‘It was night and low visibility, but I saw a guy with an AK-47 lit up by the porch light in a doorway about 400 meters away. I watched him through the sights. He looked like just another  Iraqi. I hit him low in the stomach and dropped him.’ – Specialist  James Wilks, 25, from Fort Worth, Texas. Concealment is key to becoming a  great sniper. Highly trained marksmen who can shoot accurately  from incredible distances with specialized training in high-precision rifles. In addition, they are trained in camouflage, field craft, infiltration, reconnaissance and observation, making them perhaps the most feared military presence in a war. Below is my list of top ten snipers in history and some of the greatest shots ever fired.
10 
Thomas Plunkett
died in 1851
Was  an Irish soldier in the British 95th Rifles. What makes him on of the  greats is that he shot a very impressive French general,  Auguste-Marie-François Colbert. 
During the battle at Cacabelos during Monroes retreat in 1809, Plunkett,  using a Baker Rifle, shot the French general at a range of about 600  meters. Giving the incredible inaccuracy of rifles in the early 19th  century, this was either a very impressive feat, or one hell of a fluke.  Well Plunkett not wanting his army buddies to think he was a bit lucky  decided to take the shot again before returning to his line. So he  reloaded his gun and took aim once again this time at theto the  generals aid. When this shot also hit its intended target, proving that  Plunkett is just one badass marksman, he looked back to his line to see  the impressed faces of the others in the 95th Rifles.  trumpet major who had come 
Just  for comparison the British soldiers were all armed with ‘Brown Bess  muskets’ and trained  to shoot into a body of men at 50 meters. Plunkett  did 12 times that distance. Twice.
9 
Sgt Grace
4th Georgia Infantry
The  date was May 9th 1864, when Sgt Grace, a Confederate sniper, achieved  what was considered to be an incredible shot at the time, and what is  definitely the most ironic demise of a target in history. It was during  the battle of Spotsylvania when Grace took aim with his British  Whitworth Rifle. His target was General John Sedgwick (pictured above)  and the distance was 1,000 yards. An extremely long distance for the  time. During the beginning of the skirmish, the confederate  sharpshooters were causing Sedgwick’s men to duck for cover. Sedgwick  refused to duck and was quoted saying “What? Men dodging this way for  single bullets? What will you do when they open fire along the whole  line? I am ashamed of you. They couldn’t hit Elephants at this  distance.” His men persisted in taking cover. He Repeated “They couldn’t  hit elephants at this distance” Seconds Later Grace’s shot hits  Sedgwick just under his left eye. 
I  swear you couldn’t write it. Sedgwick was the highest ranking Union  casualty in the civil war and upon hearing his death Lt. Gen. Ulysses S.  Grant repeatedly asked “Is he really dead”.
8 
Charles ‘Chuck’ Mawhinney
1949-
103 Confirmed Kills
Was  an avid hunter as a kid and joined the Marines in 1967. He served in  the U.S. Marine Corps during Vietnam and holds the record for number of  confirmed kills for Marinesnipers , exceeding that of legendary Marine  sniper Carlos Hathcock. In just 16 months he killed 103 enemies and  another 216 kills were listed as probable’s by the military, only  because it was too riskyat the time to search the bodies for documents.  When he left the Marines he told no-one of his of his role during the  conflict and only a few fellow Marines knew of his assignments. It was  nearly 20 years before somebody wrote a book detailing his amazing  skills as a sniper. Mawhinney came out of anonymity because of this and  became a lecturer in sniper schools. He was once quoted saying “it was  the ultimate hunting trip: a man hunting another man who was hunting me.  Don’t talk to me about hunting lions or elephants; they don’t fight  back withrifles and scopes. I just loved it. I ate it up.”  
A  routinely deadly shot from distances between 300 – 800 yards, Mawhinney  had confirmed kills of over 1000 yards, making him one ofthe greatest  snipers of the Vietnam war. 
7 
Rob Furlong
A  former corporal of the Canadian Forces, he holds the record for the  longest confirmed sniper kill in history at 1.51 miles or 2,430 metres.  That’s the length of about 26 football pitches. 
This  amazing feat occurred in 2002, when he was involved in Operation  Anaconda. His Sniper Team consisted of 2 Corporals and 3 Master  Corporals. When a three man Al-Qaeda weapons team moved into a  mountainside position he took aim. Furlong was armed with a .50-caliber  McMillan Brothers Tac-50 Rifle and loaded with A-MAX very low drag  bullets. He fired and missed. His second shot hit the enemies knapsack  on his back. He had already fired his third shot by the time the second  hit, but now the enemy knew he was under attack. The airtime for each  bullet was about 3 seconds dueto the immense distance, enough time for  an enemy to take cover. However the dumbfounded militant realised what  was happening just in time to take the third shot in the chest. 
