| |   |  True Story: A Marine’s Sniper Rifle Failed During a Shootout—He Called Customer Service.  Yes, this is real. 
   by  Task and Purpose   Jared Keller       “It’s probably one of the biggest highlights of my  life, to be able to help a Marine unit during a firefight,” Cook told  National Geographic. 
   The  Barrett M107 .50-caliber long-range sniper rifle   is a firearm made for the modern war on terrorism. Officially adopted  by the U.S. Army in 2002 and boasting a 2,000-meter range, a  suppressor-ready muzzle brake, and recoil-minimizing design, the  semi-automatic offers “greater range and lethality against personnel and  materiel targets than other sniper systems in the U.S. inventory,” in  an  assessment by Military.com .     While Barrett’s  reputation  of “flawless reliability” has made the M107 the sniper weapon of  choice, the rifle is just like any other essential tool: It often breaks  when you need it most. And that’s apparently what happened to one  Marine Corps unit pinned down in a firefight, according to one of  Barrett’s longtime armorers.      (This first appeared several months ago.) 
   Don Cook, a Marine veteran who’s been maintaining M107s for more than  two decades, told National Geographic in 2011 that he one day received a  call to Barrett’s workshop from a harried young Marine. During  maintenance of the unit’s M107, the Marine had bent the ears of the  rifle’s lower receiver; the next day, after engaging the enemy, they  discovered the rifle wouldn’t fire consistently.     Despite the unit’s lack of tools (and time), Cook knew exactly what  to do. The armorer instructed the Marines to use the bottom of the  carrier to bend the ears back down. Within 45 seconds, the weapon was  firing properly. “Thank you very much,” Cook says they told him, then he  heard a dial tone. They had a firefight to get back to. 
  “It’s probably one of the biggest highlights of my life, to be able  to help a Marine unit during a firefight,” Cook told National  Geographic. 
   Watch him recount the incident himself  in this excerpt   from Sniper Inc, the National Geographic documentary about the Barrett  family and the story of the M107 (the story begins at 9:26).    This article by Jared Keller originally   appeared at Task & Purpose last month. 
  nationalinterest.org |  
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