Army sniper standard when I went (2009) was the same- 20/20 corrected in BOTH eyes. I don't believe that has changed, nor would there be incentive for them to do so, since qualified canidates are in no shortage.
At least Army side, LASIK and PRK are now permissible. I had LASIK about three months before I went to school, and was still dealing with dry eye while there (sucked ass).
A few other things to consider for the guy wanting to be a sniper-
-There are no sniper contracts; you have to be selected. Doesn't matter what branch. So getting in the door (if you were even able to meet basic standards) means nothing.
-PVS-14's are worn over the non-dominate eye. The device has to be able to give you a clear and focused image since your night vision is entirely reliant upon that one eye. If the device cannot correct your vision, either on it's own, or in combination with your normal correction, to provide for an adequately clear image, you are worse than useless at night, you are a hinderance.
-If you get something in your one good eye, just what do you expect will be your back-up plan when the shit is going down?
-No one closes their non-dominate eye anymore when shooting; not that it's an issue anyway since even when good, it ghosts.
-If you want to serve, consider doing so in a support role; there are a lot of cool jobs out there that are non-combat. Intel field alone can get you into some pretty legit gigs. Assuming you can meet basic requirements for enlistment, You'd be fine. But what you describe thus far, I would say, you'd be a detriment to a combat element.
At least Army side, LASIK and PRK are now permissible. I had LASIK about three months before I went to school, and was still dealing with dry eye while there (sucked ass).
A few other things to consider for the guy wanting to be a sniper-
-There are no sniper contracts; you have to be selected. Doesn't matter what branch. So getting in the door (if you were even able to meet basic standards) means nothing.
-PVS-14's are worn over the non-dominate eye. The device has to be able to give you a clear and focused image since your night vision is entirely reliant upon that one eye. If the device cannot correct your vision, either on it's own, or in combination with your normal correction, to provide for an adequately clear image, you are worse than useless at night, you are a hinderance.
-If you get something in your one good eye, just what do you expect will be your back-up plan when the shit is going down?
-No one closes their non-dominate eye anymore when shooting; not that it's an issue anyway since even when good, it ghosts.
-If you want to serve, consider doing so in a support role; there are a lot of cool jobs out there that are non-combat. Intel field alone can get you into some pretty legit gigs. Assuming you can meet basic requirements for enlistment, You'd be fine. But what you describe thus far, I would say, you'd be a detriment to a combat element.
I was a USMC recruiter last decade, the manual changed from MPPM to the EPM, but the standards are still pretty much the same. Enlistment wise, if you have one eye that still corrects to 20/20 and the other to 20/400, you can be waivered. Here's the manual, you're looking for page 126 of the PDF, listed as page 3-75 on the doc: http://www.hqmc.marines.mil/Portals/61/Docs/FOIA/MCRCO1100.1EPM.pdf
The following conditions are not waiverable and should be considered permanently disqualifying.
1 Vision
a Blindness in one or both eyes.
b Diplopia. Cataracts; cataract surgery (unless there is an intraocular lens implant).
c Visual acuity not correctable to at least 20/400.
d History of keratotomy or kertomileusis.
e Keratonoconus of any degree.
f Refractive error in excess of +/-8.00 diopters.
If you have one of these, you're done. If you don't, then there's a chance for enlistment. Speak to the recruiter, bring your eye records with you, they'll send it up to MEPS for a "med read", the doc will look at them and reply if you can go attempt the physical or not.
Now, on the sniper side, 20/20 correctable is MANDATORY. You wouldn't even make it into the platoon, that much I can guarantee, and certainly wouldn't make it past the school check-in as the instructors verify the standards being met in your med record. My eyes are shit, 20/200 uncorrected with a diopter around 4.5 and a bit of colorblindness too, and I buggered my first eye exam at MEPS when I enlisted, they ran me as 20/30 in one eye while I see 20/15 with contacts just fine and easy 20/20 with glasses. But I damn near got booted out of school on Day 1 until I could produce the documentation and also smoke the eye chart in the instructor office, but I did and I graduated high shooter two months later. Recon, Rangers, SF, all the rest of the SOCOM type stuff that would be infantry based shooter type jobs, they'll all be the same. You could probably be a standard grunt, not that there's any shame in that, nor is there even in being a "Water Dog", but sniper in the military would be extremely unlikely.
So go forth, join and serve our great land, stomp bad guys and learn how to police call the fuck out of the barrack's quad while you're at it. And who knows, I might just be that guy who told you that you couldn't do it and you proved me wrong. That would seriously kick ass...