6 
Vasily Zaytsev
March 23, 1915 – December 15, 1991
242 Confirmed Kills
Zaytsev  is probably the best known Sniper in history thanks to the movie ‘Enemy  At The Gates’.  It is a great film and I wish I could  say it was all  true. However the truth only goes as far as the battle of  Stalingrad.   There was no Nazi Counter-Sniper Specialist in real life. Well not to  the extent of the film. Here’s the truth. Zaytsev was born in  Yeleninskoye and grew up in the Ural Mountains. His surname means  ‘hare‘. Before Stalingrad, he served as a clerk in the Soviet Navy But  after reading about the conflict in the city he volunteered for the  front line. he served in the 1047th Rifle Regiment. Zaytsev ran a sniper  school in the Metiz factory. The cadets hetrained were called Zaichata,  meaning ‘Leverets’ (Baby Hares). This was the start of the sniper  movement in the 62nd army. It is estimated that thesnipers he trained  killed more than 3,000 enemy soldiers 
Zaytsev  himself made 242 confirmed kills between October 1942 and January 1943,  but the real number is probably closer to 500. I know I said there was  no counter-sniper, but there was Erwin Kónig. Was alleged to be a highly  skilled Wehrmacht sniper. Zaytsev claimed in his memoirs that the duel  took place over a period of three days in the ruins of Stalingrad.  Details of what actually happened are sketchy, but by the end of the  three day period Zaytsev had killed the sniper and claimed his scope to  be his most prized trophy. For him to make this his most prized trophy  means that this person he killed must have been almost as good as  Zaytsev himself.
5 
Lyudmila Pavlichenko
July 12, 1916 – October 10, 1974
309 Confirmed Kills
In  June 1941, Pavlichenko was 24 and Nazi Germany were invading the Soviet  Union. She was among the first volunteers and asked to join the  infantry. she was assignedto the Red Armies 25th  infantry Division.  From there she became one of 2000 female snipers of the soviet. 
Her  first 2 kills were made near Belyayevka using a Mosin-Nagant bolt  action rifle with a P.E. 4-power scope. The first action she saw was  during the conflict in Odessa. She was there for 2 and a half months and  notched 187 kills. When they were forced to relocate, she spent the  next 8 months fighting in Sevastopol on the Crimean Peninsula. There she  recorded 257 kills and for this feat she was cited by the Southern Army  Council. Pavlichenkos’ total confirmed kills during WW2 was 309. 36 of  those were enemysnipers. 
4 
Corporal Francis Pegahmagabow
March 9, 1891 – August 5, 1952
378 Confirmed kills
300+ Captures
300+ Captures
Three times awarded the military medal  and twice seriously wounded, he was an expert marksman and scout,  credited with 378 German kills and capturing 300+ more. He was an Ojibwa  warrior with the Canadians in battles like those at mount sorrel. As if  killing nearly 400 Germans wasn’t enough, he was also awarded medals  for running messages through very heavy enemy fire, for directing a  crucial relief effort when his commanding officer was incapacitated and  for running through enemy fire to get more ammo when his unit was  running low.
Though  a hero among his fellow soldier, he was virtually forgotten once he  returned home to Canada. Regardless he was one of the most affective  snipers of world war 1.
3 
Adelbert F. Waldron
March 14, 1933 – October 18, 1995
109 confirmed kills
He  holds the record for the highest number of confirmed kills for any  American sniper in history. However it is not just his impressive kill  record that makes him one of the best, but also his incredible accuracy.
This  excerpt from ‘Inside the Crosshairs: Snipers in Vietnam’ by Col.  Michael Lee Lanning, describes just what I’m talking about:
“One  afternoon he was riding along the Mekong River on a Tango boat when an  enemy sniper on shore pecked away at the boat. While everyone else on  board strained to find the antagonist, who was firing from the shoreline  over 900 meters away, Sergeant Waldron took up his sniper rifle and  picked off the Vietcong out of the top of a coconut tree with one shot  (this from a moving platform). Such was the capability of our best  sniper.” Nuff Said.
If  there was a scale of difficulty for shots like these, it would be next  to impossible to beat. well lets try to do that anyway.
Here’s ‘white feather’….
