Brit sniper sets new sharpshooting record

10:57am UK, Monday May 03, 2010
Adam Arnold, Sky News Online

A British army sniper helped save his commander and set a new sharpshooting record after killing two Taliban machine gunners in Afghanistan from a mile-and-a-half away.

Corporal of Horse Craig Harrison fired his consecutive shots from such a long distance that they took almost three seconds to reach their targets.

This was despite the 8.59mm bullets leaving the barrel of his rifle at almost three times the speed of sound.

The distance to his two targets was 8,120ft, or 1.54 miles - according to a GPS system - and about 3,000ft beyond the weapon’s effective range.

The 35-year-old beat the previous sniper kill record of 7,972ft, set by a Canadian soldier who shot dead an al Qaeda gunman in March 2002.

Speaking about the incident, Cpl of Horse Harrison said: "The first round hit a machine gunner in the stomach and killed him outright. He went straight down and didn’t move.

“The second insurgent grabbed the weapon and turned as my second shot hit him in the side. He went down, too. They were both dead.”

The serviceman then fired a third and final round to ensure the machine gun was out of action.

He said: “Conditions were perfect, no wind, mild weather, clear visibility. I rested the bipod of my weapon on a compound wall and aimed for the gunner firing the machine gun.”

He killed the two insurgents as he protected his troop commander, whose vehicle became trapped in a field in Helmand Province and started coming under fire.

Cpl of Horse Harrison, from Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, was using the British-built L115A3 Long Range Rifle, the army’s most powerful sniper weapon.

It is only designed to be effective at up to 4,921ft - just less than a mile - and capable of only ‘harassing fire’ beyond that range.

To compensate for the spin and drift of the bullets as they flew the length of 25 football pitches, Cpl of Horse Harrison reportedly had to aim 6ft high and 20ins to the left.

In a remarkable tour of duty, he cheated death a few weeks later when a Taliban bullet pierced his helmet but was deflected away from his skull.

During the Taliban ambush, his patrol vehicle was hit 36 times. He said: "One round hit my helmet behind the right ear and came out of the top.

“Two more rounds went through the strap across my chest. We were all very, very lucky not to get hurt.”

He later broke both arms when his army vehicle was hit by a roadside bomb.

Cpl of Horse Harrison was sent back to the UK for treatment, but insisted on returning to the front line after making a full recovery.

He said: “I was lucky that my physical fitness levels were very high before my arms were fractured and after six weeks in plaster I was still in pretty good shape. It hasn’t affected my ability as a sniper.”

source: sky news

wheres this dude? we need him to say hi to Mr Bin Laden with a mr 50cal :smiley:

Beautiful… Carlos Hatchcock would be proud! :thumbup

umm wow

oh wow… thats pretty remarkable…

Wow a 3 second flight of a bullet that hits dead on with a moving target. Aiming 6ft high , thats crazy .

yah i watched a thing about the canadian who held the record before… shots like that are ridiculous

To top it off, he hit 2 guys at that range and killed both of them and then for good measure he disabled the machine gun. That is awesome!

I smell bullSHIT

How do you combat that. Fucking miles away, dudes probly couldn’t even here his rifle fire.

Literally your standing there and the next your partner is dead and you have no idea how then your dead.

crazy. I’m never going into war EVER

I love reading shit like this.

yea your partner drops, you hear nothing. Then a couple seconds later when the speed of sound catches up you hear the shot :rofl

His English, their entire culture is built upon bullshit.

What?

wait… huh??

Nothing, just not a fan of the English way of life.

I don’t even want to hear your reasoning.

I saw a show about snipers, and for shots this long of course they take into account windage but also the coriolis effect. Basically because the shot covers so much ground and takes such a long time to be on target you need to compensate for the spin of the earth. AWESOME. I can’t think of anything more that I would rather be in a time of war than a sniper. Give me my ghillie suit and put me 1.5 miles away from danger. And since I am sick-nasty at modern warfare I should be just as good at real war…

But…

There’s no respawn points in RL.

Hathcock* :thumbup

Except to be a sniper takes some of the most ridiculous training ever, its some serious shit to go through to “maybe” get the chance to place some cross-hairs on a real target. Definitely one of the toughest jobs mentally to have. Oh and in war, there is no such thing as being away from danger.

^This.

You’re usually closer to the enemy as a sniper, as you’re the one usually scouting ahead. Fuck up, all eyes on you.