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Ukrainian sniper who claims new world record. He’s 58 years old. (WSJ article)

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Not a vintage sniper rifle topic, but an interesting article on the 58-year old Ukrainian sniper who likely set a new wartime record. Domestic Ukrainian rifle with a US Bartlein barrel and a Japanese March-FX scope, looks like a 4-40x52 Genesis version. Ammunition was custom made in Ukraine. Article outlines use of ballistic software, incredible skill and clearly some incredible luck.

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The Wall Street Journal, December 4, 2023

KYIV—The Ukrainian sniper had lain still for hours in near freezing temperatures when the command came to take the shot at a Russian soldier almost 2½ miles away. “You can,” his spotter said, and Vyacheslav Kovalskiy pulled his trigger.

The bullet took around nine seconds to reach its target, who doubled up and fell, according to a video of the shot reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. Kovalskiy and Ukraine say the shot set a new sniping distance record, breaking the previously acknowledged mark by more than 850 feet.

While combat hits such as this aren’t verified by a third-party adjudicator, the shot has offered Ukraine a morale boost when the country’s forces are struggling to make headway at the front line. A Ukrainian sniper, using a Ukrainian-made weapon and bullet, had broken the record. Sniping has played a prominent role in the war with Russia, where static front lines in a flat landscape suit the discipline, even as drones and mines change the way the marksmen operate.

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Custom-made rounds used by Ukrainian snipers.

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For conventional sniping, there are a lot of variables that are hard to quantify.

The macabre record was also a shot heard around the world of snipers, a group of highly skilled shooters who have long pushed the boundaries of just how far a bullet can travel with accuracy. Some are skeptical that Kovalskiy’s shot was a record.

To hit targets at ever-longer distances, snipers lean heavily on math, calculating a host of technical factors, from the air’s humidity to wind speed, temperature and the curvature of the earth. They also need a good rifle and a lot of luck.

On Nov. 18, Kovalskiy was already packing his rifle by the time the bullet reached its destination and a member of his team shouted that it was a hit. The shot was filmed and on reviewing the footage later, Kovalskiy and other snipers concluded it had been deadly.

“I was thinking that Russians would now know that is what Ukrainians are capable of,” Kovalskiy said, who hasn’t previously been named or spoken to the media.

“Let them sit at home and be afraid,” he added.

Several snipers and ballistics experts contacted by the Journal said that while the shot is possible with the equipment described, it would be hard to execute given the uncontrollable variables, not least the weather, that would have to be taken into account at such distances.

“For conventional sniping, there are so many variables that are hard to quantify, so the reality is anything over about 1,300 meters (about 4,265 feet) can be more luck than skill,” said Steve Walsh, a former U.S. Marines sniper instructor.

Kovalskiy’s shot hit around 12,470 feet, around a third longer than the Golden Gate Bridge. That distance would break a record of 11,600 feet set in 2017 by a member of the Canadian Special Forces in Iraq.

The 58-year-old former businessman’s journey to martial mythology started just before day break on Nov. 18, when he and his spotter, a partner who calculates distance, wind speed and other variables, set up positions across the river from a Russian military base in the Kherson region of east Ukraine.

The two men, who are part of a military counterintelligence division of the Security Service of Ukraine, or SBU, observed groups of Russian soldiers cutting wood. They considered these men’s ranks too low to shoot. At around noon, a group of five soldiers appeared and Kovalskiy noticed one instructing. He had his officer.

The spotter set to work. He used a laser to measure the distance to the soldiers. Using specialist software and meteorological data he concluded that there was a strong wind that would move the bullet around 200 feet from its trajectory. He calculated humidity and temperature, which affects how fast the bullet travels.

Even the spin and curvature of the earth has to be factored in for long-distance shots. By the time the bullet gets to its set distance, the target has already shifted with the earth’s rotation.


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Ukrainian sniper Vyacheslav Kovalskiy packs up a custom made sniper rifle.

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The scope on a Ukrainian sniper’s custom-made rifle.

Using all these variables, Kovalskiy tested a shot around 1,000 feet to the side of the target. It was a miss, the spotter told him.

