Royal Marine Reacts To How Military Snipers Evolved

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  • Опубліковано 9 чер 2024
  • Original Video (How Military Snipers Evolved)
    • How Military Snipers E...
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  • Ігри

КОМЕНТАРІ • 110

  • @argantyr5154
    @argantyr5154 Місяць тому +35

    The Legendary Finnish Sniper was, Simo Häyhä also known as "White Death".

  • @williamstewart9104
    @williamstewart9104 Місяць тому +19

    White Feather the Carlos Hathcock book...
    A TRUE Account of his life career.

    • @swig1969
      @swig1969 Місяць тому +1

      It's a great book

  • @pacmon5285
    @pacmon5285 Місяць тому +9

    Etymology: The name sniper comes from the verb to snipe, which originated in the 1770s among soldiers in British India in reference to shooting snipes, a wader that was considered an extremely challenging game bird for hunters due to its alertness, camouflaging color and erratic flight behavior.

  • @turnerdan53
    @turnerdan53 Місяць тому +3

    He did skip the American Civil War where they put scopes on rifles for sharpshooter's as they were going from muskets to rifles.

  • @datboi9648
    @datboi9648 Місяць тому +3

    There’s a lot of jobs overlooked. Forward Observer or Fire Support Specialist get overlook A LOT but are a big role in force multiplication.

  • @AsianTrix
    @AsianTrix Місяць тому +9

    20:12 This has changed with Ukraine. It is farther now. Soldiers are converting ANTI-TANK rifles into sniper rifles. I guess we are just shooting people with calibers designed for armored vehicles. 🤷‍♀️

    • @toddnesbitt3113
      @toddnesbitt3113 Місяць тому +2

      Literally nothing is overkill given the importance of the target, hellfire missiles with freaking blades is hilarious

    • @m2hmghb
      @m2hmghb Місяць тому

      That was done a LONG time ago. WW1, WW2, Korea. The boys anti tank rifle was used - sometimes rebuilt in 50 bmg. The soviets used ptrs or ptrd rifles for long range shooting as well. The task hasn't changed - the ability of the arms has gotten better.

  • @GrifonJ
    @GrifonJ Місяць тому

    The Legendary shot through the scope has been DEBUNKED years ago, by many professionals

  • @ActuallyJamie
    @ActuallyJamie Місяць тому

    The term Sniper came from a long time ago (don't remember exact timeline) but when people would go snipe hunting (yes a real bird) they were so small you had to be super skilled to track them and hunt them let alone kill one. It's a neat story behind the original origins of the word sniper. You should check it out.

  • @sparkythewolfgaming
    @sparkythewolfgaming Місяць тому +1

    In the 100 Years War, it's more likely that the crossbowman would have been referred to as a "Sharpshooter", not a "Sniper".
    The term "Sharpshooter" meaning a shooter with sharp aim/eyes. After all, when using a bow or crossbow, it is referred to as "shooting a bow" or "shooting a crossbow" even in the Medieval periods.
    However, depending on the language of origins, "Sharpshooter" and "Sniper" may come from the same origin word and could be used interchangeably or have one mistaken from the other when translating from older versions of a language.

  • @datdudedatgetsit
    @datdudedatgetsit Місяць тому

    The Legendary Finish Shredder was Alexi Laiho and he had a split coil tap ❤

  • @Chief28-201
    @Chief28-201 Місяць тому

    Carlos Hathcock also mounted his sniper scope on a 50 caliber machine gun and made a 2-mile Kill

  • @justgreg8270
    @justgreg8270 Місяць тому +1

    The Reaper by Nicholas Irving is the book id recommend hes a spec ops guy with 33 confirmed kills, whos also on yt on the demolition ranch channel

  • @BryanW-bp3le
    @BryanW-bp3le Місяць тому

    I recommend doing a video on White feather Hitchcock! The man is a legend.

  • @marvincasteel4876
    @marvincasteel4876 Місяць тому

    yes, if your fancy expensive electronic equipment malfunctions, or goes down due to solar flare or EMP, you best know how to use the old analog or mechanical stuff!

