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Lithium
08-02-06, 08:57 PM
Did anyone read or hear about this interview between Katie Couric and a Marine Corps sniper?

Apparently the conversation went like this:

Katie Couric, while interviewing a Marine sniper, asked:


"What do you feel when you shoot a terrorist?"


The Marine shrugged and replied: "Recoil."

If this is true, that is about the best answer I have ever heard. Killing terrorists, one recoil at a time. :usmc: LOL:banana:

Phantom Blooper
08-02-06, 09:05 PM
<CENTER>Recoil</CENTER>
Claim: U.S. sniper, asked what he feels when he shoots an al-Qaeda member, replies: "Recoil."

<NOINDEX>Status: False. </NOINDEX>

Examples: [Collected on the Internet, 2006]

<TABLE width="90%" align=center bgColor=#000000 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#eaf2e5>While interviewing an anonymous US Special Forces soldier on his sniper skills, a Reuters News agent asked the soldier what he felt when shooting members of <NOBR>al Qaeda</NOBR> in Afghanistan. The soldier shrugged and replied, 'Recoil.'"

<HR align=center width="75%">
On December 9, 2005, CNN covered an interview of a <NOBR>US Special</NOBR> Forces soldier, a member of an elite sniper team. A Reuters reporter trying to milk the interview for all it was worth asked the young soldier, in a less than respectful tone, and in an effort to make him feel guilty, "What do you feel, if anything, when you shoot an <NOBR>Al Quaeda</NOBR> freedom fighter from such a long distance?" The young soldier shrugged his shoulders and replied. "RECOIL" & turned and walked away.

<HR align=center width="75%">
Katie Couric, while interviewing a Marine sniper, asked: "What do you feel when you shoot a terrorist?"

The Marine shrugged and replied: "Recoil."
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
Origins: We like our heroes larger than life, as this anecdote shows.

This account http://www.snopes.com/politics/graphics/recoil.jpg began arriving in the snopes.com inbox on <NOBR>10 January</NOBR> 2006. Hunt about as we might, we have been unable to find mention of such an interview in newspaper or wire service archives (Reuters is a wire service) or through CNN's web site's search facility, on <NOBR>9 December</NOBR> 2005 or any other date. Despite its glut of seemingly checkable facts (CNN, Reuters, <NOBR>9 December</NOBR> 2005), the yarn is a humor piece, the soldier's pithy "Recoil" rejoinder naught but the punchline of a joke and the "checkable facts" mere window dressing. The same day the tale was first mailed to us, it also appeared as a post to the USENET newsgroup rec.humor.

The shorter example is the earlier of the two versions of the "Recoil" anecdote; the longer a reworking of the more compact original undertaken to express points its rewriter wanted to make. The second version adds a negative view of the media that was missing from the original: the Reuters reporter is characterized as "trying to milk the interview for all it was worth," he addresses the soldier (the story's lantern-jawed hero) "in a less than respectful tone," poses the question he does "in an effort to make [the soldier] feel guilty," and refers to a member of <NOBR>Al Qaeda</NOBR> as a "freedom fighter." It also adds a Gary <NOBR>Cooper-ish</NOBR> flourish to the soldier's remark by noting that after he made it he "turned and walked <TABLE cellPadding=8 align=left border=0><TBODY><TR><TD><SCRIPT language=JavaScript>rnum=Math.round(Math.random() * 100000); ts=String.fromCharCode(60);if (window.self != window.top) { nf='' } else { nf='NF/' };document.write(ts+'script src="http://www.burstnet.com/cgi-bin/ads/ad1874c-.cgi/v=2.1S/sz=300x250A/NZ/'+rnum+'/'+nf+'RETURN-CODE/JS/">'+ts+'/script>');</SCRIPT><SCRIPT src="http://www.burstnet.com/cgi-bin/ads/ad1874c-.cgi/v=2.1S/sz=300x250A/NZ/16802/NF/RETURN-CODE/JS/"></SCRIPT><NOSCRIPT>http://www.burstnet.com/cgi-bin/ads/ad1874c-.cgi/ns/v=2.1S/sz=300x250A/ (http://www.burstnet.com/ads/ad1874c--map.cgi/ns/v=2.1S/sz=300x250A/)</NOSCRIPT></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>away."

