Norway's Home Guard has added some serious reach to its toolkit. Their school recently completed the first instructor course and several initial user courses on the new 12.7mm MØR, the Barrett M107A1, now rolling out across the Heimevernet. Instructor cadres qualified first, then turned around and ran the first operator courses, with the school noting high motivation and strong engagement from students throughout. The rollout continues with additional courses and further competency building across the force.
The Barrett M107A1 is a recoil-operated, semi-automatic anti-materiel rifle chambered in .50 BMG (12.7x99mm NATO), based on the long-serving M82 platform that the Norwegian Armed Forces have operated since the 1990s. The A1 variant brings meaningful improvements over the original M82: a titanium barrel key reduces weight by around 5 pounds, a suppressor-ready muzzle brake cuts back on signature and hearing risk, and an improved bolt carrier group reduces cyclic rate to limit stress on the system.
Effective range against materiel targets sits at around 1,800 meters, making it a credible capability for both force protection and precision interdiction at range.
The “Heimevernet” fields around 45,000 soldiers organized into area-based rapid reaction forces responsible for territorial defense across Norway. Pushing the M107A1 down into that structure, supported by proper instructor pipelines, is a meaningful step toward the kind of distributed anti-materiel capability that makes a territorial defense network genuinely difficult to operate against.
If you ever claim to have a shooting range with a view, you have to consider this as a benchmark.
Photos: Heimevernets skole- og kompetansesenter