They had got the wind speed wrong.
He quickly reset, reloaded and aimed.

“You have to (shoot) immediately because the wind changes constantly,” Kovalskiy said.


In video of the shot, the Russian officer can be seen gesticulating to men who had gathered around him. The spotter gave his usual command that he should fire.

“You can,” he said.

Kovalskiy pulled his trigger. The video shows a gap from shot to impact of around nine seconds, a period long enough that a target can have moved. U.S. ballistics expert Brad Millard timed the shot in footage and said that it was the correct time that this sort of bullet would take to hit 12,470 feet.

A sniper will aim their barrel above a target because gravity forces the bullet down. Kovalskiy’s shot was like a mini artillery shell, traveling over 330 feet above the level of the target before descending toward the unaware officer.

In the footage, the officer doubles up and falls and his men flee. The video ends.


The shot has been widely covered by Ukrainian news websites. It was also noted with pride by Ukrainian soldiers on the front line. In the Kreminna Forest in east Ukraine, a former sniper turned artilleryman said hearing the news was a “punch the air” moment.

“Everyone was talking about it,” he said.

im-895228


Vyacheslav Kovalskiy holds a typical sniper round and a larger handmade custom round that he and his spotter used to shoot at a Russian soldier.

Ukraine needs a boost. A much-heralded counteroffensive has been stymied by stubborn Russian defense. The country has lost tens of thousands of soldiers and Russia continues to bomb civilian sites.
Countries in war often turn to combat legends to build morale, and countries in the former Soviet Union have a history of elevating the sniper to hero status. At the start of this war, Ukrainians traded stories of the “Ghost of Kyiv,” a Ukrainian jet-fighter pilot credited with shooting down several Russian planes. The Ukrainian military later said that rather than an individual pilot, the “Ghost of Kyiv” was meant as a composite symbolizing the combined heroism of its pilots.

Millard, the U.S. expert who designs software to test gun ballistics, says he doubts how the Ukrainian sniper team knows for sure that the officer was killed.

The shot hit its target in the chest or stomach area, Kovalskiy said. Having seen footage many times, he is certain that the soldier died because of the way he doubled up and dropped immediately. The bullet they used was also so large, and would have traveled at such a speed, that it would be impossible to survive such a hit, he said.

“There is no chance he survived,” Kovalskiy said.

The lack of confirmation that the shot was fatal is likely to lead to continued skepticism. When British sniper Craig Harrison broke the then-record in Afghanistan in 2009, killing two, the British military confirmed sightings of the corpses.
Kovalskiy says that online critics are incorrectly basing many of their calculations on the type of bullet used by the record-setting Canadian sniper.

A round is made of the actual projectile that hits a target and the casing that contains the explosive material that takes it there. Kovalskiy’s round was custom-made by a local gunsmith. It has a similar projectile to the Canadian round but a larger case that could pack more propellant, making it faster.

At a location in Kyiv, Kovalskiy and his spotter laid out their gun and bullets for inspection.

The long, thin gun is a specialist sniper rifle called the Lord of the Horizon, of which Kovalskiy’s is one of around 10. The rounds are 16 cm long.

The barrel was made by the U.S. company Bartlein Barrels and the scope comes from Japan. But the rest is Ukrainian, adding to local pride.

Kovalskiy and his spotter wonder why there is so much skepticism about a shot of this distance when targets, albeit stationary, have been achieved at these lengths several times in competitions such as the King of Two Miles in the U.S.

The two men are no ordinary snipers. Kovalskiy has been winning long-distance shooting competitions in Europe and North America for decades and first met his spotter at such competitions in Ukraine.

But this time, Kovalskiy hit a man, not an inanimate target. Unlike most soldiers, who may never see an enemy’s face let alone know if they have killed them, snipers head out seeking to kill people whom they can clearly see and generally have little doubt if they have taken a life.

Harrison, the former British sniper, said that the record is a heavy crown to wear.

Though he has since written a book about his experiences, the sniper says the actual record brought him misery for years. He was named by the British military without his permission, which led to threats against his life and that of his family, he said.

