Chew off all the sovereignty you can swallow.

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shaka

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“Our tactic in Grozny was to fire at the enemy everywhere without being seen anywhere. The Russians did not know where and who the enemy was. We shot, destroyed, withdrew, went home to sleep, returned to start military actions again. No organization or planning. We were independent hunters.” – Aslan Maskhadov

Outline of Sniper Tactics

A. Timing. Psychologically, soldiers are weakest immediately after a win.

1. When soldiers are fleeing, you can kill them as fast as you can fire.
2. Victorious soldiers are focused only on raping, looting and sleeping.
3. Let invaders pass by, then attack them from behind after the battle.

B. Position. Select neither a panoramic view nor a tiny loophole.

1. Positions with a wide view are easily identified and targeted early.
2. Positions with a wide view are elevated and thus easily encircled.
3. If you are too hidden, nobody will walk in front of your loophole.
4. If it is hard for the invaders to find you, it is hard for you to scram.
5. There are many semi-concealed hides; quantity makes them obscure.

C. Elevation. Stay in the basement or first floor of most buildings.

1. Tanks cannot fire down into basements, but anti-aircraft guns can.
2. If the ground is frozen, basements will protect one from artillery.
3. The roof and top floors of buildings will be destroyed by artillery.
4. Avoid skyscrapers; they are easily encircled and have solid windows.
5. Apartments and hotels are wider and have windows and balconies.
6. Only go into upper stories if all the nearby buildings are multi-story.

D. Teamwork. Most of the advantages of teams apply only to the invaders.

1. Crew-served weapons reduce willful misses by reluctant killers.
2. In static positions (e.g. on a skyscraper) teams have more endurance.
3. Rifles fire sideways and binoculars look forward; it is hard to do both.
4. Two men and a rifle do not fit on a motorcycle, but cars are too slow.
5. For the defenders, mobility is all-important and teams are a hindrance.

E. Move. The moment you stop moving is the moment you stop moving.

1. If at all possible, do not get out of your getaway vehicle.
2. Keep a warren of streets behind you. Fire over obstacles like canals.
3. Never climb high into narrow buildings that can be easily encircled.
4. In wide apartments and hotels, mouse-hole between interior rooms.

F. Hug. Move alongside a column of troops 300 to 500 yards from them.

1. Inside 200 yards you are vulnerable to machineguns and RPGs.
2. Outside 600 yards you are vulnerable to artillery and air strikes.
3. Stay in the safety zone; fire when there is an obstacle to shoot over.

G. Surprise. Fire when the invaders are distracted or not expecting a shot.

1. Invader’s attacks on buildings are initiated with flash-bang grenades.
2. Barrels of ANFO are ineffective weapons but are useful diversions.
3. Never fake randomness. Choose among your options by rolling dice.

H. Illuminate. The battlefield is defined by who can see whom and when.

1. Do not use a light yourself. You see glare and the invaders see you.
2. From 90° away have a helper clamp a light down, turn it on and run.
3. Radar can see mortar shells. Do not use them to launch flares.
4. Deploy flares with small, remote-control rockets.

I. Divide. Engage the invaders when they are crossing a boundary.

1. Fire when half the invaders are inside a building and half outside it.
2. Fire when half the invaders are in open and half in rough terrain.
3. Fire at dawn or dusk when neither infrared nor visible light is optimal.

J. Pin. Your first shot pins the invaders down. Follow-up shots kill them.

1. Aim to break a soldier’s pelvis. He cannot run and must be carried.
a. The center of mass (hips, not heart) moves around the least.
b. A .308 at 500 yards will not penetrate the armor over the heart.
c. If cutting the femoral artery does not kill him, just shoot him again.
2. Induce the invaders to hide behind non-bulletproof objects like trees.
a. They will run if engaged in the open and you will only get one shot.
b. They will hide if engaged near trees. Just shoot through each tree.

K. Escape. Trap your pursuers in an apartment complex or cul-de-sac.

1. Park your motorcycle in the living room and fire off the kitchen table.
2. Drive your motorcycle away through narrow pedestrian walkways.
3. Have a helper chain the gates shut to lock the pursuit vehicles in.
4. Change vehicles under overhead cover to lose any airborne pursuit.
5. Anti-tank missiles will not recognize a motorcycle and will fly past it.
 
Reply to Mutant Musket

At We the Armed I received the following reply:

Mutant Musket writes:

"Tanks cannot fire down into basements, but anti-aircraft guns can"
LOLWHAT.
SPAAGs can fire at higher angles than tanks, not fire down into basements. What is all this stuff suposed to be anyway? Authentic wisdom from the Chechens? Was it badly translated?

I replied as follows, but my reply was twice deleted:

Lt Col Timothy Thomas writes in his paper, The Battle of Grozny: Deadly Classroom for Urban Combat:

"The correct mix and employment of weapons in the city were also important. Grozny was a three-tiered fight (upper floors of buildings, street level, and subterranean or basement), and the weapons had to fit. Russian tanks could not lower their main gun tubes and coaxial machine guns low enough to shoot into basements harboring Chechen fighters. To correct this problem, the Russians put ZSU-23-4 self-propelled, multi-barreled, antiaircraft machine guns forward with columns to fire at heights and into basements."

Also effective were Shmel flame-throwers. But tanks were useless. Lt Col Thomas writes:

"Flame-throwers appear to have been a weapon of choice for the Russian force. One article written after the fighting noted that the Kalashnikov assault rifle, the Mukha grenade launcher, and the Shmel flame-thrower were a "soldier's best weapons." The flame-thrower was chosen as much for its psychological effect as its ability to flush people or snipers out of buildings at a considerable range. Evidence supporting the view that this is an important Russian weapon was provided when an improved, jet-powered model was advertised for sale abroad in October 1998. It reportedly was capable of the same effectiveness as 152mm artillery rounds, and had a maximum range of fire of 1,000 meters (over a half mile!). With its portability and range, it may prove to be an adequate substitute where the use of supporting artillery would be difficult."

References:

ZSU-23-4 Shilka 23MM Antiaircraft Gun

RPO-A Shmel Rocket Infantry Flame-Thrower
 
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