Hardin,
I don't agree with your assessment.
First, a Cooper quote:
The more I ponder the matter the more I am led to believe that a man alone, fighting for his survival, is probably better armed with a good, strong modern sporter than he is with any form of battle rifle. If it comes to equipping "private armies" we deal with a totally different subject. If I were called upon to do so, I would probably go to the H&K line, though there is a good deal to be said for…
Read what the guy has to say. He thinks that rifles like the general-purpose rifle have no place (or at least a limited role) in modern armies, especially when the powers-that-be aren't willing to invest in enough training to turn inexperienced city boys into marksmen (if such a thing is even possible). This is appropriate in an age where 90% of battlefield casualties are the result of a radio call – "Adjust fire, over."
The problem is that in any engagement any of us are likely to see (assuming our infantry days are behind us) we'll be standing alone, or with the few friends we trust enough to train with. If it's you and your four closest friends against a numerically superior force, it's suicidal to try and establish fire superiority, even if you
could get select-fire weapons (ambushes may be the exception here, but claymores or improvised munitions may be much more effective in this situation anyway).
It's a misuse of the term, but "sniping" would be a better approach in a "man alone" scenario, or one where it's a small force against a much larger one. If your combatants can hit what they're aiming at, are firing an effective round, have the discipline to limit their fire to one or two rounds per location, and have the field skills to move undetected to another firing position, then you have a team that's got an incredibly high lethality, even against a numerically superior force. Or at least, that's the theory.
If the theory is correct, then a scout rifle is an excellent arm for the task. If you disagree, then you'll choose to arm yourself differently. You have to admit that the idea has some merit though.
For a rifle to be TRULY versatile, it needs a .22 conversion unit, a blast reducer,a nd it needs to be concealable in an attache case or gym bag, because most of the "high-value" targets are in urban environments.
I'm sorry; I don't know what you're trying to say here. Is that your definition of "TRULY versatile," intended to combat Cooper's definition of a Scout? If so, "what's it for?"
To say that the possessor of a good rifle is a citizen rather than a subject is to imply that such a gun's owner is able to resist tyranny to an EFFECTIVE degree. What else CAN this mean but firing upon Big Brother's minions? If you try THAT with a Scout, you will shortly become a martyr.
Personal observation: I did my time as an 11C almost a decade ago, and my inability to hang in a high-speed unit (shoulders dislocate way too easily) meant I got assigned to an armored unit in Deutschland. We were the only infantry platoon in the battalion (4.2" Mortars), so we got tapped every time the line companies had to do their yearly testing (ARTEP?) We used to tear them up – in the worst example a .45 Government Model killed
five M1 Abrams tanks. A .308 bolt action would have performed nicely, thank you.
It's a question of tactics – you're right in that trying to apply current military doctrine to an army armed with bolt-action rifles would be insanely stupid. You're wrong to assume there's only one way to fight.
Your problem here isn't with the arm in question, as much less can be used effectively (see earlier example). Your problem here is that you haven't thought about your scenarios creatively -- if TSHTF and you fight the way your enemy fights, you've lost before the first round is fired.
Oh – one more Cooper quote:
A really good rifleman, with a really good rifle in his hands, is a man of stout heart. He knows what he can do and he looks down upon those who cannot do the same. I was one told by a very experienced and battlewise officer, who later became Commandant of the Marine Corps, that he would rather attack ten machineguns working together than one platoon of riflemen who could shoot.
Having said all that, if I had to walk into the "man alone" scanario, I might still choose an M1 over a Scout rifle. Maybe.