MARINE
CORPS SCOUT SNIPERS
Being a Marine scout sniper involves many technical skills, such as camouflage field-craft, mission planning and marksmanship. The training is tough and without previous Marine training, few will successfully complete sniper school.
They often assist the CIA in risky operations and, yes, the job can be very dangerous.
In the MISSION OF VENGEANCE spy thriller, Marine Corps Recon Snipers take out a
suicide bomber on a resort beach on a remote Bahamian out island, called Cat Island, and many American tourist lives
were saved. Check the video at the bottom about Cat Island where many of the resorts, pubs and restaurants mentioned in it are featured in my spy thriller.
The MISSION OF VENGEANCE spy thriller
brings out just who a USMC Scout Sniper is… a Marine, highly skilled in fieldcraft and
marksmanship, who can deliver long-range precision fire on selected targets,
from concealed positions. CIA Spymaster Corey Pearson calls in two teams of
them to assist in a mission that unfolds on a remote Bahamian out island called
Cat Island and gives them the code-name “OSOK”- One Shot, One Kill. Both teams
are specially suited for night operations and fully capable of operating in
almost complete darkness through use of night vision scopes and infrared laser equipment.
Each Scout Sniper team has two members.
One sniper is equipped with a long-range, specially-made sniper rifle, the M40, and
he also has an M9 9mm
pistol strapped to his thigh. The spotter is armed with an M4 carbine and
uses a high-power spotting scope to
spot targets and to guide follow-up shots for the shooter. They can blow a
man’s brains out with the M40 from 1000 yards away, and even are effective
killers at a range of up to 1.25 miles (2.01 km) with the M82.
Here’s a few snippets from the MISSION OF VENGEANCE spy thriller that describes the Marine Corps Scout Sniper teams (code-named “OSOK”) which are called in to assist the CIA’s mission on Cat Island, Bahamas:
“I requested Morrison to send in two OSOK
teams. That’s why I’m kayaking into the Bonefish Creek mangroves, to retrieve
their cache that was parachuted in last night. It has the gear they need.”
A hazmat tech asked, “What’s OSOK?”
Murray answered. “It stands for ‘One Shot,
One Kill’. They’re Marine sniper teams that CBIF calls in for help now and
then.”
Corey added, “They’re well-versed in
delivering long-range kill shots from a concealed position up to a thousand
yards away. I called them in to protect you people. They’ll be observing
the Fountain Bay Resort grounds. We won’t see them, but they’ll be watching us
and will be in instant communication. If the bomb-sniffing dogs or any of us
spots the bomber, raise your left arm with a fist, point to him with your right
hand, and his head will explode in one second.”
~ ~~ ~~
~
Corey’s app indicated the cache was twenty
feet away. He saw it, a green parachute hung in the branches. It matched the
surrounding colors perfectly. He cut the strings and laboriously dragged the
cache back into the clearing and unzipped it. Inside lay two M40 and two M82 bolt-action
rifles with silencers and rifle scopes mounted on them, spotting scopes, two
boxes of ammo with ‘3,400 feet per second velocity’ written on them, binoculars,
bipods to rest the rifles on, and two shovels to build a ‘hide’.
Four ghillie camouflage suits were wrapped
around a duffel bag. He unzipped it. Inside were compasses, two maps of Cat
Island, handheld field radios, large hunting knives, insect repellent, food
rations, first aid kits, penlights with filter lenses to darken the light,
chemical mace, camouflage paste for their faces, laser range finders,
bulletproof vests… even camouflaged duct tape. No wonder it’s so fuckin’ heavy! End of snippets
Lastly, you'll enjoy this video of Cat Island, Bahamas: Fly To Cat Island!
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