Harrison said sniping contributed to severe post-traumatic stress disorder that he has suffered after fighting in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan.

“I will carry that last instant of their life in my mind forever. I know it will never leave me,” he wrote in his book.

Kovalskiy and his spotter say they have no regrets about killing Russians. Despite his age, the Ukrainian signed up as a sniper on the first day of Russia’s full-scale invasion.

“It doesn’t worry me a gram,” Kovalskiy said.

Ievgeniia Sivorka contributed to this article.
 
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The Russians definitely aren’t going to validate whatever happened that day. Regardless, I’ve made a mental note to never invade Ukraine, as even the old guys will volunteer to become snipers…
 
OK...

Why the fuck are you(not you OP) putting your "top" sniper in the press when the war is still going? I get propaganda during wartime.

But with tech now adays. If he has family they are already identified and located.

Let's not forget that's like a 44 lb weapon if not more. That old fat fuck isn't packing that up and moving with it.

This is all propaganda.

The fucking wall street journal? I don't believe a fucking thing from them.

Put this in the bear pit. It's not vintage.
 
Is this account true? I don't know. Billy Dixon made a 1538 yard shot with an iron sight black powder rifle in 1874. Calculated time of flight for the projectile was reported as being 4.1 seconds.

With today's technology anything is possible. It certainly makes for an interesting story.
 
This is all propaganda

Well, I’ll let Frank of Bartlein barrels chime-in, but the Ukrainians did contact him and ordered a “large quantity” of those barrels before the story broke…so the fact patten is there. Frank does sometimes post here on the vintage rifle section, hence my post here. Over in the m14 forum he noted the following:

“Yes the emails I got from HL it appears it is our stick. We made them a small batch of barrels earlier this year. Think by the time paperwork all cleared for shipping we shipped them back in Jan or Feb. 2023.

They told me prior to this article and some others posting about the record shot that they did test other brands of barrels as well. Some did shoot accuracy as good as ours but didn’t have the consistency.

The 50cal barrels we made them are 1-15 twist. The blank length was 46”. From what I understand they finished them at 42”.

….When this news first broke I know people are skeptical. Heck I would be too but right before this all broke they did contact me about buying a large qty of barrels. So I know something happened right then and there. Believe it or not.

I will say making a shot like that will be very hard to duplicate… it’s been tried before by guys who have made a shot like that at such a great distance and couldn’t replicate it. Luck plays a huge part into the equation but no matter what you need good equipment in order to even attempt something like this.

They did by email give me some more detail into the shot. They gave me pictures of the shooter and did tell me I could post it by social media as well.

****

…..I think he is right. It likely happened as reported, it involved good equipment and a lot of luck, and that shot can not likely never be duplicated again. Frank/Bartlein also makes excellent barrels. My 2cts.

Btw, Here’s his unnamed spotter on the left (clearly seeking to remain incognito). He looks much younger, so maybe he helps with the heavy load?
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I wonder if he’s a cross dressing homosexual like Zelensky ? Most likely this story is 100% bullshit. Remember the “ghost of Kiev” story. Yeah just more bullshit aka propoganda.
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So let me understand, as a shooter and spotter I make myself known all over the world……!? to look for the rest of my life over my shoulder? Seems not to be a smart move.
 
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Audie Murphy, hathcock, Chris Kyle, and on and on..

When the population tires of war, you give them the hero they want. It's usually a sniper (or a marksman), allows them to award individual glory since the public has no idea how any of this works..

Someone who looks good in uniform with a shy smile. The aw shucks boy next door. It's all bullshit.
 
I recall from the Hollywood movie ‘Enemy at the Gates’ that during the Battle of Stalingrad circa 1942, Russia famously using Vasily Zaitsev for propaganda purposes in those dark early days of the war. Unlike some other details of that movie, I think that aspect was historically accurate.

All nations seek military hero’s during wartime. Ukraine is no different, aside from admitting the advanced age of that soilder. Anyhow, as the Ukrainian people tragically know at a personal level, their freedom is not free…so they fight on.
 
