FULLY ILLUSTRATED, THIS ABSORBING STUDY EXPLORES THE EVOLVING SNIPING
TECHNOLOGY AND TACTICS EMPLOYED BY BOTH SIDES IN ASIA AND THE PACIFIC
DURING 1941–45.
During World War II, both the Japanese and their Allied opponents made
widespread use of snipers armed with a variety of rifles, scopes and
accessories and prepared by widely differing levels of training and
tactical doctrine. The challenges of fighting in a variety of harsh
environments, from the Pacific islands to the vast expanses of China,
prompted improvisation and innovation on both sides in the ongoing war
between snipers and their adversaries. Often operating at relatively
close ranges in restrictive terrain, snipers made particularly
ingenious use of camouflage and deception as the fighting spread
across Asia and the Pacific in the wake of the Pearl Harbor attack,
while troops tasked with countering enemy marksmen had to learn the
hard way how best to defeat a seemingly invisible enemy.
Small arms expert John Walter considers the strengths and limitations
of the rifles, scopes and accessories deployed by Japanese snipers and
their Allied counterparts, as well as their different approaches to
sniping tactics and training. Specially commissioned artwork and
carefully chosen photographs illustrate this enthralling study of the
sniping war in Asia and the Pacific during World War II.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472858306
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter