Rather than guess, try an experiment - measure the starting torque required to get the scope moving. This could be done by applying a force with a spring balance at a known radius (this would be a small number so an appropriately sensitive spring balance would be required).
For example say you applied the spring balance at 100mm radius (0.1m) and you get a starting force of 0.1kg.
For a steadily applied load a Newton (N) = kg x g (gravitational constant 9.81m/s2)
Torque = force x distance it is applied at
Therefore the measured starting torque = 0.1 x 9.81 x 0.1 = 0.0981 Nm
Multiply by 1000 to get mNm (milli newton meters) = 98.1mNm.
Remeber also, a reduction gearbox will multiply the torque by the same ratio e.g a 100:1 ratio will give approx 100x more torque!
The spring balance is not too accurate but it should get you in the right ball park. I hope this helps.
Dave G