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The reality is WE will neber know if its true but I am certain he is quite a celebrity in Ukraine. Of course I am sure Russia is looking to martyr him
 
For those who doubt it, there is a legit video taken at the time. That is how the 9 second bullet flight time has been validated. What has been reported has not been contradicted via any contrary facts. The Russian on the far right is the one who immediately doubled over. The other two on the left dropped immediately to the ground and crawled over. Of course no one knows if that Russian solider died or survived, but the video is compelling evidence.




Clearly a lot of luck was involved, and as Frank said, it was a shot that can likely never be duplicated. War is a brutal thing, as reflected here.

Kovalskiy and his spotter say they have no regrets about killing Russians. Despite his age, the Ukrainian signed up as a sniper on the first day of Russia’s full-scale invasion.
 
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Anyone else remember the rock chuck hunting videos being passed off as sniper kills in the early days of GWOT? Grainy footage that let the imagination run wild.
 
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how do you know that video is legit?...

...How do you know it's not just a hand full of Ukrainian actors?...

...How do you know it's actually 3800m and not 1000m?...
Frank, the owner of Bartlein Barrels, was contacted by the Ukrainians after the event and before it was publicly reported. They privately shared details with him of that shot, and sent him pics. Here's what Frank shared on the m14 forum. I suspect this is legit, the only unknown thing is whether the Russian solider/officer was killed or injured. Moreover, I don't believe in conspiracies, especially given all the observable facts that support what happened.

I presume this was the ballistic watch of the spotter (or maybe the shooter). I guess they took pics at the time or saved this computation, given they realized the uniqueness of that event. Again, the Ukrainians sent these pics to Frank, and ordered many of his barrels for that rifle, so those are facts.

HL watch picture.jpg



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Here's a picture of the middle-aged ELR rifle competitor in happier times, presumably this pic was taken before the Russian invasion of Feb 2022.
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My opinion? I think this is a very tough old bird...and I do hope he survives the war.
 
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Kovalskiy’s shot hit around 12,470 feet, around a third longer than the Golden Gate Bridge. That distance would break a record of 11,600 feet set in 2017 by a member of the Canadian Special Forces in Iraq.
Unless one thinks the 2017 record by a Canadian sniper was also “straight up propaganda,” it would seem the Ukrainian’s exceeded the old record by ~870 feet. Given the experience, equipment used, and supporting video evidence, it seems plausible to have beaten the previous record. Luck was still involved in both records, no doubt about it.
 
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I can’t just believe a random guy in the internet.
Although, I did see a deers eyes pop out of its head in a similarly grainy video involving a 50 cal and magic.
 
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My god, with all these supermen in Ukraine, how did they not defeat they Russian on day 1?
Our own top military leadership briefed Congress behind closed doors in early Feb 2022, just before the invasion, and predicted that Ukraine's military would only be able to hold out for 72 hours at most against a full-scale Russian invasion. Gen. Milley gave them 3-days before the country would fall.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/gen-mill...s-if-russia-decides-to-invade-ukraine-sources

So yes, it's a miracle that Ukraine is still fighting for their freedom. War is an ugly thing, but I think we should accept that even a 58 year-old Ukrainian man wants his freedom and is willing to pick up arms to fight and die for democracy. As for lying and propaganda, Vladimir Putin is the man most guilty of lying...for two decades now, about Chechnya, Georgia, Syria and now Ukraine. War is his legacy. He lied right up to the moment he invaded, telling the West he wasn't going to invade Ukraine. In his defense, KGB officers were trained to be professional liars, and in that regard he still excels.

PS: The Ghost of Kyiv myth was apparently the idea of Andrii “Juice” Pilshchykov, a somewhat well-known Ukrainian pilot who died in a training accident back in August 2023. He wanted to counter the Russian propaganda on the first day of the war about the supposed destruction of the entire Ukrainian Air Force. Here's the background info if curious:
“Stalker” said that the “Ghosts of Kyiv” was Andrii’s idea.

