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5 Real Life Soldiers Who Make Rambo Look Like a *****

I can't imagine being a sniper would be a cake walk and I certainly wouldn't call them cowards. Think about it, 1/2 lone men against possibly multiple platoons. Not to mention, you might have navigate through hostile territory.

I'd love to see the ones calling them cowards try it.

As a sniper- you main target/ order will be to kill the officers- or any high ranking commanding officer you find in platoons-
You'll just fin few people and need few shots- and thats all- and job done-

The infantry (real heroes) will take care of the rest of the platoons-
 
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2. Yogendra Singh Yadav

Mind Blown, shows how crappy and lame the guys in the bunkers were :P i mean what the hell? Dont they even get some training in the PA, what do they do; Show you a picture of a gun and send you out to fight?

ALthought I do respect those shaheeds but still, disappointed, that is sub humanly weak.

Remember officially they were 'Freedom Fighters' not PA.
 
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To gain any and every advantage is what war is all about...and thts what snipers are all about.
One can't be making moral decisions form there grave...

Trained in being a patient survivalist and holding ur nerves when u finally get ur chance...
 
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I onetime saw US special forces sniper training documentary. Its not about taking the shot, its also about reaching that position in the first place. He along with the spotter is helicopter or air dropped behind enemy lines, then track their target for days even weeks, then find the suitable place to hide..kill the enemy and fight their way back to LZ without any backup to speak off. It needs balls of steel to do that.

When special ops team is dropped behind enemy line- it usually carries one sniper-
The sniper is usually left behind to provide cover and the foot soldiers do their jobs-
The dead are usually infantry and thus are the heroes-
 
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Is it true that receivers of Vir Chakras are so much honored inside army that even officers stand up and salute no matter what the rank.
 
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Vasily Zaitsev

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This Hero of the Soviet Union killed more than 300 Nazi soldiers in the Battle of Stalingrad during World War II and taught scores of other snipers. Vasily Zaitsev was born into a family of peasants in the village of Yelenovsk in the Chelyabinsk Region in the Urals.

His grandfather taught him to hunt at a very early age – as a child, Vasily would spend days in the taiga together with his younger brother, tracking wolves, setting traps and sleeping in the snow. He brought home his first trophy at the age of twelve: a wolf that he shot with a single bullet from his first personal weapon, a large single-barreled Berdan rifle, which he was just barely able to carry behind his back at the time. As bullets were scarce, Vasily learnt to pull the trigger just once per animal. This is how he grew up to become a sharpshooter.
In 1937 Vasily was recruited into the Red Army. Despite his small frame, he was sent to serve in the Soviet Navy in the Pacific, near Vladivostok. But when Nazi forces invaded the Soviet Union, Zaitsev, like many of his comrades, volunteered to be transferred to the frontline. At the time he had already reached the rank of Sergeant Major.

On the eve of 22 September 1942 Zaitsev crossed the Volga River and joined the 1047th Rifle Regiment of the 284th Rifle Division of the 62nd Army. He made a name for himself during the first encounters with the enemy in the flame-lit city. Then one day, Zaitsev’s commanding officer called him up and pointed at an enemy officer in a window 800 meters away. Vasily took aim from his standard-issue Mossin-Nagant rifle, and with one shot, the officer was down. In less than a few moments, two other Nazi soldiers appeared in the window, checking their fallen officer. Vasily fired two more shots, and they were killed. For this, together with the Medal for Valor, Vasily was also awarded a sniper rifle.

Vasily Zaitsev’s name quickly became known across the Soviet Union; between 10 November and 17 December he was credited with 225 verified kills, 11 of them snipers. The Soviets soon organized a school of snipers based in a metal hardware factory, marking the beginning of the sniper movement in the Red Army.

“For us there was no land beyond the Volga,” Zaitsev once said in a famous quote, revealing his fervent loyalty to the Motherland.


Zaitsev would hide in all sorts of locations – on high ground, under rubble, in water pipes. After a few kills he would change his position. Together with his partner Nikolay Kulikov, Zaitsev would hide and sting. One of Zaitsev’s common tactics was to cover one large area from three positions with two men at each point – a sniper and scout. This tactic, known as the “sixes,” is still in use today and was implemented during the war in Chechnya.
In his memoirs, Vasily recalls a certain sly Nazi sniper he tracked for a week – they called him the

“Supersniper.” He was allegedly Heinz Thorvald, aka Erwin König, a high-ranking Werhmacht officer and head of the Berlin sniper school. There is little known about König’s identify. He reportedly came to Stalingrad to kill Zaitsev, who had already caused much havoc and drained Nazi morale. Zaitsev writes that the sniper was highly skilled and was very hard to find. But when two of Vasily’s comrades were injured by a sniper, Zaitsev and Kulikov began searching the area, and Vasily noticed a glimpse of light under a piece of metal. When Kulikov lifted a helmet on a stick from a window, Erwin König fired and revealed himself as he peeked to see whether his target was dead. It was then that Zaitsev shot him in the head.

