Duckk wrote:Err, really? Some quick Googling shows this to be the opposite, plus I know .50 cal sniper rifles were used in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Armed Neo-Bob wrote:Just so you all know--shooting an infantryman with a .50 cal is a violation of the laws of war. It is supposed to be used only on non-living things like vehicles. Not that it doesn't happen anyway, but the Good Guys are supposed to avoid it.
At least, that was what they told us on the firing ranges at Ft Benning when I did the 11C MOS.
Rob
As I said, that was what they told us at the time.
I went to Ft Benning in 1977 as a National Guardsman; the only .50 cals we trained on were the M2 heavy machine guns. We were told it violated the 1949 geneva convention to use them on people, you were supposed to shoot the vehicle they were riding in. Like that is different, somehow.
The .50 Cal sniper rifle was developed either during or immediately after the Vietnam War; but that weapon is not fully automatic. The previous sniper gun was a WWII M1, I think.
The drill instructors I had said not to use the M-2HB against people, its role is to lay down suppressive fire, and it is far more effective against vehicles than the M14 or M16.
They told us a lot of stuff, some of which was even true.
But I just looked it up, and it is legal. It may be that they told us that at the time because my training platoon was all from the National Guard (it wasn't that long after Kent State). And we wasted an awful lot of training time learning crowd control techniques using batons when the Pope flew into Boston.
When I went active in 1980, I changed MOS to EW/Sigint (98G), so I never deployed with active duty infantry. The only weapon I ended up cleaning in my first deployment was my re-machined XM-16.
Rob