A Ukrainian sniper achieved an incredible shot on the battlefield

The distance defies belief
The sniper used a Sako M10 rifle
A record shot for the special forces sniper
Not the longest shot recorded in the war
The bullet travelled nearly two and half miles
Footage of the shot confirmed the elimination
The bullet traveled over 12,000 feet
How are snipers affecting the battlefield?
Ukraine’s secretive snipers
Devils and Angels
An important mission
Invisible killers
The nature of the role
An effective battlefield tool
Discombobulating a unit
Russian Major General Andrei Sukhovetsky
An important commander
Impressive feats
Not a single shot was fired
Stopping Wagner
Confirmed kills
Destroying the enemy
Important assets
Stable frontlines
The distance defies belief

A Ukrainian sniper achieved an incredible shot against a Russian soldier according to a report from the Defense Intelligence of Ukraine that revealed the details of a recent successful long-range operation on the frontline.

The sniper used a Sako M10 rifle

The long-range shot occurred over a distance of 2,069 meters or roughly 6,788 feet and was achieved using a Sako M10 rifle equipped with .338 Lapua Magnum ammunition. The successful shot led to the elimination of the Russian soldier according to the Defense Intelligence of Ukraine (DIU) report. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Vitaly V. Kuzmin, CC BY-SA 4.0

A record shot for the special forces sniper

It was reported that the shot was a record for the special forces sniper, who goes by the callsign Lector, and a record for the Ukraine based on the ammunition that was used. 

Photo Credit: Telegram @DIUkraine

Not the longest shot recorded in the war

While Lector’s recent shot was one of the most long-range sniper elimination registered in the war, another Ukrainian sniper claimed the absolute long-range record in 2023. The shot not only broke the record for the longest shot in the war but also the longest kill shot ever made in history. 

The bullet travelled nearly two and half miles

In November 2023, a sniper operating under the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) named Vyacheslav Kovalskiy claimed he set a new record for the world's longest kill shot when he fired a bullet that took out a Russian soldier almost two and a half miles (or roughly four kilometers) from his position.

Footage of the shot confirmed the elimination

Kovalskiy's shot took nine seconds to reach its target, and a video recording of the incident that the Wall Street Journal reviewed confirmed that the Ukrainian sniper did indeed set a gruesome new record.

"Let them sit at home and be afraid"
“I was thinking that Russians would now know that is what Ukrainians are capable of,” Kovalskiy told the Wall Street Journal about his record-setting shot. “Let them sit at home and be afraid,” he added.
The bullet traveled over 12,000 feet

Kovalskiy's bullet traveled about 12,470 feet or about 3,800 meters before it hit its intended target, and while the achievement showed off the skills of Ukraine's formidable snipers, the country's silent assassins have been making the frontlines a chaotic mess for Russian soldiers ever since the very beginning of the war.

How are snipers affecting the battlefield?

On the frontlines of the brutal fight to push Russian forces out of the territory that they took following the full-scale invasion, a new Ukrainian strategy emerged that was meant to sow chaos and fear among the Kremlin’s invading armies. 

Ukraine’s secretive snipers

In August 2023, The Wall Street Journal reported on Ukraine’s secretive snipers and their mission aimed at targeting high-value Russian commanders and demoralizing Vladimir Putin’s soldiers. 

Devils and Angels

There was one sniper team in particular that had been picking off senior commanders and they dubbed themselves “Devils and Angels,” but they weren’t just killing military leaders. 

An important mission

The group had also been tasked with terminating the vital members of artillery teams as well as eliminating any other high-profile marks they were sent out to find on the battlefield. 

Invisible killers

“We work quietly, we are invisible,” one of the sniper team’s three members explained to the Wall Street Journal. But just how effective were these sniper teams on a modern battlefield in Ukraine? 

The nature of the role

Retired Army Major General and Military Historian Robert Scales told The Journal that snipers could still have an outsized effect in today’s combat due to the nature of their role at the time.

An effective battlefield tool

“If you’re assembling to attack and your lieutenant is picked off,” Scales explained, “the unit goes into disarray,” which makes snipers an extremely effective battlefield tool. 

Discombobulating a unit

“When you kill a Russian small-unit leader, you completely discombobulate the unit,” the retired major general added—and it’s something Ukrainian snipers had gotten good at. 

Russian Major General Andrei Sukhovetsky

One of the most high-profile examples of a commander killed by a sniper’s bullet in the Russo-Ukraine conflict occurred in March 2022 when Major General Andrei Sukhovetsky was eliminated by sniper fire. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Unkown Author

An important commander

Sukhovetsky was the commanding general of Russia’s 7th Airborne Division as well as the deputy commander of the 41st Combined Arms Army according to Business Insider. 

Impressive feats

However, Sukhovetsky's death was only one of the several impressive feats Ukrainian snipers have been credited with achieving. In August 2023, a sniper team allegedly took twenty Russian soldiers prisoners. 

Not a single shot was fired

The Press Service of Ukraine's Special Operation Forces revealed the story that snipers from the 3rd Special Purpose Regiment took all 20 soldiers without firing a single shot. 

Stopping Wagner

The Wall Street Journal noted that snipers had proved to be particularly effective in the battle for the city of Bakhmut, where they helped to repel waves of attacking Wagner soldiers before its ultimate capture. 

Confirmed kills

In July 2023, a BBC News team interviewed members of a team of elite snipers known as “the ghosts of Bakhmut” and discovered that the group had killed a confirmed 524 soldiers. 

Destroying the enemy

"It's nothing to be proud of,” one member of the sniper team with the callsign Kuzia said. “We're not killing people, we're destroying the enemy,” he added.

Important assets

Snipers can become extremely important assets when frontlines stabilize according to Mark Cancian, an advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.  

Photo Credit: Twitter @csis_isp

Stable frontlines

“Stable front lines allow snipers to develop good ‘hides’ and fields of fire,” Cancian told The Wall Street Journal, which was exactly what has happened in Ukraine since the country's summer counter offensive of 2023. 

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