List of snipers
A sniper is a trained sharpshooter who operates alone, in a pair, or with a sniper team to maintain close visual contact with a target and engage the targets from concealed positions or distances exceeding the detection capabilities of enemy personnel.
Military snipers
Some notable military snipers include
Name | Lived | Active | Notes | Confirmed sniper kills |
Nationality |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Noah Adamia | 1919–1942 | 1938–1942 | A Soviet Georgian naval infantryman who is credited with over 200 kills and several tanks knocked out.[1] Trained another 80 snipers within a couple of months during the Second World War.[2] | 200+ | Soviet Union |
Vamba | 1987– | 2008–2011 | VAMBA know also as (The math) sudanes sniper who fought with the private military company he world's deadliest sniper in Africa last update served on the darfur, and was credited with 900 kills with fast capabilities in using math equation to hit his goal . | confirmed 780 | Sudan |
Josef Allerberger | 1924–2004 | 1943–1945 | A German sniper who fought with the II Battalion of the 144th Gebirgsjäger Regiment of the 3rd Mountain Division; he served on the Eastern Front, and was credited with 257 kills. Allerberger is the second most successful German sniper.[3] | 257 | Nazi Germany |
Hiram Berdan | 1824–1893 | 1861–1864 | The commander of the 1st and 2nd US Sharpshooters during the American Civil War.[4] | N/A | United States |
Herman Davis | 1888–1923 | 1918 | American sniper of the First World War, awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the Croix de Guerre with palm, the Croix de Guerre with Gilt Star and the Médaille Militaire awards from the American and French governments.[5][6] | 60 | United States |
Fedir Dyachenko | 1917–1995 | 1932–1945 | Soviet Ukrainian sniper during World War II, credited with as many as 425 kills and awarded with the Hero of the Soviet Union. | 425 | Soviet Union |
Rob Furlong | 1976– | 1996–2003 | A Canadian Army sniper who held the record for the kill from the greatest distance during Operation Anaconda, War in Afghanistan.[7] | 1+ | Canada |
Lucky Bisht | 1988– | 2003–2019 | An Indian Secret Service Sniper, Nickname Lima[8] who has a record that he shot the heads of two gangsters with a single bullet, killing them on the spot, but till date no agency has been able to find out how he did this.[9][10] According to the report of Intelligent, he is also a contract killer but till date no allegation has been proved.[11][12][13] [14] | 139 | India |
Vladimir Gavrilovitsj Salbiev | 1916– | 1937–1944 | Soviet sniper during World War II, credited with as many as 601 kills and awarded with the Hero of the Soviet Union.[15] | 601 | Soviet Union |
Gary Gordon | 1960–1993 | 1978–1993 | A Delta Force sniper who was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for protecting the injured crew of a downed helicopter during the Battle of Mogadishu.[16] | N/A | United States |
Craig Harrison | 1974- | 1990-2014 | A British Army sniper who achieved the fourth longest confirmed kill shot in history (2,475 m) using the Accuracy International L115A3 Long Range Rifle.[17] | N/A | United Kingdom |
Carlos Hathcock | 1942–1999 | 1959–1979 | A renowned United States Marine Corps sniper who is credited with 93 confirmed kills.[18][19] | 93 | United States |
Dejan Berić | 1974- | 2014-present | Simply known as Deki (Деки) is a Serbian volunteer in the forces of the Donetsk People's Republic with the rank of Major, who is fighting as a sniper in the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War. | N/A | Serbia |
Simo Häyhä | 1905–2002 | 1939–1940 | A Finnish sniper during the 1939–40 Winter War known as the "White Death" from his habit of lying in the snow wearing snow camouflage and a white face mask, waiting for a target to appear. Antti Rantamaa, who served as a field chaplain in Häyhä's regiment, credited him with 505 confirmed kills by sniper rifle and 250 kills by submachine gun during the war.[20] All of Häyhä's kills were made over the course of fewer than 100 days, before he was seriously wounded—an average of just over 5 per day, with the highest daily count numbering 45 kills—at a time of year with few daylight hours.[21][22] | 505–542 | Finland |
Musa Herdem | 1987–2015 | 2006–2015 | A YPG sniper known as 'Musa' with allegedly more than 80 confirmed kills, mainly during the fighting for Kobani during the Syrian Civil War.[23] | Rojava PJAK PKK | |
Matthäus Hetzenauer | 1924–2004 | 1943–1945 | An Austrian sniper on the Eastern Front during World War II who was credited with 345 kills between 1943 and 1945.[24] | 345 | Nazi Germany |
Abukhadzhi Idrisov | 1918–1983 | 1939–1944 | A Soviet Chechen sniper credited with 349+ kills during World War II. He was reported to have killed 100 soldiers in only 10 days of fighting. Awarded multiple of the highest state orders of the Soviet Union. [25] | 349+ | Soviet Union |
Nikolai Ilyin | 1925–1943 | 1941–1943 | Soviet sniper with 494 kills, who fought in the 50th Guards Rifle Division during the Battle of Stalingrad, World War II.[26] | 494 | Soviet Union |
Nicholas Irving | 1987– | 2004–2010 | A sniper nicknamed "The Reaper" with the 3rd Ranger Battalion deployed in Afghanistan in 2009, with 33 confirmed kills.[27] | 33 | United States |
Juba | N/A | 2005–2007 | Juba (Arabic: جوبا) (also called "Joba") is the pseudonym of an alleged sniper involved in the Iraq War's insurgency. He participated in Iraqi Civil War as well as the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. | 100+ (Allegedly)
37 (confirmed) |
Iraq |
Tatang Koswara | 1947–2015 | 1975–1976 | A sniper credited with at least 41 confirmed kills in only a single mission during the Indonesian invasion of East Timor in the 1970s. Other story said he killed 49 in a single mission, because he saved one bullet for him self out of 50 bullets he brought [28] | 41+ | Indonesia |
Ivan Kulbertinov | 1917–1993 | 1941–1945 | A Russian Soviet sniper credited with 252, or alternatively 487 kills using a Mosin-Nagant 1891 rifle during the Second World War.[29][30] | 252 | Soviet Union |
Vasilij Kvachantiradze | 1907–1950 | 1941–1945 | A Soviet Georgian sniper who is credited with 534 kills during World War II, one of the highest Soviet kill counts.[31] Known for almost single-handedly thwarting a German assault on Shumilino in Belarus.[32] | 500+ | Soviet Union |
Chris Kyle | 1974–2013 | 1999–2009 | A US Navy SEAL credited with 160 confirmed kills by the Pentagon, but who allegedly killed 255.[33][34] | 160 | United States |
Marie Ljalková | 1920–2011 | 1942–1953 | A Czech sniper fighting in the Soviet Army during World War II who was credited with at least 30 confirmed kills.[35] | 30+ | Czechoslovakia |
Charles Marlowe | 1968– | 1987–1990 | A United States Marine Corps sniper who holds the record for most solo missions completed (27).[36] | 46 | United States |
Chuck Mawhinney | 1949– | 1967–1970 | A United States Marine Corps sniper who holds the record for most confirmed kills by a US Marine (103),[37] with an additional 216 "probable kills". | 103 - 319 | United States |
Herbert W. McBride | 1873–1933 | 1914–1918 | A US citizen who serves as a captain in the 21st Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force, during World War One.[38] | 100+ | United States |