The sniper duel is loosely depicted in the feature film “Enemy at the Gates,” directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud and starring Jude Law as Zaitsev and Ed Harris as Major König.
Vasily continued teaching Soviet soldiers while sniping Nazi troops until January 1943 when he was severely wounded and blinded by a mortar. He was taken to Moscow, where he was operated on by Professor Filatov, the famous Russian ophthalmologist. While he was in hospital, his rifle was given to the best snipers in his school. His students, the “zaichata,” were credited with more than 6,000 kills during World War II.

With his sense of sight restored, Zaitsev returned to the frontline, where he continued teaching snipers, commandeered a mortar platoon and became a Regiment Commander. He fought in Ukraine, at the Dnepr and in Odessa, sniping the enemy at the Dniestr River. But during the victorious day of 9 May 1945, he was in hospital again. He ended the war with the rank of Captain.

After the war, Zaitsev lived in Kiev, where he studied at a textile university and then worked as an engineer before becoming the director of a textile plant. Vasily Zaitsev died in 1991 and was buried in Kiev, although his final request was to be buried in the land he fought so hard to defend – Stalingrad. His wish came true on the 63rd anniversary of the Battle of Stalingrad, when Vasily Zaitsev was reburied with full military honors at Mamayev Kurgan in Volgograd, a monument in honor of the millions of victims of the battle. His rifle is on display in the Museum for the Defense of Stalingrad.

Vasily Zaitsev’s highest awards include: Hero of the Soviet Union, Order of Lenin, Order of the Red Banner (twice), Order of the Patriotic War (First Class), Medal for the Defense of Stalingrad and the Medal for the Victory Over Germany.

Vasily Zaitsev – Russiapedia Military Prominent Russians

Enemy at the gates eh?!
 
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When special ops team is dropped behind enemy line- it usually carries one sniper-
The sniper is usually left behind to provide cover and the foot soldiers do their jobs-
The dead are usually infantry and thus are the heroes-
^^tht is the sad tale of all unsung heroes...
people left alive getting the medals and honor ..
while the ones dead are left with weeping family and orphaned offspring....
 
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When special ops team is dropped behind enemy line- it usually carries one sniper-
The sniper is usually left behind to provide cover and the foot soldiers do their jobs-
The dead are usually infantry and thus are the heroes-

This was about 'special' snipers. His only buddy is his spotter and vice versa.

---------- Post added at 11:48 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:46 PM ----------

while the ones dead are left with weeping family and orphaned offspring....

This thread is about real life Rambos and remember Rambo always survives in the end..but its true that many heroes didn't got the chance to return home.
 
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^^tht is the sad tale of all unsung heroes...
people left alive getting the medals and honor ..
while the ones dead are left with weeping family and orphaned offspring....

Well to be honest- if a sniper position is comprised- its standard procedure for him to change his position- or flee-
So much for the bravery-
While the infantry has to do their job- spotted- or killed trying-
 
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This was about 'special' snipers. His only buddy is his spotter and vice versa.

Those special snipers are usually tasked to kill a "VIP" target-
One the target is "Killed"- even if from miles away- he receives a recommendation- or medal for it-
Thats just lame-


This thread is about real life Rambos and remember Rambo always survives in the end..but its true that many heroes didn't got the chance to return home.

the so called rambos- probably had a choice- to abandon and return or carry on the mission till end - The Real Heroes- Dead ones mostly chose the later- thats Commitment and Bravery-
 
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Well to be honest- if a sniper position is comprised- its standard procedure for him to change his position- or flee-
So much for the bravery-
While the infantry has to do their job- spotted- or killed trying-

All in the doctrine friend..all in the doctrine.
All types of people are born to this world...

like animals
there are rats there are horses and there are sheep
guess who survive? nothing immoral its all natural...

its the same if u compare an infantry man to a pilot sitting smug in his heli or jet.
to each there respective opportunities.

Life takes ya where it takes ya.
 
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Those special snipers are usually tasked to kill a "VIP" target-
One the target is "Killed"- even if from miles away- he receives a recommendation- or medal for it-
Thats just lame-

I think you have the same mentality that the French had during the medieval ages when they considered using archers in a battle is below them and fighting on horses clad from head to toe in iron jacket is the honorable way to do so and guess what British send their ***** packing using Longbows.




the so called rambos- probably had a choice- to abandon and return or carry on the mission till end - The Real Heroes- Dead ones mostly chose the later- thats Commitment and Bravery-

So its the soldiers fault that they survived. That Indian soldier was shot 15 times for God sake..the very fact that he is alive is a miracle in itself.

Anyways I always believed in General George Patton's immortal words:
No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country.

 
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^^ this mentality of your will only lead you to pick on small or weaker armies- Just like amrika is doing- No moral no remorse-
where the term bravery suits into that logic?-

The brave amrikan soldiers dropping bombs from air- while the cowards are hiding in a cave-
that will win you the war maybe- but doesn't fill in the criteria of this thread for brave soldiers-
 
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