

Between wind, drop, etc, thats an insane hit.   

that is f'ng amazing
- much more so than the Quigley which was only at 196 meters and the targets were lined up perfectly for a double kill shot

andreisdaman

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I'll bet being a sniper and just picking guys off one by one all day long must give those guys such a thrill.....

Jadeveon Clowney

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When he's not running the Galveston PD, benchmstr moonlights as a sniper. He's been known to take Talibans out on full moon nights from a full mile out.

clowney

Jadeveon Clowney

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Dead Men Risen: The snipers' story
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/8376808/Dead-Men-Risen-The-snipers-story.html

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I think this is the first 386 post I've actually clicked the link on and read the article - which was good.

Kazan

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I'll bet being a sniper and just picking guys off one by one all day long must give those guys such a thrill.....

ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ


Dos Equis

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Awesome.  Best story I've read in a while.  These guys rival the Seals who simultaneously took out the three Somali pirates.  It is incredibly difficult to shoot targets at 1200 to 1400 meters.  The one shot, two kills at 196 meters with a moving target is just unreal.  Those guys are beasts. 

andreisdaman

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Awesome.  Best story I've read in a while.  These guys rival the Seals who simultaneously took out the three Somali pirates.  It is incredibly difficult to shoot targets at 1200 to 1400 meters.  The one shot, two kills at 196 meters with a moving target is just unreal.  Those guys are beasts. 

agreed