Many who have served in the U.S. forces in previous conflicts have reported hearing the tale during their time in the service. In particular, we've heard from a number of men who fought in the Vietnam War and who encountered the story at that time, either as a "bar tale" or as a comment scrawled on a latrine wall. One of our correspondents mentioned it being commonly written on the cloth helmet covers or the "boonie hats" worn by infantry soldiers, usually in the form of "All I feel when I kill is...Recoil! —Infantry."

Another of our Vietnam War correspondents told us about a similar comment that was also in circulation at that time: The other, similar comment was a response to the "hippy" question, "How can you shoot women and children?" Answer: "They don't run as fast - you have to give them a little less lead."
The "recoil" anecdote presents the soldier (and thus by implication all U.S. soldiers) as an emotionless specialist who regards killing members of the enemy's forces as just part of the job, nothing more. When asked what he feels while taking a life, he answers not about any emotional response to killing another human being, but about his physical reality — that after squeezing off a shot he has to deal with the gun's recoil. Within the framework of the tale, U.S. soldiers are depicted as many would like to think of them: cool-headed capable professionals who will ultimately overcome the enemy no matter what obstacles now stand in their way, because that is what they've been trained to do and what they are very good at. The narrative thus delivers a measure of comfort, in that all feel reassured of their own safety, knowing they are defended by fighting men like these.

Whatever may be the truth about the emotional makeup of the average soldier, those who become snipers are very carefully chosen, not only for their marksmanship but for their emotional stability and outlook as well. "We need the kind of soldier who can turn the remorse button off," said <NOBR>Sgt. Buck,</NOBR> the head of an Edmonton Garrison-based sniper unit. (While <NOBR>Sgt. Buck</NOBR> was speaking about snipers serving in the Canadian Armed Forces, his comment applies equally to soldiers in that specialty across the board, no matter what their nationality.) When asking for sniper volunteers, the military seeks well-balanced professional soldiers with great emotional discipline.

Barbara "ghille suited" Mikkelson

Last updated: 3 June 2006 <!--15 January 2006 - original19 January 2006 -mentioned other instances of story3 June 2006: Added Katy Couric example-->

<CENTER>The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/politics/war/recoil.asp

Urban Legends Reference Pages © 1995-2006
by Barbara and David P. Mikkelson
</CENTER>

JWG
08-02-06, 10:28 PM
I SWEAR I saw this interview on TV... coulda sworn that was what happened, too..

Either way.. thats MOTIVATING! MOTO!!!


Motivated,

-Jon :iwo:

minimi
02-25-08, 06:07 PM
Did anyone read or hear about this interview between Katie Couric and a Marine Corps sniper?

Apparently the conversation went like this:

Katie Couric, while interviewing a Marine sniper, asked:


"What do you feel when you shoot a terrorist?"


The Marine shrugged and replied: "Recoil."

If this is true, that is about the best answer I have ever heard. Killing terrorists, one recoil at a time. :usmc: LOL:banana:


This was actually a British Royal Marine Sniper...

Katie Couric, while interviewing a Royal Marine sniper, asked:

"What do you feel when you shoot an Terrorist?"

The Marine shrugged and replied , "A slight recoil."

Wyoming
02-25-08, 06:53 PM
This was actually a British Royal Marine Sniper...

Katie Couric, while interviewing a Royal Marine sniper, asked:

"What do you feel when you shoot an Terrorist?"

The Marine shrugged and replied , "A slight recoil."

No, wait, he was, like a Canadian, or like a Korean, or like, an Aussie!!

Jeez!!!!

sparkie
02-25-08, 07:41 PM
Musta happened first in Russia. Like everything else.

sawatzke82
02-25-08, 07:43 PM
I guess we may never know where this originated. Makes a good bumper sticker though.<!-- / message --><!-- sig -->

mrandmrspoot
02-25-08, 08:00 PM
clever response, ill have to use that if I ever become a marine