The commanders approved this idea as trolling the Russians, who said they had destroyed all the aviation on the first day of the war. And Andrii, who had such a caustic trolling style, said: “And here we are on the very planes that they destroyed, which are not there – we are fighting them so much. And who are we? Ghosts!” says “Stalker”.

— Volodymyr B., Born for the sky: Andrii “Juice” Pilshchykov obituary, Full scale war

Patrick Henry at the time of our American Revolution supposedly said "Give me liberty or give me death!"
I think the Ukrainian people have adopted that sentiment, much to the surprise of the West, and especially to Vladimir Putin...
 
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He vouches for the Ukrainian’s shooting ability and honesty. He is a friend and he vouches on Facebook

Apparently the Ukrainian is world class ELR shooter

I have no dog in this fight but hope it’s true
 
How can I get a job as a Ukrainian military propagandist? All I have to do is go from forum to forum and spout bullshit, then collect all those free Americansky tax dollars which are funding Ukraine's entire existence, in exchange for the bullshit I type out.
“Rock Chucking” videos on vhs are sufficiently grainy that those little buggers can appear to be hajis scurrying around the mountains. I would start there…
 
This forum is not appropriate for a discussion re complex geopolitics. I do have opinions based on historical knowledge and family ties in central Europe, but I’ll just leave it at this post:
He vouches for the Ukrainian’s shooting ability and honesty. He is a friend and he vouches on Facebook

Apparently the Ukrainian is world class ELR shooter

I have no dog in this fight but hope it’s true
I’m good with that...others not so much. Moving on…
 
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Fwiw, pretty sure Ukriane is loading this aluminum tipped Hornady bullet with their long range sniper rifle. The listed G1 BC value kind of blows my mind…

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Fwiw, this appears to the super high-end Japanese Marxh scope that was used:

It’s pretty exotic - it inclines/cants in the mount:

Camera lens Digital camera Camera accessory Reflex camera Cameras & optics



D40V52GFIML10 (MIL, Tactical, Illumi, 0.1MIL adj) | MARCH Scopes | DEON Optical Design CorporationMARCH Scopes | DEON Optical Design Corporation

MARCH Scopes Official website info:

D40V52GFIML10 (MIL, Tactical, Illumi, 0.1MIL adj)
Tactical Model (Illuminated)

March "GENESIS" 4x-40x52mm with 86 Mil of total elevation travel.
GENESIS scope will extend the accuracy capability of modern rifles without the need for modifications including inclined rails, adjustable mounts, or prism systems. It took us many years to develop this Genesis scope which is globally unique and the first in the history. 4-40x52 Genesis scope is capable of engaging targets from 20 meters up to 3 miles (4827m) subject to rifle system, ammunition, and environmental conditions without compromising image quality and without utilizing any external accessories. There is no requirement for additional, bulky and expensive additions. The unique design of Genesis scopes (the scope itself inclines) allow the shooter to always see through the central part of the lens producing clarity, definition, and minimal chromatic aberration even when at extreme elevation. You can achieve a perfect IQ throughout all the magnification range and elevation travel.

・10X Zoom in FFP, MIL
・52mm objective lens
・Wide Angle eyepiece : 24 degrees
・Temperature Anti-Drift Lens System
・High Master lens system (Super ED lenses)
・Side focus 20m - infinity
・Scope body fully machined from aluminum ingot
・All Japanese metal parts with no plastic part except for minimum essentials such as an insulator
・Argon gas filled for internal stability
・Fast focus eyepiece
・6 level illumination module
・Top quality multi lens coating where the transmittance is very near 100%
・Water repellent lens coating
***
 
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There's just been way too much propaganda around this conflict to believe anything coming out of Ukraine.

I don't think we've ever been exposed to such levels of propaganda before, it's stunning.

Anything coming out of this conflict, no matter whom the source, is at a minimum a half-lie, if not full on bullshit.

That's why I don't trust anything around this. There's been way too much propaganda already, and this reeks of it.
 