  • @tjboylan20
    @tjboylan20 Місяць тому +2

    a great book that was released a few years ago about Nick Irving who was a ranger with 33 confirmed kills, he was nicknamed "The Reaper' in that book there is also I forgot hisd actual name but his youtube is LunkersTV. they were both Snipers and it is a great book.

    • @m2hmghb
      @m2hmghb Місяць тому

      Lunkers is NOT reaper. Two different people. Lunkers is Rob Terkla.

    • @tjboylan20
      @tjboylan20 Місяць тому

      @@m2hmghb I know that Lunkers and Nick are two different people, I forgot Rob’s name. I said “there is also…” meaning there’s a 2nd person

  • @pacmon5285
    @pacmon5285 Місяць тому +2

    It's unlikely it went straight through the scope. Mythbusters tested this and found that the bullet begins to deflect when it enters the scope. They tried a bunch and couldn't get it to go straight through. It was, however, still potentially lethal.

    • @scarecrow274
      @scarecrow274 Місяць тому

      Everything I’ve learned about Gunny Hathcock and the Cobra was they had stalked each other all day and were within 30 yards of each other and Hathcock even recognized that the only way he made that shot was cause Cobra had him in his sights too. Hathcock just happened to squeeze the trigger a fraction of a second earlier.

  • @vegashawkfan59
    @vegashawkfan59 26 днів тому

    Hathcock and his spotter took the Cobra's rifle for a trophy. They saw the path of the shot through the rifle scope.

  • @martindean612
    @martindean612 Місяць тому

    The camouflage ghillie suits were made scottish deer hunters named ghillies

  • @NottiOne
    @NottiOne Місяць тому

    2.2 miles is a long ways but he walked that bullet in with like 4 shots.

  • @sirfox950
    @sirfox950 Місяць тому +5

    British rifleman Plunket from the 95th Rifles, in Spain, 1809, shot a French general on his saddle at a range of probably 300 yards. Just to proof it wasn't a fluke, he shot the general's aide de camp, aswell

  • @ryanomalley3705
    @ryanomalley3705 Місяць тому

    If u want a sniper autobiography I recommend 'the longest kill' by Craig Harrison. He was a sniper in the blues and royals and holds the record for the longest kill in the .338 calibre. It can get dark at times.
    If u want fiction u might enjoy 'point of impact' by Stephen Hunter which was adapted into movie with Mark wahlburg and a TV show both called 'shooter'.

  • @pacmon5285
    @pacmon5285 Місяць тому +3

    He would be wrong to use Sniper back then. The British didn't land in India until 1608, so they wouldn't have been hunting the bird until after that.

  • @scottbmedic
    @scottbmedic Місяць тому

    My dad once told me that when he was in the Marines in 1950 he qualified as an expert marksman and he was told one more dead center bullseye he would qualify for sniper school and then he was told the life expectancy of a sniper in Korea was less than 5 minutes and my dad said he put the next round in the dirt 😊

  • @NottiOne
    @NottiOne Місяць тому

    You should read about Carlos Hathcock, Vietnam Era. Some amazing stories like snipers hunting snipers, confirmed.

  • @scyberian
    @scyberian Місяць тому +1

    My understanding is that they would have been called marksmen back in the time period of the Hundred Years War, if they had a specific term. "Sharpshooter"came about during the American Civil War, because of the Sharps rifle being used (Sharp's shooter). Sniper came from the ever-popular idea of the "Snipe hunter", with a Snipe being 1 of various breeds/types of birds distinguished by a small body; long, slender bill; and other defining characteristics; since they were so small, they were a difficult shot for hunters, thus a skilled snipe hunter could be called a "sniper" Also, a VERY good novel about a sniper is "Shooter", by Stephen Coonts (later turned in a mediocre movie starring Mark Wahlberg). As far as nonfiction/biography, my pick is "Lone Survivor", by Marcus Lutrell (also turned into a Mark Wahlberg movie, but a little better than "Shooter").