Philip McDonald | 1886–1916 | 1914–1916 | 8th Battalion (90th Winnipeg Rifles), CEF, 42 confirmed kills during the First World War. Killed in action 3 January 1916.[39] | 42 | Canada |
Neville Methven | N/A | 1916–1918 | A big game hunter and target shooter who served as an officer with Sir Abe Bailey's South African Sharpshooters on the Western Front during World War One. | 100 | South Africa |
Olga Minchakievich | 1898-1920 | 1917-1920 | World War One and Russian Civil War sniper. Regular member of The 1st Russian Women's Battalion of Death. | 129 | Russian Republic |
Tatianna Minchakievich | 1900-1920 | 1918-1920 | World War One and Russian Civil War sniper. Regular member of The 1st Russian Women's Battalion of Death. One of the highest confirmed number of kills of any female at 93 kills using only the iron sights of a 7.62x54mm Mosin-Nagant Model 1891. | 93 | Russian Republic |
Timothy Murphy | 1751–1818 | 1775–1780 | An American Revolutionary War sniper credited with killing British General Simon Fraser during the Battle of Saratoga.[40] | 1+ | United States |
Semyon Nomokonov | 1900–1973 | 1941–1945 | A Soviet Russian World War II sniper with 367 logged kills.[41] | 367 | Soviet Union |
Henry Norwest | 1884–1918 | 1915–1918 | A sniper in the 50th Canadian Infantry Battalion during the First World War. He had 115 confirmed kills and was killed by a German sniper on 18 August 1918.[42] | 115 | Canada |
Fyodor Okhlopkov | 1908–1968 | 1941–1945 | A Russian Soviet sniper credited with 423 confirmed kills during World War II.[43] | 423 | Soviet Union |
Johnson Paudash | 1875–1959 | 1914–1918 | A member of the 21st Battalion (Eastern Ontario), CEF during World War One who made 88 confirmed kills.[44] | 88 | Canada |
Lyudmila Pavlichenko | 1916–1974 | 1941–1953 | Soviet sniper. The most successful female sniper during World War II. She served in the Soviet army and had 309 confirmed kills. Pavlichenko was called "Lady Death" for her ability with a sniper rifle. She served in the Red Army during the siege of Odesa and the siege of Sevastopol. She was awarded Hero of the Soviet Union[43] | 309 | Soviet Union |
Vladimir Pchelintsev | 1919–2001 | 1941–1945 | Credited with 152 kills using a Mosin-Nagant 1891 rifle during the Second World War.[45] | 152 | Soviet Union |
Francis Pegahmagabow | 1891–1952 | 1914–1919 | An Ojibwe sniper in World War I who is credited with 378 kills, and an unknown number of unconfirmed kills.[46] | 378 | Canada |
Friedrich Pein | 1915–1975 | 1943–1945 | An Austrian fighting in the German Army credited with over 200 kills on the Eastern Front between 1943 and 1945 during the Second World War. | 200+ | Nazi Germany |
Arron Perry | 1972– | 1999–2005 | A Canadian Army sniper who briefly held the record for the longest-ever recorded and confirmed sniper kill in 2002.[7] | 1+ | Canada |
Stepan Petrenko | 1922–1984 | 1941–1945 | Soviet sniper during the Second World War with 422 confirmed kills, awarded the HSU (Hero of the Soviet Union).[26] | 422 | Soviet Union |
Ranjith Premasiri Madalana (Nero) | 1991–2009 | 2000–2009 | A sniper in the Sri Lanka Army during the country's civil war alias "Nero" who is recorded as having made 217 confirmed kills of Tamil Tigers.[47] | 217 | Sri Lanka |
Graham Ragsdale | 1969– | 1988–2003 | A former Canadian Army sniper who fought in Afghanistan in 2002[7] and 2005-2014 as a designated defensive marksman with private military companies. | 56 | Canada |
Patrick Riel | 1876–1916 | 1914–1916 | A Métis Canadian attached to the 8th Battalion (90th Winnipeg Rifles), CEF during the First World War with 30 confirmed kills. Killed in action by shell fire on 14 January 1916.[48] | 30 | Canada |
