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Sniper
(redirected from One shot, one kill)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Acronyms, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Sniper 

a rifleman who is skilled in marksmanship, camouflage, and observation; the term “sniper” first appeared in the British Army during World War I. In the Soviet Armed Forces, sniper training was greatly expanded during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-45. Snipers had the task of eliminating enemy snipers, officers, observers, couriers, artillery and machine-gun crews, low-flying aircraft, and other targets. They were armed with rifles equipped with telescopic sights, which increased aiming accuracy and made it possible to fire effectively at distances up to 800 m. Snipers usually worked in pairs: one man fired, and the other acted as an observer. Since the war, sniper training has been conducted in the armed forces of many countries. The term “sniper” is sometimes applied to marksmen in other types of units, such as artillery, armored, or aviation units.



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Sasser is a former Green Beret and author of One Shot, One Kill and other military nonfiction titles.
During his military service Muhammad was stationed at Fort Lewis, Washington state, home to 21,000 troops including the sniper-trained 1st Special Forces Group whose motto is One Shot, One Kill.
In an appendix entitled "Defining Sniper Rifles," One Shot, One Kill indicts not only weapons termed "sniper rifles" by the firearms industry itself, but also weapons "call[ed] by a euphemism such as 'tactical rifle,' but [having] essentially the same design features and accessories as, or [are] simply a production derivative of, a recognized sniper rifle.
 
 
 
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