  • @ErraIsYourGirl
    @ErraIsYourGirl Місяць тому +3

    Who's that in the corner yapping over the video? Joking keep up the great work if I have to make 3,000 alternate accounts to get you there I will all of the mead must be drunk

  • @beesnestna9544
    @beesnestna9544 Місяць тому +1

    3:36 The etymology of the term "sniper" varies somewhat but most sources attribute it's first use in 1824 allegedly by British troops in India when referring to their ability to hunt "Snipe" (as you mentioned). Some sources place that date in the late 1700s. The older term sharpshooter comes from the calque of the German word Scharfschütze, in use by British newspapers as early as 1801. Was the book written around the time of the "100 Years War"? No? Problem solved.😉 If it's a modern "Fiction" book and not an actual "historical account" it make sense that the author of a modern book would simply use modern terms in writing it. Check the print edition (or reprint) year(s) on the copyright page.😉
    I love military books. I've read Helmet for My Pillow by Robert Leckie,◾With the Old Breed by Eugene Sledge, Islands of the Damned by R.V. Burgin,◾The Eagle and the Rising Sun: The Japanese-American War 1941-1943: Pearl Harbor through Guadalcanal by Alam Schom,◾The Tenth Fleet: The True Story of the U.S. Navy's "Phantom" Fleet Battling U-Boats During World War II by Ladislas Farago,◾Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway by Jonathan Parshall,◾Japanese Destroyer Captain: Pearl Harbor, Guadalcanal, Midway - The Great Naval Battles Seen Through Japanese Eyes by Captain Tameichi Hara◾Everything We Had by Al Santoli (1982?)◾and far too many others to name in the past 50 years. I'm strictly a "Non-fiction" reader. I like to know what really happened according to eye-witnesses or historians. I still have bought books I've yet to read.😉

  • @johngould2665
    @johngould2665 Місяць тому

    Sniper was first used in 1820s and an 18 oh one it was called sharpshooter

  • @videofiend452
    @videofiend452 Місяць тому

    Enemy at the Gates was a good sniper movie.

    • @DopeSauceBenevolence
      @DopeSauceBenevolence Місяць тому

      The book is much more focused on a wide-angle of the whole Siege, rather than just the two snipers in the movie.
      (As happens when nonfiction books are turned into fiction movies.)

  • @EgilWolf420
    @EgilWolf420 Місяць тому

    check out "the Reaper" written by a military sniper nicholas irving

  • @viteye9091
    @viteye9091 Місяць тому

    Carlos Hathcock came back with the rifle.

  • @johngould2665
    @johngould2665 Місяць тому

    I think he’s referring to being a sniper before the term was actually used by the methods the person used

  • @ryanperry1322
    @ryanperry1322 Місяць тому

    should check out the reaper series by nicholas irving a former spec ops sniper with 33 confirmed kills. even the taliban had a bounty on him during the war

  • @ActuallyJamie
    @ActuallyJamie Місяць тому

    Sandboxx News channel just uploaded a video about maybe a replacement for the new B21 Raider is already in development?

  • @RealAaron317
    @RealAaron317 Місяць тому

    The guy from Finland didn't use a scope for his kills

  • @NottiOne
    @NottiOne Місяць тому

    The story of that Finnish sniper is amazing, the one that hunted wolves before the Russians attacked them.

  • @swig1969
    @swig1969 Місяць тому

    Marine sniper by Charles Henderson is an awesome book about Carlos Hathcock

  • @chrisbeatty743
    @chrisbeatty743 Місяць тому +1

    I finally got the notification on time! I love your content Luke! Keep up the hard work

  • @mikkorenvall428
    @mikkorenvall428 Місяць тому

    The essence of a sniper has been there for centuries, begining from the William Tell stories for being the best and sharpest shoter. And even during the musketeers time the best guns and the first rifles were handed to the guyes known for being the best shot. So this story only covers the most modern times.

  • @Jeeperskip
    @Jeeperskip Місяць тому

    Some old guy who served in WWII once told me that colorblind guys could spot snipers in the trees because the colors of the leaves could not be reproduced accurately enough. They apparently stood out to those guys like a sore thumb. Could be true? Could be BS.

