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A military sniper, knows his equipment very well and knows it's limitations as well as his own. They are also given rules of engagement as to what is considered a threat and what isn't. Usually it involves a positively identified weapon or actions that are identified as threatening, for example use of optics and a cell phone right before a mortar attack on a dismounted patrol or filming of a convoy's response to a suspected IED.SHMIV wrote:1000 yards is 3000 feet. 1 mile is 5280 feet, so 1000 yards is less than a mile. Personally, I can read most signs on the interstate (on a clear day, on a long straight stretch of road) at about 3/4 mile, and see them at 5 miles. With a good set of binoculars, I imagine that one could figure out exactly who was coming when they get 1000 yards out.
Military snipers are trained to shoot at such long distances. Surely, they know who they are about to shoot. A shtf scenario would be, pretty much, a war zone. If a military sniper is justified in taking out a man at that distance in a war overseas, then I would think that a man defending his property in a war at home would be afforded the same justification.
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