you missed my entire post. I believe the competitions you are referring to are biased. simple as that. As I said, the international sniper competition put on at Benning for the last what....2-3 years. out of the 20 or so teams there, 14 of them will be Army teams. The remaining few will be devided by USMC, USNAV, Law Enforcement, and foreign countries. They don't let the most of the top tier teams shoot. Navy SEAL snipers do not work in teams, they work solo and they use that as an excuse to not let them shoot.
Actually there have been 12 or 13 competitions, depending on whether you want to count 2013 or not (Sequester - did not have a full turnout / competition).
The rundown on the 2012 Competition was:
SERVICE CLASS
1 TEAM 8 469 D CO 2/1 SWTG (A)
2 TEAM-12 424 2-19TH IN
3 TEAM 3 419 USMC SCOUT SNIPER SCHOOL (WEST)
4 TEAM 2 419 GSB, SSD 10TH SFG (A)
5 TEAM 4 380 1-89 10TH MTN
6 TEAM 9 375 1-8 4TH ID
7 TEAM 7 372 SOI-W SCOUT SNIPER SCHOOL
8 TEAM 6 372 SOI-E SCOUT SNIPER SCHOOL
9 TEAM-16 360 HHC 1-16TH IN 1ST ID
10 TEAM-13 352 75TH RANGER RGT.
11 TEAM 5 343 WTBN-Q SCOUT SNIPER SCHOOL
12 TEAM-15 323 HHC (2) 2-69 AR 3RD ID
13 TEAM 1 323 HHC 2-14 10TH MTN
14 TEAM-17 286 HHC 1-158TH IN
15 TEAM-20 284 1-506 IN 101ST
16 TEAM-14 264 HHC (1) 2-69 AR 3RD ID
17 TEAM-10 241 2ND BCT 101ST
18 TEAM-11 227 HHC 1-72 AR 2ID
19 TEAM-18 198 HHC 2-121 IN
20 TEAM-19 156 3-71 CAV 10TH MTN
OPEN CLASS
1 TEAM-21 691 USAMU
2 TEAM-29 552 IRELAND
3 TEAM-26 537 USASOC
4 TEAM-32 451 B/2/3
5 TEAM-28 435 DENMARK
6 TEAM-24 393 USCG
7 TEAM-30 390 SWEDEN
8 TEAM-36 329 GERMANY
9 TEAM-25 326 IRRF
10 TEAM-33 293 4/3 IN
11 TEAM-31 291 620TH GCTS
12 TEAM-27 278 UAE
13 TEAM-34 267 FT. LAUDERDALE SWAT
14 TEAM-35 259 LAS VEGAS SWAT
15 TEAM-23 213 NLD
16 TEAM-22 169 CHICAGO SWAT
Can you really take anything away from that competition in terms of who is best, probably depends on how you want to look at it?
My general takeaway from that year, and many of the previous years:
- Most winners shoot for a living, their primary assignment in their military unit is shooting. Time Shooting makes a difference.
- Recently, winning teams were receiving training from outside of the normal military training channels. Certain parts of the Military have figured out that there is more out there, and they are taking advantage it. Training makes a difference.
- Also recently, some winning teams were utilizing equipment outside of normal military inventory. Some have considered this as "cheating", and as such some restrictions have been implemented on & off again. Equipment makes a difference.
- Shooting Skill Set is part of it, but not all of it. The Int Sniper Comp places an emphasis on being "operationally capable", so things like physical fitness and field skills come into play. Well-rounded Complete Skill Set makes a difference.
- The sample size for teams outside of the US Military, and to a certain extent outside of the Army, are not large enough or consistent enough to prove anything.
Key thing to remember about the Int Sniper Comp, it was intended to be more of a training / networking / see what works best event, versus being just a straight up competition. The ultimate goal was to bring the "best snipers" together from all over the world so they could learn from one another.
I am not aware of any "Sniper Competition" that exists which would come even close to identifying which Country or Military has the best Snipers.
Of course many would argue, the title "Best Snipers" is not something that can be determined simply through competition.