  • @psy101514
    @psy101514 Місяць тому

    Carlos Hathcock Whitefeather is the book you need to read.

  • @ScottyM1959
    @ScottyM1959 Місяць тому

    The sniper ghillie suite came from from the the royal hunters called ghillies but if you want a good history lesson on the sniper, there is a channel on cable caled the American Heros Channel or AHC called Weaponology that has episodes on everything planes and tanks to booby traps to sniper rifles to U S Army Rangers to the SAS and the history & lineage of of each. I think you'd enjoy the show.
    I know who you're thinking of but cant remember his name either. You want to read anything on Carlos Hathcock the greatest sniper of Vietnam or Chuck Mulwinney the send best in my opinion.

  • @martindean612
    @martindean612 Місяць тому

    Simo Häyhä was the finish sniper ace.

  • @CharlesStaley001
    @CharlesStaley001 Місяць тому

    Marine sniper, Carlos Hathcock, white feather

  • @brianmccourt8664
    @brianmccourt8664 Місяць тому

    Do you guys still issue the tree and leaves camo still or is multicam still used

  • @lyman6
    @lyman6 Місяць тому

    The use of the term "sniper" in a 1300's setting is definitely anachronistic, but I don't see a problem with it; presumably the characters were speaking in modern English instead of ye olde Aenglisc. Sniper is a modern word with a modern meaning that we understand, and fine to use in a fictional tale where all the other language is being changed as well. There were probably dozens of similarly anachronistic words in that book, sniper is just the one you noticed because it has a well known and recognizable history.
    The Finnish sniper you were thinking of was Simo Hayha, the White Death, who had like 512 kills or something.
    It's been a while since you've done a Fat Electrician video; I'd love to see you cover his Percy Hobart video, mainly because I'm legitimately curious how well known Hobo is in his home country and if you already know anything about him.

  • @otobking
    @otobking Місяць тому

    My dad was a sniper in Vietnam. He was pulled out of Boot Camp and was invited to join a special group for the Ted offensive. He said there was only 28 of them made and were considered the elite in country. They had no dog tags and were under, direct order of the special forces general. He said he was surprised how after World War II the sniper core and training school was not great. His group ran without dog tags and were the predecessor to Delta force called project blue light. They were also part of project Phoenix. He told me he got hate from our own guys. He signed a 100 year NDA and told me after he dies I could write a book. When he left Vietnam, he was one of the top five highest rated snipers the United States has ever had. He left really highly decorated and ran operations for the United States for years to come. His stories are pretty amazing. He used the Winchester for 70 that the Marine Corps set up for him.

  • @nemethbalazs7416
    @nemethbalazs7416 Місяць тому

    Lady Death :The Memoirs of Stalin's Sniper is a great book

  • @bradleydanek3958
    @bradleydanek3958 Місяць тому

    look up the Reaper Sergeant Nicholas Irving

  • @fryercarey
    @fryercarey 27 днів тому

    I enjoyed the book One Shot One Kill

  • @string_fellow_hawk
    @string_fellow_hawk Місяць тому +2

    Back for a "cheeky peek" at snipers , with the "waffler" . ❤😂😂😂
    He read a book ?? Thought they untrained Royal Marines from doing that ?? 😂😂😂😂
    I am only kidding, I have much respect for ALL services .

  • @shadoeedl
    @shadoeedl Місяць тому

    The White Sniper: Simo Häyhä
    A Book by Tapio Saarelainen you said you wanted a book about sniper here's a book about one of the best

  • @Mickey-kh9hb
    @Mickey-kh9hb Місяць тому

    Check out The longest Shot by Craig Harrison

  • @marktisdale7935
    @marktisdale7935 Місяць тому +1

    The current record for the longest confirmed kill happened in November of 2023 by a Ukrainian, Viacheslav Kovalskyi.

  • @Jeeperskip
    @Jeeperskip Місяць тому

    Fiction series about a guy named Bob Lee Swagger by author Stephen Hunter. There is a lot of them but some good ones. Turned into a movie not worth seeing, but the books are good.

