Sniper reveals how he broke the world record for murder in Afghanistan – The 2,475-meter shot

Craig Harrison was on a mission in 2009 to his Helmand province Afghanistan when he shot from a distance of 2,475 meters and broke the world record, as this is the longest distance ever recorded for a murder. According to Unilad, the former sniper of the British Army revealed how he “broke” the world record, without of course knowing it – for the biggest murder at a distance.

The story went viral again afterwards the success of US forces in killing an ISIS leader in Syria. Remembering what was the most dangerous mission of his career, Harrison talked about the incident and what prompted him to pull the trigger.

The British veteran explained how a patrol entered a “killing zone”, where “killing you is extremely easy to kill”. “An area of ​​land where it is open and you have nowhere to hide and they can just tear you to pieces,” he commented.

How he discovered the Taliban

He then stated: “I saw from afar something flickering” and realized that he was an enemy (Taliban) with a radio and the flicker was his antenna “. Soon, however, his attention turned again to the patrol of the 12 soldiers, who were shooting at them.

“I was wondering where he was from. I was looking everywhere, but I could not find anything. “The only place I did not look was where I saw the guy on the radio,” he said.

Harrison’s weapon had a range of 1,500 meters but had to fire at 2,475. “So I had to do what I call lobbying and so I threw a bullet in. It took me nine shots to get there, because I was bracketing. What is bracketing? “It’s when you shoot the first one, you see where it lands, you add a little more, you add a little more until you hit where you want”, he explained.

Harrison “managed to hit the wall of the group” and then next to one of the Taliban: “So I shot again. As I shot again, I got up and hit him. He fell backwards and then the second man stood up and I threw again. And as I fired a third shot, I moved my gun further and fired a fourth shot, so that I had two bullets in the air at the same time. The third bullet missed, the fourth hit him and fell to the side. “It was 2,475 meters,” he said.

The previous longest recorded killing distance was also in Afghanistan in 2002 and was just 50 meters shorter. Harrison did not realize until he received his medal that he had broken the world record, although he said he did not feel “at all proud” of holding such a record.

Harrison said he was simply “doing my job, trying to save 12 soldiers, that was it.”

Source: News Beast

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