Toronto Star

Elite snipers gather for shot at title

Annual Canadian competitio­n will test their shooting skills, including a lot of math

- KEVIN BISSETT THE CANADIAN PRESS

CFB GAGETOWN, N.B.— Some of the world’s best snipers are gathered at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown to compete against their peers in an elite profession that is the stuff of movies and myths.

“I thought it was the coolest thing in the world, basically,” said Sgt. Steven Thompson, of the United States Marines Corp. Reserve.

Thompson spent five years in the active forces, including two tours in Afghanista­n, and said he is determined to win the 19th-annual Canadian Internatio­nal Sniper Concentrat­ion at this sprawling base in central New Brunswick.

The competitio­n includes teams from Canada, France, Australia, the Netherland­s and the United States.

Most of the snipers interviewe­d Friday took a more analytical approach to their task.

Capt. John Bourgeois, officer in charge of the Canadian Forces Sniper Cell, said the event is both a competitio­n and a chance to compare notes and improve skills.

“The shooting part of being a sniper is the easy part. What we’re doing is challengin­g the snipers on every other part of being a sniper. They’re going to be required to navigate over 40 kilometres through deep, thick woods. They have timings to meet and plan their missions to get through this exercise. We’re going to push them to their limits,” he said.

The event comes just three months after a Canadian Forces sniper set a record in Iraq for the longest confirmed kill, at 3.5 kilometres.

The shot killed a Daesh fighter, which the military said thwarted an attack on an Iraqi military unit.

Although that sniper has not been named, Bourgeois said his fellow snipers are proud of him, rather than jealous.

Sgt. Ivan Sanson, of the 2nd Battalion Royal Canadian Regiment, agrees — but said it doesn’t diminish the competitiv­e nature of snipers.

“Everyone in the sniper community is very competitiv­e. I think you have to be. It’s important that they strive to be the best,” he said.

While most competitor­s are military, there are also snipers from the Halifax Regional Police, the Ontario Provincial Police and the Saint John Police Force.

The Canadian Forces are primarily using two rifles, the .338 Timber Wolf and the Tac 50 — a .50 calibre weapon that was used to make the record shot in Iraq.

The Saint John force is now also equipped with the .338.

Saint John Const. Darren Milburn says his force will use it differentl­y than the military because police tend to work in shorter distances.

“We’re going to use ours more as an anti-material weapon — if we have to take an engine block out of a suspect vehicle. The military are using that calibre for extended range,” he said.

The competitor­s used Friday to test their weapons and get them “zeroed in” before the competitio­n began on Saturday.

Bourgeois said the skills required to excel include a lot of math.

“They’ve got to know how far away the target is, they’ve got to know how big he is, they then determine the angle, the gravity, the atmospheri­c pressure, the wind, the temperatur­e of the rifle, the temperatur­e of the air, the angle of the sun and time of day,” Bourgeois said.

“The good guys here will factor those things in four or five seconds and take their shots.”

 ?? KEVIN BISSETT/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Snipers calibrate their rifles before the 19th annual Canadian Internatio­nal Sniper Concentrat­ion’s opening day.
KEVIN BISSETT/THE CANADIAN PRESS Snipers calibrate their rifles before the 19th annual Canadian Internatio­nal Sniper Concentrat­ion’s opening day.

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