Re: What Makes a Sniper
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Seth8541</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: DP425</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: kraigWY</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> as an SEO, your job is to assist the snipers in advising proper employment to the commander……… it is not the SEO's job to know how to shoot or how to be a sniper, only how to employ them. Any time, materials and assets you use up,………………… The last thing they need is you coming along and fucking up their training plan in an attempt to gain training or experience which serves no one.</div></div>
That is total bull shit. You want a guy running airborne school who never attended? You want an EOD OIC who knows nothing about EOD.
Son, you’re all wet, the best way for an officer to learn the capabilities of a sniper is to attend sniper school. It’s not a waste of training assets for an SEO to go through sniper school.
To the contrary.
The Honor Grad in the class I went through was a Captain from the Infantry Center. His goal was to write a paper for SEOs, to do that he needed to know snipers, to do that he figured he needed to go to sniper school. The cadre of the AMU (most of who were snipers from Vietnam) totally agreed. It gave them (the cadre) a chance to get in their input.
I was an E7 when I went, and attended OCS afterword. Because I was an officer it was a lot easier to sell a sniper program to the Alaska National Guard. (long before the present Benning School and the Guard's School at Robinson).
I sure as hell wouldn’t have been able to sell a program if I didn’t know what I was talking about, where better to learn then sniper school.
As a commander I sure as hell wouldn’t appoint someone who didn’t understand sniping, in charge of a sniper program.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> your job is to assist the snipers in advising proper employment to the commander</div></div>
Just how are you suppose to do that if you don’t know what a sniper is capable of?
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I'm not all wet- you're mis-reading what I'm saying. First and foremost, the SEO is not an instructor as you mention for airborne school- instructing is not his job. His job is to understand the proper utilization; that does not require knowing the intricacies of a sniper's job. Only requires how to best apply them as a force multiplier.
I don't really even understand how an OIC of Airborne school or an EOD OIC relates to an SEO. An SEO is NOT supposed to be a sniper section OIC. He does not run the sniper section as a PL runs his platoon- he does not drive the training. He is nothing more than an officer trained in correct employment of snipers. If he makes it his business to be a sort of SS OIC, chances are all he'll do is fuck shit up since that is not his primary duty and cannot devote the required time.
The problem with the way you are reading my reply is you are seeing it in terms of me saying he should not be allowed to go to sniper school. I'm not making that argument... that is irrelevant since the fact is that as an officer, in today's schools, he isn't allowed to attend. My argument is, if he decides he needs to be involved in the training to the same levels as the snipers themselves- at the unit... he is taking assets, materials and time away from the men who will actually be doing the job for the sole purpose of filling personal desires.
Now, moving along from that- does one need to be a trained sniper to understand what a sniper is capable of? No, they do not. They can get this understanding by simply observing training and asking questions. That would be like saying an Air Ops NCO must also be a pilot to understand how to correctly make use of air assets. Or that an infantryman or FO must be a trained artilleryman to be able to make proper use of artillery.
The SEO does not need to know how to properly employ a ghillie and stalk, call wind, call corrections, make dope charts. All they need to know is how to employ snipers, not how to be a sniper. Now if they have that experience, good for them- it certainly won't hurt. But it is not necessary, certainly not at the cost of training for the men who will actually be conducting the missions.
Again, let me make this totally clear- No where did I say officers should not be permitted to attend sniper school itself. Only that sucking up assets that should be utilized by the snipers themselves during unit training is self-serving and irresponsible. Their knowledge requirement can be fulfilled by observing and asking questions.
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Well put. I agree, an SEO in my experience does not NEED to be a Sniper to understand how to properly employ them. I have known a few officers that have attended and passed scout sniper school. In my experience it has a way of validating there participation in the training of his or the Snipers in his section, which, is definately not his job or purpose. It is great if said officer attends the sniper training and can still hold true to was his purpose is as an SEO, and not get his paws into the middle of his guys training.
In my mind, sending an officer to scout sniper school is taking away a quota from a student who will actually use those skills learned for real and as a primary mission skull set. Not for bragging rights and a feather in his cap. In all honesty, an SEO is required (in the Marine Corps) to be an Intelligence Officer, and attend the SEO course in Quantico, from there he may only actually be an SEO in a platoon for 1.5 years tops, and that's along time. I would much rather see a qualified Marine attend this course than an officer who's looking go to a course in which he will never use 98% of the skills learned. Send him to the 2 week SEO course and if he wants to learn the individual skill set, he can ask the Marine that just graduated the Sniper School thanks to the officer not snagging his quota.
JMTC
Funny thing is, I've seen quite a few Scout Sniper Platoon Sgt's that were not Snipers themselves. How do you justify having an officer that is a qualified sniper and a Ply. Sgt. That is not? After graduating that officer will NEVER;
Wear a ghillie
Wear cammi paint
Land Nav
Shoot an M40
Adjust his scope
Shoot UKD or KD with an M40
Mil a target
Call for Fire
Mantrack
Etc, etc.
Lot of skills learned that will NEVER be used. Seems like a waste to me. Especially when its at the cost of someone attending that will use those skills as a primary job. The majority of what that SEO will be required to knoe will be located in the Scout Sniper Employment chapter of the HOG Book. </div></div>
The army doesn't allow anyone over E-7 to attend their schools these days, which is why I wasn't really arguing the point of attending the school. But you bring up a very good point with limited slots in these schools- specialized schools of training are usually fairly short on available slots. If an officer who cannot fill the billet of a sniper attends and that prevents a soldier/marine from attending who is filling the billet and waiting on a class date, you've just done the entire section a disservice. Sure you can train him at the unit, but that training will almost never be as intensive and focused as he would receive at the course- the time and funding just isn't available to replicate the training at the unit level.