  • @brianmccourt8664
    @brianmccourt8664 Місяць тому

    Also I'm talking about woodlands to people in the comments

  • @m2hmghb
    @m2hmghb Місяць тому

    Dear mom a sniper's vietnam is a good book by J.T Ward. Dead Center by Kugler is also good. A sniper in the Arizona is decent. Sniper one by Dan Mills is one you might want to read - Iraq by a British sniper.

  • @BrakeRP1
    @BrakeRP1 Місяць тому

    Read, "93 Confirmed Kills"

  • @DopeSauceBenevolence
    @DopeSauceBenevolence Місяць тому

    The greatest sniper book ever written is JARHEAD of course!!!

  • @theoriginalburgandy550
    @theoriginalburgandy550 Місяць тому +1

    Makes me want to do a rewatch of top shot, amazing show

  • @johngould2665
    @johngould2665 Місяць тому

    You have to do a video on gorilla warfare now that you mentioned it

  • @everypitchcounts4875
    @everypitchcounts4875 Місяць тому

    Of course the British would see it as unsportsmanlike because they wanted everyone to lineup in rows facing each other in the middle of empty fields.

    • @willythemailboy2
      @willythemailboy2 Місяць тому

      It wasn't just the British, it was all of the continental powers at the time. And it wasn't considered "unsportsmanlike" it was considered COWARDLY because the sniper wasn't brave enough to stand up to return fire.

  • @xroosterrttv4048
    @xroosterrttv4048 Місяць тому +2

    Nicholas "Reaper" Irving. The Reaper: Autobiography of One of the Deadliest Special Ops Snipers

  • @williamfoley7387
    @williamfoley7387 Місяць тому

    Carlos Hathcock captured the rifle but the problem is they stole the rifle from the armory because they knew the significance of the history of the rifle

  • @tarabradford1848
    @tarabradford1848 Місяць тому

    It is highly likely that the term sniper came about before the occupation. I do not personally know a lot about military history, at least not the more detailed stuff, but I do know of Dan Jones because he is one of my favorite English historians. He is an expert on the Crusades and Plantagenet dynasty. If he mentioned the term sniper in reference to the Hundred Years War and someone observing a crossbow man firing from a church bell tower he likely is speaking facts, regarding an earlier use of the term, as he is unlikely to bring up something of significance without fact checking first. This is why I think that the term came before the occupation.

  • @ctmetsfanmike9262
    @ctmetsfanmike9262 Місяць тому +2

    Dan Jones is the man. Love watching anything he does or talks avout. And there are some great books about Carlos Hathcock

  • @johnl5316
    @johnl5316 Місяць тому

    war lasting 100 yrs occurred in 1 year? 1346?

  • @communisttoes4924
    @communisttoes4924 Місяць тому +1

    You should definitely check out the me262 first operational jet fighter in combat in world war 2.

  • @chrisbeatty743
    @chrisbeatty743 Місяць тому +2

    You should read the “marine sniper” book about Carlos hathcock

  • @johngould2665
    @johngould2665 Місяць тому

    1801 sharp shooter

  • @SamGray
    @SamGray Місяць тому

    Historical word use in fiction is often coloured by modern writers vocabulary. How many times have archers in film been ordered to "fire"?

    • @willythemailboy2
      @willythemailboy2 Місяць тому

      I personally like David Drake's response to that criticism: I could write the dialog for Roman soldiers in Latin, but then you couldn't read it. If I'm going to write it in English instead, why not use the sort of modern English that the audience is going to understand?

    • @SamGray
      @SamGray Місяць тому

      @@willythemailboy2 I'd rather it be in Latin with subtitles.

    • @willythemailboy2
      @willythemailboy2 Місяць тому

      @@SamGray Drake writes books, not movies or TV. You'd want subtitles in books?

