While Germany and Austria-Hungary were well-equipped with sniping
rifles in 1914, their Allied opponents were not. This highly
illustrated volume tells the inside story of the rifles carried by
snipers of all the major powers during World War I. Although military
sharpshooting had existed since the 18th century, in 1914 only the
German and Austro-Hungarian armies fielded trained snipers armed with
scoped rifles. Thus upon the outbreak of World War I, the Allied
armies found themselves on the receiving end of a shooting war to
which they had no means of response. Only the Canadians brought a
dedicated sniping rifle into the trenches, but in small numbers. For
the British, although production of a suitable rifle and scope were
settled on quickly, the establishment of sniper training was difficult
and its success was mostly due to the efforts of a handful of
dedicated officers. The French eventually introduced a competent
scoped rifle and a sniper training system, as did the Italians.
Entering the war in 1917, the Americans experienced rifle shortages
but were able to build on their pre-1914 efforts to find a suitable
sniping weapon. The country that suffered most grievously was Russia;
Russian troops fielded no snipers at all and suffered accordingly.
Featuring full-colour artwork, carefully chosen archive images and
photographs of the sniping rifles and accessories used in the
trenches, this is the inside story of the rifles carried by snipers of
all the major powers during World War I.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472850799
Publisert
2022
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Osprey Publishing
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter