Go Back   Professional Soldiers ® > Special Forces Weapons > Ammo Talk

Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 04-29-2004, 13:59   #1
FullGallop
SF Candidate
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Blood on the Bluegrass
Posts: 98
Question .50 cal illegal for use on human targets?

Can't remember the show I was watching but I think it was Chris Mathews. It was about the Kerrey hoopla over his Vietnam war protesting. They showed an interview he gave in the 70's (with whom I don't know) where he was stating the atrocities soldiers in Vietnam had commited. One of the things he mentioned was the use of .50 calibre ammo on people. After the clip Chris mattews(?) stated it was illegal to shoot people with .50 cal.

I have heard this argued before..........that it is ilegal. Can someone confirm as I cannot find any info. I do not see how it can be against "the law of warfare", especially when we are using them in sniper roles via the Barrett. I have never heard military personell state it was unlawful either.

Thanks in advance.
FullGallop is offline  
Old 04-29-2004, 14:04   #2
brownapple
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
One of the myths. It is not illegal to shoot personnel with a .50.
 
Old 04-29-2004, 20:34   #3
CSB
Quiet Professional
 
CSB's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Clarksville, TN
Posts: 1,159
.50 cal

This is your JAG speaking:

Greenhat is absolutely correct. Use of a .50 cal is not contrary to the Law of War, anymore than use of 7.62/.308 or 5.56/.223.

If you need to shoot with a .50 cal, do it. If you can just as well smother an objective with 7.62 and save those few & heavy .50 cal MLB for your M2's in favor of lighter 7.62 1-4, save the heavy duty ammo for when you need it.

What is contrary to the Law of War (and the Principle of War - Economy of Force) is using more than you need to, given the choice, wasting a limited supply of ammo and endangering civlians or good guys who may be miles away.

I've heard this .50 cal bulls--t before, along with comments that the following are prohibited by "Geneva Conventions":

- handcuffing prisoners of war.
- blindfolding prisoners of war.
- photographing prisoners of war.
- males searching female prisoners of war.
- use of silenced weapons.

In fact, of course, none of the above are prohibited.
CSB is offline  
Old 04-29-2004, 21:02   #4
Team Sergeant
Quiet Professional
 
Team Sergeant's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 20,929
Re: .50 cal

Quote:
Originally posted by CSB
I've heard this .50 cal bulls--t before, along with comments that the following are prohibited by "Geneva Conventions":

- handcuffing prisoners of war.
- blindfolding prisoners of war.
- photographing prisoners of war.
- males searching female prisoners of war.
- use of silenced weapons.

In fact, of course, none of the above are prohibited.
"use of silenced weapons."

Whew, well that's a relief!!
__________________
"The Spartans do not ask how many are the enemy, but where they are."
Team Sergeant is offline  
Old 04-29-2004, 23:46   #5
KevinB
Asset
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: No Longer Canada...
Posts: 53
IIRC with the MK211 Raufos is illegal to intentionally ( ) engage personnel due to som eissue about payload in a round under a certain weight - that is some one of our 'force mod' guys but he cited the Hague Convnetion and one of our AJAG's when he gave it to me...

But it was just a HTI mission that went wrong...
__________________
Your Village called - they want their idiot back...
KevinB is offline  
Old 04-30-2004, 03:12   #6
Radar Rider
Guerrilla Chief
 
Radar Rider's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Fayetteville
Posts: 796
Am I the only one that thinks it's horseshit to define which weapons or calibers of weapons that one might use to kill another human being are restricted? Yeah, I know that the conventions are based on those that might survive, but, if you kill them, then no problem.

I don't want an argument about the Geneva Convention and the "Inhumanity" of certain weapons. If its WAR, its WAR. I'm sorry that people suffer or God forbid DIE. But that's the nature.
Radar Rider is offline  
Old 04-30-2004, 04:07   #7
Solid
Guerrilla Chief
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: NC
Posts: 995
While I'd agree with you in terms of weapons, the idea of war being an utter free-for-all devoid of rules is probably not the best. Look at what those soldiers did to Iraqi prisoners.
However, the Geneva Convention and Laws of Land Warfare were designed to govern the actions of countries, primarily 1st world, fighting each other. We aren't fighting those kind of countries anymore (unless France steps out of line again..), so unfortunately our enemy cannot be trusted to follow the laws.

Nevertheless, I'd argue that that does not effect our position.

JMO from a theoretical view,

Solid
Solid is offline  
Old 04-30-2004, 09:06   #8
CPTAUSRET
Gun Pilot
 
CPTAUSRET's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Iowa and New Mexico
Posts: 2,143
Quote:
Originally posted by Radar Rider
Am I the only one that thinks it's horseshit to define which weapons or calibers of weapons that one might use to kill another human being are restricted? Yeah, I know that the conventions are based on those that might survive, but, if you kill them, then no problem.
I have heard the argument that Flechette weapons should be outlawed, they were a pretty effective weapon when utilized correctly though not something to be utilized in a CAS role:

We spent some time working with Mohawks using HAC FLIR and people sniffers, flying over the U-Minh forest during the hours of darkness. The Mohawks would call a hack every time they received a strong indicator of urine, body odor, campfires, human excrement, or whatever they were dialed in for, someone following them on radar would plot and eventually triangulate positions of troop strength.

My heavy team of Cobras would be standing by (with no protection whatsoever) parked on an makeshift airfield with a jp-4 blivet and Flechette rockets, we would be scrambled, fly pretty much blacked out guided by the same radar controllers who had triangulated the Mohawks findings. At approx 1 mile out we would start our dive (can't remember the altitude we were using, probably 1000ft AGL) the radar controller would advise us at 1/4 mile from target On Target, and 1/4 mile past and we would we would dump 1/3 of our load at each mark.

Then with our night vision completely gone we would fly back rearm and refuel and wait for the next scramble, we usualy took a few hits on these missions, although I don't remember losing anyone. Troops were inserted into the areas we hit (BDA) and reports filtered back, lots of blood, bloody tracks where they drug off their dead, and even of people nailed to trees (I took that one with a grain of salt).

For some reason these missions were halted, never found out why.

Terry
__________________
E7-CW3-direct commission VN
B model gunship pilot 65-66 Soc Trang, Cobra Pilot 68-69-70 Can Tho Life member 101st Airborne Association
CPTAUSRET is offline  
Old 04-30-2004, 13:24   #9
FullGallop
SF Candidate
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Blood on the Bluegrass
Posts: 98
Thanks for clearing that up Gentlemen!

Afterall I could'nt see the humanitarian difference of using a .50 over using indirect fire.
FullGallop is offline  
Old 08-04-2008, 12:46   #10
Michamus
Currently in a Time Out
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 8
Question "Doc" and his .50cal

Hello,
I know this is an old thread, however this question is on topic.

I have a question in regard to Medical Personnel and the use of large caliber weapons. I have heard that under the Geneva Convention, Medical Personnel are not authorized to utilize large caliber weapons (ig. M2, M240, MK-19). I have read all 4 Conventions and 3 Protocols. I have yet to find a definitive answer to this. Any help would be appreciated.
Michamus is offline  
Old 08-04-2008, 13:01   #11
Kyobanim
Moderator
 
Kyobanim's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Central Florida
Posts: 3,045
Michamus,

Now would be a good time to read the welcome email you received and follow the guidelines.

Thank you for your service.
__________________
"Are you listening or just waiting to talk?"


Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.

"Fate rarely calls upon us at a moment of our choosing."
Optimus Prime
Kyobanim is offline  
Old 08-04-2008, 13:25   #12
CSB
Quiet Professional
 
CSB's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Clarksville, TN
Posts: 1,159
Medics with Large Caliber / Crew Served Weapons

This is your JAG speaking (again):


See: "The Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in the Armed Forces in the Field" August 12, 1949 Commonly known as the First Geneva Convention; soldiers are generally much more familiar with the Third Geneva Convention (relative to the treatment of prisoners of war).

See: Chapter III, Article 21:

The protection [from attack] to which fixed establishments and mobile medical units of the Medical Service are entitled shall not cease unless they are used to commit, outside of their humanitarian duties, acts harmful to the enemy ...

Article 22:

The following conditions shall not be considered as depriving a medical unit or establishment of the protection guarenteed by Article 19:

(1) That the personnel of the unit or establishment are armed, and that they use the arms in their own defense, or of that of the wounded and sick in their charge.

(2) That, in the absence of armed orderlies, the unit is protected by picket or sentries or by an escort.

...

=====

And so the position of the United States Army is that medical personnel may carry side arms (pistols) for their immediate personal defense and the defense of their patients. The use of large caliber/crew-served weapons is generally considered beyond the scope of "immediate personnel defense."

Unless the medical personnel are abusing their protected status ("hiding behind the Red Cross") the use of a medic in a soldier's role, for example, on a watch tower, even if armed with an M60 / M2 machine gun, is lawful, but may cause the medic to lose his protected status as a non-combatant, (meaning the bad guys can shoot him without committing war crime). In other words, it may cost him the protections of the First Convention (protected medical personnel) but does not cost the medic his rights to the Third Convention as a prisoner of war if captured.
CSB is offline  
Old 08-04-2008, 13:48   #13
Michamus
Currently in a Time Out
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 8
I appreciate the reply. I remember reading that and it still seems vague to me. Perhaps that is the point? Either way it would seem to me that as long as you are not "currently" operating in a "medical" fashion, then there is no issue (ig. a Line Medic as a Gunner).
Michamus is offline  
Old 08-09-2008, 01:57   #14
optactical
Quiet Professional
 
optactical's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Ft Bragg
Posts: 139
I love this debate, it really gets me wondering how fucking stupid people are.

If you believe for one second, hell, one half second I can't shoot an enemy with .50 Cal, then why the hell do we develop muntions like 40mm, 60mm, 81mm, 4.2 inch, 120mm, 105mm, 155mm, 500 lbers, 2000 lbers, MOABs, H-bombs, A-bombs, 20 Kiloton warheads, 20 megaton warheads, and the freaking list goes on...

You can use all those, but please, oh please, don't shoot a guy with 50 cal, that's just crazy! I doesn't matter if it's ROUFUS or ball, it's war and I want to kill a muldoon, I'm not gonna stop a TIC (excuse me guys, gotta reload, I was ready to interdict vehicles, thanks!) to rechamber. How ridiculous is that?

Get real, I see a better argument for uniform corrections on the battlefield that for this bullshit.
__________________
The enemy IS reading this.
optactical is offline  
Old 08-09-2008, 03:40   #15
JJ_BPK
Quiet Professional
 
JJ_BPK's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: 18 yrs upstate NY, 30 yrs South Florida, 20 yrs Conch Republic, now chasing G-Kids in NOVA & UK
Posts: 11,901
I don't suppose that it would make much difference to the anti-gun peace-niks,,

But if you get into a conversation about weapons of war,, you might want to mention that George Washington was found of the Brown Bess musket.

Bess is one of several smooth bore flintlock musket styles used by Civilians and the Army in the American Revolution.

Muskets at that time used round lead balls,, the caliber??

.62 to .75 inch bore, equivalent to the modern 16 & 12 Ga shotgun??? Which we still carry in combat.

Both military arms and civilian hunting weapons used large caliber round lead ball up through the American Civil War, circa 1865.

The reason, Black Powder is a slow burning propellant, so to do any damage you needed a large projectile.

Even during the Civil War, the prevalent weapons were .58 caliber Springfield musket and the .69 caliber Harpers Ferry Rifle..

It wasn't until smokeless powder was readily available in the late 1800, that the size of rifle projectiles became smaller..

and one other small note,,

In discussing the 2nd amendment,, Civilian weapons and Military weapons, in the context of the American Revolution war,, are exactly the same gun..

Just a bit of our history...
__________________
Go raibh tú leathuair ar Neamh sula mbeadh a fhios ag an diabhal go bhfuil tú marbh

"May you be a half hour in heaven before the devil knows you’re dead"
JJ_BPK is offline  
Closed Thread


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Rumsfeld Targets 'Future Threats' Valhal The Early Bird 0 02-25-2004 23:28



All times are GMT -6. The time now is 22:29.



Copyright 2004-2022 by Professional Soldiers ®
Site Designed, Maintained, & Hosted by Hilliker Technologies