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Firearms

The M24: America’s Headhunter

July 10, 2025 by Ajita Sherer 3 Comments

Every rifle makes a snap when fired, but some rifles make history with the same action. The M24 does both, but mostly the latter. In a world gone mad with high-rate-of-fire platforms and tactical gear that looks better on Instagram than it performs in the field, the M24 bolt-action rifle remains a stoic monument to American marksmanship. The M24 is a purpose-built tool forged for the hands of warriors who deal in patience, calculation, and terminal precision. Based on the venerable Remington 700 long action, and chambered in 7.62x51mm NATO, the M24 earned its reputation the hard way: one shot, one kill.

Origin and Development

When the Army went looking for a new sniper system in the 1980s, it wanted more than a scoped rifle. The Army wanted to prioritize consistency, accuracy, and adaptability. Enter the M24 Sniper Weapon System. Officially adopted in 1988, the rifle marked a shift from Vietnam-era improvisation to standardized excellence. Unlike its predecessors, the M24 was designed from the ground up to be a sniper rifle, not a hunting gun retrofitted with a scope, or a WW2 era platform that GI’s made work. The long-action Remington 700 platform was chosen to allow for a potential caliber upgrade to .300 Winchester Magnum, a move that many elite units eventually made.

This choice alone showed that the Army was investing in a platform that could grow with the mission. The result was a rifle system that would remain in service for over 30 years, evolving alongside the changing face of warfare.

Design and Optics

The M24 is a masterclass in doing more with less. At its core is a simple bolt-action system, no gas system to clean, no reciprocating mass to affect accuracy. Just a buttery-smooth bolt, a free-floating heavy barrel, and an H-S Precision stock with an aluminum bedding block. That stock was adjustable for length of pull, a revelation at the time, and rugged enough to survive air drops, dirt, sand, and the general disrespect of war.

Perched on top was the Leupold M3A 10x fixed power scope. No variable zoom. No illuminated reticle. Just mil-dots, a focus ring, and the knowledge that your dope better be squared away. If you wanted a first-round hit, you had to understand your environment, wind, humidity, angle, and mirage. That level of training made M24 gunners not just shooters, but scientists of ballistics. Many a sharpshooter was made behind the controls of the M24.

Field Use and Effectiveness

From the streets of Mogadishu to the peaks of Takur Ghar, the M24 earned its place in military folklore. It was standard issue for Army snipers during Operations Just Cause, Desert Storm, Iraqi Freedom, and Enduring Freedom. Its effective range with 7.62x51mm NATO rounds hovered around 800 meters, but with .300 Win Mag conversions, many shooters pushed it beyond 1,200 meters, which, to be honest, is absolutely insane.

The rifle wasn’t flashy, but it was deadly consistent. It demanded respect, and it returned results. Multiple reports from the field confirmed the M24’s ability to punch through light cover, maintain sub-MOA groups, and deliver lethal effects on target in the hands of properly trained operators. This was a chess game at 900 yards, and the M24 played to win.

Legacy and Continued Use

Even with the introduction of modern semi-automatic sniper systems like the M110 SASS and the MK 20 SSR, the M24 has held on. Why? Because precision doesn’t go out of style. Plenty of law enforcement units still deploy it for hostage rescue and overwatch roles. Civilian shooters compete with it in PRS matches. Veterans rebuild them in their garages, chasing sub-MOA nostalgia with upgraded chassis, barrels, and optics.

The M24 set the standard for bolt-action sniper rifles. It laid the foundation for the Army’s current M2010 Enhanced Sniper Rifle and inspired countless commercial imitators. If you’ve ever owned a tactical Remington 700, you owe a nod to the M24, bonus points if you’ve kryloned it in your shooting shed.

Call of Duty Modern Warfare’s M24 Clone

Cultural Presence

The M24 is a symbol, a long gun of American mythos that everyone recognizes, whether they know what it’s called or not. It shows up in military sims like “ARMA” and “Squad,” gets trigger time in “Call of Duty,” and shows off in movies like “Shooter,” “American Sniper,” and “Black Hawk Down.” It’s the rifle that doesn’t need a dramatic soundtrack. Its presence says enough.

Ask any veteran who ran one, and you’ll hear the same thing: the M24 was a rifleman’s rifle. No electronic gimmicks. No shortcut to proficiency. You got results only if you earned them. It built better shooters and better stories.

Conclusion

The M24 defined a generation of precision shooting. It turned young soldiers into long-range surgeons. It taught patience, discipline, and the value of doing one thing exactly right. M24 still stands tall, quiet, deliberate, and lethal.

So here’s to the hunter. The one-shot killer. The rifle that taught a generation of warriors the value of waiting, watching, and never wasting a round. The M24 may not shout, but it always speaks with authority.

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About the Author

Ajita Sherer Ajita Sherer spent eight years on active duty in the U.S. Air Force and currently serves as an employee of the DoD, dedicating his career to Combat Rescue. As an engine troop and later a Flying Crew Chief on CSAR C-130Js, he deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan in support of SOF missions, often serving as the sole mechanic on aircraft deep in contested environments. Working closely with Air Force Pararescue (PJs), JTACs, and Combat Controllers, as well as Navy SEALs, Army Rangers, and our sister country's Tier 1 units, he provided direct support to some of the military’s most demanding rescue and combat operations. He is most proud of his role in real-world rescue missions in Operation Inherent Resolve, saving lives and delivering trauma care to SOF teams and Marine Task Force Lion. Now an Aerospace Propulsion curriculum developer, Sherer is solely responsible for developing curriculum and training the next generation of engine system maintainers on more than 70% of all Air Force aircraft, to include his former CSAR platforms.

See All Ajita Sherer Articles

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