Ben Roberts-Smith | 1978– | 1996–2015 | A sniper with the Australian Special Air Service Regiment who was awarded the Medal of Gallantry for his actions in 2006 during Operation Perth in the Chora Valley of Oruzgan Province, Afghanistan.[49] Subsequently, awarded the Victoria Cross for Australia in 2011. | N/A | Australia |
Ian Robertson | 1927–2014 | 1945–1953 | A sniper with the 3rd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment after the Second World War, becoming one of the most effective snipers of the Korean War. In a single morning, Robertson killed 30 enemy soldiers.[50] | 30+ | Australia |
Roza Shanina | 1924–1945 | 1943–1945 | A Russian Soviet sniper during the Second World War, credited with 60 kills, including 12 soldiers during the Battle of Vilnius in 1944.[51] | 60 | Soviet Union |
Randy Shughart | 1958–1993 | 1976–1993 | A Delta Force sniper who was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for protecting the injured crew of a downed helicopter during the Battle of Mogadishu.[16] | N/A | United States |
Ivan Sidorenko | 1919–1994 | 1939–1945 | A Soviet sniper credited with over 500 kills during the Second World War. | 500+ | Soviet Union |
Billy Sing | 1886–1943 | 1914–1918 | An Australian First World War sniper credited with over 150 confirmed kills. Contemporary evidence puts his tally at close to 300 kills.[52] | 150+ | Australia |
Mikhail Surkov | 1921–1953 | 1941–1945 | Soviet sniper in World War II. Official documents indicate a tally around 236 kills, although newspapers inflated his tally to over 700 kills.[53][54] | 236 | Soviet Union |
Bruno Sutkus | 1924–2003 | 1944–1945 | A Lithuanian sniper fighting in the German Army during the Second World War. He was credited with 209 kills on the Eastern Front between 1944 and 1945. | 209 | Nazi Germany |
Abu Tahsin al-Salhi | 1953–2017 | 1973–2017 | A sniper who fought in the Yom Kippur War, Iran–Iraq War, invasion of Kuwait, Gulf War, as well as the 2003 Invasion of Iraq.[55][56][57] However, his kills in other wars other than against ISIS are unaccounted for and unknown. | 341+ (against ISIS only) (Alleged) | Iraq |
Adelbert Waldron | 1933–1995 | 1968–1970 | A United States Army sniper who formerly held the record for the most confirmed kills by a US military sniper (109).[58] | 109 | United States |
Alvin York | 1887–1964 | 1917–1918 | An expert sharpshooter with the 82nd Infantry Division who used an M1917 Enfield rifle during the Meuse–Argonne offensive near Chatel-Chéhéry, France, 1918 in World War I. Medal of Honor recipient for leading an assault on machine gun positions. | 28 | United States |
Vasily Zaytsev | 1915–1991 | 1937–1945 | A Soviet sniper who fought at the Battle of Stalingrad. Zaytsev is credited with 242 kills (including 11 snipers).[43] | 242 | Soviet Union |
Tha'ir Kayid Hamad | 1970- | 2002 | A Palestinian sniper who killed 7 Israel soldiers and 3 Israeli civilians with a Second World War Mauser rifle. He would be arrested two years later and sentenced to life imprisonment.[59] | 10 (7 soldiers, 3 civilians)
Confirmed by Israel and al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades |
Palestine |
Brian Ogoti Nixons | 1996 | 2019 | A Kenyan-born sniper who fought/fights in the 2nd Foreign Infantry Regiment of the French Foreign Legion. [60] | 13 | France |
Zhang Taofang | 1931–2007 | 1953–1985 | A Chinese sniper who fought in the Korean War with 214 confirmed kills over 32 days.[60] | 214 | China |
Abdorrasul Zarrin | 1941–1983 | 1979–1983 | An Iranian sniper in the Iran–Iraq War. Iranian sources claim that he had 700 kills during the war.