I do not doubt this shot.
In Sweden, some 30 years ago, a man was killed while driving his car at app 45mph with an open side window. He was hit in the head. The 7.62NATO bullet was fired 4000m away from a M240 MG on a military range.
My best shot was taken about 50 years ago. I shot a swallow in the air at app 30m, from the hip, with a Slavia 624 airrifle.
In the Imperial War Museum in London they have a .303 Lee Enfield rifle with a blown up barrel. When the soldier fired the rifle in a ww1 trench a 8mm bullet entered the muzzle and met the 303-bullet in the middle of the barrel. The soldier survived.
When there are enough lead flying, miracles do happen. One just have to try.
 
WSJ article?
Well that says it all..everything they print is propaganda, and lies... so start there.
He's old cause all the young guys are mostly dead.
Ukraine has already lost the war, so, it doesn't matter, anyway.
 
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I do not doubt this shot.
In Sweden, some 30 years ago, a man was killed while driving his car at app 45mph with an open side window. He was hit in the head. The 7.62NATO bullet was fired 4000m away from a M240 MG on a military range.
My best shot was taken about 50 years ago. I shot a swallow in the air at app 30m, from the hip, with a Slavia 624 airrifle.
In the Imperial War Museum in London they have a .303 Lee Enfield rifle with a blown up barrel. When the soldier fired the rifle in a ww1 trench a 8mm bullet entered the muzzle and met the 303-bullet in the middle of the barrel. The soldier survived.
When there are enough lead flying, miracles do happen. One just have to try.
In none of your examples was the shot touted as a world record, or the shooter as an amazing marksman. Amazing accidents can happen. This is not what is being discussed.
 
In none of your examples was the shot touted as a world record, or the shooter as an amazing marksman. Amazing accidents can happen. This is not what is being discussed.

Exactly.

I think everyone is aware that projectiles can travel a large distance and inadvertently cause damage.

Deliberate placement of that projectile in a precise manner on a target far away is something else entirely.
 
Take the article with a grain of salt but there is some truth to it.

Yes no matter what there is good and bad propaganda... war or no war we see it everyday in our lives.

All I know is... we did make them barrels and the round/caliber is legit. They ordered the barrels for testing and for the preproduction guns prior to the war in Ukraine getting started.

They want more barrels as well. So something happened to make them a believer in the system. Yes at that distance it was probably 80% luck that the round connected.

The shooter that did it also has won the European F class champs. Shoots our barrels on his personal guns as well.
 
Is this account true? I don't know. Billy Dixon made a 1538 yard shot with an iron sight black powder rifle in 1874. Calculated time of flight for the projectile was reported as being 4.1 seconds.

With today's technology anything is possible. It certainly makes for an interesting story.
Wado, which is thank you in Cherokee, for bringing up Billy Dixon in this thread.

The legendary Bat Masterson was there with Billy Dixon when the shot was made against the Comanche, and Quanah Parker was on the other side.

3 Wild West legends at the same battle puts it in the record books, in my opinion.

Well done, Sir!
 
All seems very possible..... People that are convinced it is complete bullshit, well the bullet has to end up somewhere doesn't it?
Getting it close takes enormous skill, getting a hit takes enormous luck!
 
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All seems very possible..... People that are convinced it is complete bullshit, well the bullet has to end up somewhere doesn't it?
Getting it close takes enormous skill, getting a hit takes enormous luck!
It’s not being called bullshit because it’s impossible. It’s being called bull shot due to the metric butt-ton of propaganda coming out of this conflict.
 
It’s not being called bullshit because it’s impossible. It’s being called bull shot due to the metric butt-ton of propaganda coming out of this conflict.
HLEE~
Yep, there's a ton of propaganda coming from this war, it's a pretty cool story, "If it's true", if it's so much bullshit then I expect we'll hear about that too.
Either way, I've got no skin on the game aside from hating Putin. And, I mean that I hate everything associated with that prick. If I were even 15 years younger and not suffering from TBI from my combat days, I'd love to put his arse in my reticle, even if only for enough time for one more shot as the sniper I was trained to be from the time I was only 8 years old. Just one shot, dammit!
But, that's just me.
I'm just an old N8V combat sniper with a long hate for tyrants and a kind heart for the underdogs.
Know what I mean?
Wado, which is our Cherokee word for thanks.