2 
Carlos Norman Hathcock II
May 20, 1942 – February 23, 1999
Nicknamed ‘Lông Trung du Kich’  (‘White Feather Sniper’) 
93 Confirmed kills
Hathcock  has one of the most impressive mission records of any sniper in the  Marine corps. Lets forget about the dozens of shooting championships he  won, during the Vietnam war he amassed 93 confirmed kills. The Vietnam  army put a $30,000 bounty on his life for killing so many of their men.  Rewards put on U.S. snipers by the NVA (North Vietnamese Army) typically  amounted to….say $8. 
It  was Hathcock who fired the most famous shot in sniper history. He fired  a round, over a very long distance, which went through the scope of an  enemy sniper, hit him in the eye, and killed him. Hathcock and Roland  Burke his spotter were stalking the enemy sniper, (which had already  killed several Marines) which they believed was sent to kill him  specifically. When Hathcock saw a flash of light reflecting off the  enemies scope he fired at it in a split second pulling off one of the  most precise shots in history. Hathcock reasoned that the only way that  this was possible, would have been if both snipers were aiming at each  others scopes at the same time, and he fired first. However, although  the distance was never confirmed, Hathcock knew that because of the  flight time, it would have been easy for both snipers to kill each  other. The white feather was synonymous with Hathcock (He kept one in  his hat) and he removed it only once for a mission. Keep in mind that he  volunteered for this mission, but he had to crawl over 1500 yards of  enemy territory to shoot an NVA commanding general. Information wasn’t  sent until he was on-route. (He volunteered for a mission he knew  nothing about) It took 4 days and 3 nights without sleep of inch-by-inch  crawling. One enemy soldier almost stepped on him as he laid  camouflaged in a meadow. At another point he was nearly bitten by a  viper, he didn’t flinch. He finally got into position and waited for the  general. When he arrived Hathcock was ready. He fired one round and hit  the general through the chest killing him. The soldiers started a  search for the sniper and Hathcock had to crawl back to avoid detection.  They never caught him. Nerves of steel.
1 
Simo Häyhä
December 17, 1905 – April 1, 2002
Nicknamed ‘The White Death’
705 confirmed kills  (505 with rifle, 200 with submachine gun)
Was  a Finnish soldier who, using an iron sighted bolt action rifle, amassed  the highest recorded confirmed kills as a sniper in any war…ever!!
Häyhä  was born in the municipality of Rautjärvi near the present-day border  of Finland and Russia, and started his military service in 1925. His  duties as a sniper began during the ‘winter war’ (1939-1940) between  Russia and Finland. During the conflict Häyhä endured freezing  temperatures up to -40 degrees Celsius. In less than 100 days he was  credited with 505 confirmed kills, 542 if including unconfirmed kills,  however the unofficial frontline figures from the battlefield places the  number of sniper kills at over 800. Besides his sniper kills he was  also credited with 200 from a Suomi KP/31 Submachine gun, topping off  his total confirmed kills at 705.
How  Häyhä did all this was amazing. He was basically on his own all day, in  the snow, shooting Russians, for 3 months straight. Of course when the  Russians caught wind that a shit load of soldiers were being killed,  they thought ‘well this is war, there’s bound to be casualties’. But  when the generals were told that it was one man with a rifle they  decided to take a bit of action. first they sent in a counter-sniper.  When his body was returned they decided to send in a team of  counter-snipers. When they didn’t come back at all they sent in a whole  goddamn battalion. They took casualties and couldn’t find him.  Eventually they ordered an artillery strike, but to no avail. You see  Häyhä was clever, and this was his neck of the woods. He dressed  completely in white camouflage. He used a smaller rifle to suit his  smaller frame (being 5ft3) increasing his accuracy. he used an iron  sight to present the smallest possible target (a scoped sight would  require the sniper to raise his head for sighting). He compacted the  snow in front of the barrel, so as not to disturb it when he shot thus  revealing his position. He also kept snow in his mouth so his breath did  not condense and reveal where his was. Eventually however his was shot  in the jaw by a stray bullet during combat on March 6 1940. He was  picked up by his own soldiers who said half his head was missing. He  didn’t die however and regained consciousness on the 13th, the day peace  was declared. 
Once again total kills…. 505 sniper + 200 submachine = 705 total Confirmed Kills…all in less that 100 days.
Source:   http://listverse.com/2009/11/13/top-10-snipers-in-history/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheListUniverse+%28The+List+Universe%29&utm_content=Netvibes
 











 
 
 
 
 