According to Seyyed Ahmad Mousavi, his friend and Intelligence Commander of the Younis Diver Battalion of Imam Hussein army asked Zarrin how many kills did he had, and he said more than 3,000 kills. The Jamejam newspaper agreed on this number. |
700+ | Iran |
James George Smith Neill | N/A | 1857 | An unknown Indian sniper, who fought for the Oudh state during the Siege of Lucknow in the Indian Rebellion of 1857, nicknamed "Jim the nailer" by defending British soldiers.[61] | N/A | Oudh |
Zhou Xixiang | 1931– | 1950–??? | A Chinese sniper who fought in the Korean War with 203 confirmed kills with 206 bullets.[62] | 203 | China |
N/A | A soldier who is reputedly the deadliest sniper alive as of 2009 with 173 confirmed kills, mostly with the L115A3 on a single tour with British Army in Afghanistan in 2006–2007, including over 90 Taliban members in one day.[63] | 173 | United Kingdom |
Non-military snipers
Not all snipers are highly trained professional soldiers. The term is sometimes ambiguously used to describe criminals firing from cover at long range with a rifle, as well as police sharpshooters. Some non-military snipers include:
Name | Lived | Notes | Nationality |
---|---|---|---|
Frank Carter | 1881–1927 | A notorious murderer in Omaha, Nebraska, who claimed to have murdered 43 victims.[64] | United States |
Michael Andrew Clark | 1949–1965 | A teenage sniper who killed three and wounded six in Highway 101 shooting spree on 25 April 1965.[65] | United States |
Byron De La Beckwith | 1920–2001 | An ex-US Marine and white supremacist, assassinated NAACP field secretary Medgar Evers after the civil rights activist arrived home in Jackson, Mississippi on 12 June 1963. | United States |
William "Billy" Dixon | 1850–1913 | Defended the Adobe Walls settlement against Native American attack with his legendary buffalo rifle, and was one of eight civilians in United States history to receive the Medal of Honor. | United States |
Jack Hinson | 1807–1874 | A farmer who engaged Union troops at long range during the American Civil War and recorded 36 officer "kills" on his custom-made .50 caliber Kentucky long rifle with iron sights.[66] | United States |
Lon Horiuchi | 1954– | A Federal Bureau of Investigation sniper who shot Randy Weaver and shot and killed Vicki Weaver at Ruby Ridge.[67] | United States |
Thomas "Tom" Horn, Jr. | 1860–1903 | An American Old West lawman, scout, and hired gunman, known for shooting cattle rustlers and sheepherders at long range with a Sharps rifle.[68] | United States |
John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo | 1960–2009 1985– |
Perpetrators of the Beltway sniper attacks, a series of coordinated shootings that took place over three weeks in October 2002 in Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. Ten people were killed and three other victims were critically injured in several locations throughout the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area and along Interstate 95 in Virginia. | United States |
Lee Harvey Oswald | 1939–1963 | A former US Marine who assassinated President John F. Kennedy and shot Governor John Connally in Dallas, Texas on 22 November 1963, and shot at General Edwin Walker on 10 April 1963.[69] | United States |
Stephen Paddock | 1953–2017 | Perpetrator of the 2017 Las Vegas shooting using multiple high-powered modified rifles from the 32nd floor of a high-rise hotel, killing 60 people and wounding over 800 others on 1 October 2017. | United States |
Charles Whitman | 1941–1966 | A college student and former US Marine who fired from a clock tower on the University of Texas Austin campus, killing 14 and wounding 32 on 1 August 1966.[70] | United States |
See also
References
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During the war, "Frontovaya Illustratsiya" wrote: "Sniper Sergeant Mikhail Surkov shoots at the enemy confidently and accurately. – He does not wound – he hits the spot. After killing over 700 Fascists, he went on to the next hunt"
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:|work=
ignored (help) - "Сурков Михаил Ильич". soviet-aces-1936-53.ru. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
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