Terrific article on the most elite military sniper school on earth: The Marine Scout Sniper school
All about PIGS and HOGS
All about PIGS and HOGS
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the most elite military sniper school on earth
I'm not sure I would call it...
Which school would you say is then?
I'm not sure I would call it...
Look at the list of snipers confirmed kills that are published and back track what school they went to. According to the Marines the USMC school is the best in the world, just ask them, actually you dont have to ask they will tell you..
I wouldn't leave the Brit, French, German and Israeli schools off the list for consideration.
I'd think mission difficulty and effectiveness would be a better scale of skill level. Kill numbers are easily affected by circumstance/stituation. I have a friend who was with 2nd Recon Bn complained that everytime they had a good mission SEALs would steal it or Army would just show and fuck it up so take that for what it's worth(hearsay). Can't really put your skills to the test if you aren't getting the missions.
Also thinking that, in reality though all the schools are pretty good considering not that long ago it was hard to find one school amongst the whole dam military.
According to the Marines the USMC school is the best in the world, just ask them, actually you dont have to ask they will tell you..
That's some funny shit right there![]()
You have to understand, the USMC School is a Basic Course, and not an advanced one..
Comparing it to a secondary course that is not the MOS course, is Apples & Oranges.
As far as a Basic School, the USMC School is second to none... end of discussion.![]()
I'd have to agree I made an apples to oranges comparison. The standard Army School and Navy (read Seals) are two very different schools. I do not know how SOTIC fares today, but in the early eighties, I would have definitely chosen a Marine Graduate over an SF graduate. I do understand that the SF course was modified substantially. So, that may be an unfair comparison.
Also, my experience being thirty years old with this, is somewhat of an apples/oranges comparison of what we know today. But the one thing that sticks out in my mind is the Marines are solid on every point needed in a snipers world. Systems have advanced, but there are things you still need to know from the 'old school' way of doing it. A foundation in any subject is a plus.
Terrific article on the most elite military sniper school on earth: The Marine Scout Sniper school
All about PIGS and HOGS![]()
I always saw the same from the USMC shooting team. If it wasn't for my spending two years working the Parris Island ranges, I wouldn't have interacted with a single team shooter my entire career. I had a CWO Range officer who spent 12 years shooting the teams, and hadn't been in his MOS (1371) since he was a LCpl. Another Line SNCOIC who was a 0311/0369 and hadn't done a pump since he was a PFC. The PMI section had several of those types as well, so maybe that would be considered passing on their skills to the Corps as a whole, but really it was their way of dodging the FMF. I couldn't get orders out of there fast enough...Unfortunately I have to agree with Sandwarrior in regards to the AMU. While they are great at competing I have never seen them do anything to help the Army as a whole when it comes to marksmanship training. They are based out of Fort Benning and I have never even heard of them helping train one of the Sniper courses or lend a hand during Basic Rifle Marksmanship for the Basic Training battalions there. They just worry about themselves and their upcoming competitions.
I always saw the same from the USMC shooting team. If it wasn't for my spending two years working the Parris Island ranges, I wouldn't have interacted with a single team shooter my entire career. I had a CWO Range officer who spent 12 years shooting the teams, and hadn't been in his MOS (1371) since he was a LCpl. Another Line SNCOIC who was a 0311/0369 and hadn't done a pump since he was a PFC. The PMI section had several of those types as well, so maybe that would be considered passing on their skills to the Corps as a whole, but really it was their way of dodging the FMF. I couldn't get orders out of there fast enough...
Schools are just schools. They teach the basics, certify that you meet the minimums, dog the shit out of you day in and out, and that's about it. I thought I was hot shit coming out of USMC Sniper School as "High Shooter" until one month later I was being humbled in the Urban Sniper Course put on by SOTG. I learned how to call wind in SSBC and I learned how to shoot in Urban. But it was in my platoons that I learned how to be a sniper. Mission after mission after mission, pushing the limits operationally, physically and mentally, is where you learn the actual trade. I never was the best, but I knew a thing or two and the Company Commanders I supported liked my team's performance. Except that one, and he was a fucking tool who couldn't employ a can opener, much less a Scout Sniper Team... [MENTION=150]NOMAD[/MENTION] knows exactly who I'm talking about. Fuck that guy.
