These six legendary Soviet and Russian snipers not only aided the Soviet’s army but also changed the way militaries utilized long distance attacks.
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In the 1930s , when other countries were cut down sniper teams , the Soviet Union began train some of the most talented sniper of not only the World War II era , but of story .
These marksman , able to the snuff out high - ranking , difficult - to - supersede officers on the opposing side , were capable to play havoc on their foe ’s chain of command and team spirit and quickly became some of the most important soldier to contend in the war .

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Here are the stories of six of the deadly Soviet snipers of World War II :
Russian Snipers: Klavdiya Kalugina
Wikimedia CommonsKlavdiya Kalugina
Unlike many armed services at the fourth dimension , the Soviet Union made use of women as snipers . In 1943 , there were more than 2,000 female Soviet snipers in the Red Army . Females made peachy long - stove hit man because of their flexibility , cunning , and patience .
The youngest educatee at the Komsomol sniper schooltime , 17 - twelvemonth - older Russian Klavdiya Kalugina was n’t a cracking guess at first . She had piercing eyesight , but her talent egress as her squad loss leader give her personal education .

Wikimedia CommonsKlavdiya Kalugina
Kalugina is credited with 257 German killing , but taking her first human life was not an well-to-do project for the young sniper . partner with her good friend Marusia Chikhvintseva on the front channel , they did n’t even take a single guessing on their first night .
“ We just could n’t extract the trigger , it was hard … Sir Noel Pierce Coward ! Coward ! Why did we total to the front ? ” Kalugina told an interviewer . But the next 24-hour interval , she cumulate her courage . “ … a German was clearing ( a ) machine gas pedal emplacement . I fired . He fell , and was pulled back by his feet . It was my first German . ”
Marusia did not come as well . Kalugina ’s spouse was shoot by a German sniper while on defensive picket . “ Oh , how I shout out ! ” Kalugina remembers . “ I scream so aloud it could be heard all over the trench , soldiers ran out : “ subdued , quiet , or they ’ll open mortar fire ! ” But how could I be quiet ? She was my best friend … I live for her now ” .
There is no account of Kalugina ’s life after the war and plainly no news report of her demise either . Might she still be alive ?