  • @datdudedatgetsit
    @datdudedatgetsit Місяць тому

    Snipes are birds small birds hard to hit people who could are called snipers

  • @forrestcrain3401
    @forrestcrain3401 Місяць тому

    While I have not read the book. I would say that using that term historically at that time IS incorrect, however, I'm pretty sure the author just used that word for a modern audience to understand. Not really something I would even call an error, unless it was being used in a non-fictional work and describing what actually happened.

  • @scyberian
    @scyberian Місяць тому

    Also, as far as "general public" is concerned, I think "Sniper" has become a "tacti-cool" phrase relating to the markmanship and ignoring the observation and intelligence collection duties.

  • @unnixjp
    @unnixjp Місяць тому

    Hey someone on telegram with your name originalhuman told me to participate in a giveaway of ps5 and macbook sounds like a scaaam from far ! Was it you ? It doesn’t matter to me that i am not getting it but it matters me is that i chatted about an hour whole heartedly thinking that its you till that giveaway thing came out ! So plz plz clarify!

  • @KimberlyLaw-id8jb
    @KimberlyLaw-id8jb Місяць тому

    Would be nice if my favorite UA-camr watches Australian Military Aviation History channel, it's really worth checking out high quality documentary channels.

  • @user-zw4fm1hy3n
    @user-zw4fm1hy3n Місяць тому

    Read Hathcock's book.

  • @serpentblade8704
    @serpentblade8704 Місяць тому +1

    Sniper: the best of classic movie i like is enemy at the gates

  • @MauJugam
    @MauJugam Місяць тому +1

    Please reaction SCP-7709

  • @bryanoneill7550
    @bryanoneill7550 Місяць тому

    Ukraine just beat that I believe around 3 miles and with an actual confirmed kill

  • @firestorm165
    @firestorm165 Місяць тому +2

    To answer your question the word "sniper" originated in the 1770's when soldiers of the British army stationed in India got bored and went out to hunt birds called "snipes" which took a lot of skill to successfully do due to their skittishness, quickness and natural camouflage. I haven't read the book you've referenced but my gut tells me the archer in question should be called an arbalest after a new type of crossbow the French were fielding around that time which was feared for it's power and accuracy
    But then again not everyone is a massive history nerd and "sniper" gets the message across so chalk it up to creative licence

  • @VVAIBHAVTIWARI
    @VVAIBHAVTIWARI Місяць тому

    Bro if you want some reaction about Hinduism please go through this speech of Swami Vivekananda the *first convention of World's Parliament of Religions -1893* you get lilbit mind blowing things please react on this

  • @lincolngarces9987
    @lincolngarces9987 Місяць тому

    The Germans were my favorite at the time no matter the side the Germans still look good and there technology looks good and also is good

  • @cameronking3341
    @cameronking3341 Місяць тому

    That record has been broken in the Russia Ukraine war the record of 2.2 miles don't stand

  • @Mickey-kh9hb
    @Mickey-kh9hb Місяць тому

    The author is in error

  • @joman2487
    @joman2487 Місяць тому

    The new world record was set by a Ukrainian sniper

  • @RealAaron317
    @RealAaron317 Місяць тому

    The most deadly sniper from WW2 was a female sniper from Russia

  • @joeylingross818
    @joeylingross818 Місяць тому +1

    If your looking for more military history content, look into the Fat Electrician's videos, and World Wars Week by Week
    Ps. Simo hoiya "the white death"

  • @FuzzyMarineVet
    @FuzzyMarineVet Місяць тому

    I like Cappy, even thought he's an Army veteran. He knows what he talks about.
    A European snipe is a rather small bird. In the 10th to 15th centuries, anyone who could shoot a bow or crossbow with sufficient accuracy to hit one was called a "sniper."

  • @T0X1C-WA5TE
    @T0X1C-WA5TE Місяць тому +1

    WOOOOO 436TH WOOOOO

  • @NottiOne
    @NottiOne Місяць тому

    Band of brothers was good but The Pacific was better.

  • @sirisakchaising4753
    @sirisakchaising4753 Місяць тому +1

    first like first comment that cool oii

  • @ohnoitisnt666
    @ohnoitisnt666 Місяць тому

    That programme is dumb. Absolute rubbish.