In my years I've worked with incredible SEALs, SF, Aussie SAS, Royal Marines, US Army and USMC Snipers, and Recon Marines. I've also met my share of shit heads from virtually every branch and background as well. I've seen STA Platoons that were incredible, and ones that worried far more about their haircuts and hoodies than missions. I worked with one 10th Mountain Scout Platoon that despite having attended the schools, they were hurting badly for follow on training, and asked myself and my partner to come up there for a month TAD on their dime to help train them (got nixed, my Plt Cmdr said fuck no). The differences between successful and shitty usually came down to Battalion/Company Commanders that used them how they are best employed, the Platoon Sergeant and Chief Scout doing their jobs to push the platoon to new levels, and a Battalion that supported their STA Platoon members to do more schools than just SSBC along with members not resting on their laurels when they earn their Hogs Tooth. STA doesn't have a school pipeline like Recon or Force does - You have to fight with the Bn to come off every last TAD dollar or do PTAD to get what you need, and beg/borrow/steal for school seats left and right.
Who has the best basic school though? Marines, of course. Why? Because fuck you, that's why!![]()
Couple of points here:
SOTIC / SFSC (also NSW SSC) - major overhauls, really does not look like the old program.
Special Forces Sniper Course - YouTube
(PR vid, but it gives you some ideas)
Per above, a lot of the old sacred cows have been shown out to pasture, or butchered and eaten. When you train, deploy, fight, and return to train, the stuff that works sticks, the other stuff goes by the wayside fairly quickly. Don't get me wrong, still room for improvement when compared to some of the better civilian programs out there, but the lines between the Civilian and MIL training programs are blurring more and more.
"Best at doing what?" - per the discussion in many other topics here, not all of the Mil Sniper Schools are on the same sheet of music, or more importantly they do not have the same goals & objectives, or training curriculums. Personally, I think that is a huge mistake, if one branch deems it worthy, then the others should look at it as well. As such it is also really an "apples to oranges" comparison to try and look at the USMC School versus the US Army School. Case in point, the USMC places more of an emphasis on things such as acting as a Forward Observer. Sure the USMC Snipers are better at it, but you can't fault the Army Snipers for something they did not receive equal training on. Also hard to compare MOS training with ASQ training, IE: the USMC course is 12+ weeks versus the Army course which is 7 weeks.
"Shooting" - if you want to get down to trigger pulling, and throw out all of the rest of it, it goes back & forth some, but best of luck beating USAMU, and the SF and Ranger Sniper Teams. Take a look at the results of events like the Int Sniper Comp and the USASOC Sniper Competition. In all fairness, the Army does place a big emphasis on competitive shooting, but once again so should all of the branches IMHO. If you read up on the recent changes to the NSW SSC, you will see that the USAMU had a fair influence in that process. Very good example where the benefits of a well developed competitive shooting program are influencing and benefiting operational training.
IMHO, competition between the services can be a good thing, but it still blows my mind how much separation still exists between the various branches. Last I checked they were all fighting together for the USA!
No disrespect intended with the Army comments, just throwing it all out there in the hopes that it may benefit someone.
I pretty much always enjoyed working with the other branches, with the exception with one particular unit full of of big heads but little knowledge of the bush. That particular 10th Mtn unit didn't have a training problem, they had an employment and upper level leadership problem, and it was well proven on a JRTC run we did with them. I'll sum it up by saying SS teams are small for a reason, camouflage and stealth are your best friend. It's a great story and one of my fondest ops with my now late sniper partner, but I'm not throwing it out in the open airwaves.Well said. I would've love to train with you guys prior to jumping the pond.
I've had BCs and CCs look at me like I had a dick growing out of my forehead when I would advise them how I should be best employed, simply because I didn't have shiny shit on my collar. My Platoon Commander would tell them the exact same thing and holy shit, it was all the sudden the greatest idea in the world. When we worked directly for the Deuce, that was a clusterfuck. Maybe I just had shitty intel officers, I don't know, but having a Plt Cmdr who was both intel and an infantry officer worked well for us.