Hand to hand combat
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Combatives FM 21-150 Figure 4-1, Vital Targets. |
Hand to hand combat (sometimes abbreviated as HTH or H2H) is a generic term for close quarters fighting, particularly when the outcome is likely to be fatal, as in
mêlée military
combat or a
duel. This distinguishes it from
combat sport. Usually the phrase "hand-to-hand" (in Spanish
Mano-a-mano) indicates unarmed combat or combat using improvised "field expedient" or muscle-powered weapons such as clubs or knives.
Close combat is the common term for
combat within close range. It may include lethal and nonlethal methods across a "spectrum of violence" or within a "
continuum of force" as established by
rules of engagement. Unarmed close combat is sometimes called
combatives. Close combat with weapons may be called at the squad level. Current
NATO terminology is to use
MOUT for higher-level strategic and tactical considerations of
urban warfare or
MOOTW for "military operations other than war" such as
peacekeeping or disaster relief.
Combatives is a term used to describe various
hybrid martial arts, which incorporate techniques from several different
martial arts and
combat sports. Unlike combat sports, such systems usually have limited
sport application and often focus on simple techniques for use in
self-defense or
combat.
As defined by US Army
FM 21-150 Combatives:
Hand-to-hand combat is an engagement between two or more persons in an empty-handed struggle or with handheld weapons such as knives, sticks, and rifles with bayonets. These fighting arts are essential military skills. Projectile weapons may be lost or broken, or they may fail to fire. When friendly and enemy forces become so intermingled that firearms and grenades are not practical, hand-to-hand combat skills become vital assets.
Also known as
hand to hand combat, close combat is the most ancient form of fighting known to man. A majority of cultures have their own particular histories related to close combat, and their own methods of practice. There are many varieties including
martial arts,
boxing, and
wrestling. Other variations include the
gladiator spectacles of ancient Rome and
medieval tournament events such as
jousting.
Military organizations have always taught some sort of unarmed combat for conditioning and as a supplement to armed combat. Soldiers in
China were trained in unarmed combat as early as the
Zhou Dynasty (1022 BC to 256 BC).
[See Jiao li.]Even through major technological changes such as the use of gunpowder in the
Napoleonic wars, the machine gun in the
Russo-Japanese War and the
trench warfare of
World War I, hand-to-hand fighting methods such as
bayonet remained common in modern military training though the importance of formal training declined after 1918. During the Second World War, bayonet fighting was often not taught at all among the major combatants; German rifles by 1944 were even being produced without bayonet lugs (see Cyrus Lee's SOLDAT books).
Sometimes called
close combat,
Close Quarters Combat, or
CQC, contemporary American combatives was largely codified by
William Ewart Fairbairn and
Eric Anthony Sykes. Also known for their eponymous
Fairbairn-Sykes fighting knife, Fairbairn and Sykes had worked in the
Shanghai Municipal Police (SMP) and helped teach the
British armed forces [
1] a quick and effective and simple technique for fighting with or without weapons in
melee situations. Similar training was provided to British
Commandos, the
Devil's Brigade,
OSS,
U.S. Army Rangers and
Marine Raiders. Fairbairn at one point called this system
Defendu and published on it, as did their American colleague
Rex Applegate. Fairbairn often referred to the technique as "gutter fighting," a term which Applegate used, along with "the Fairbairn system." In practice, such military systems are the fruit of dozens and even hundreds of dedicated instructors and personnel, known and unknown.
Other combatives systems having their origins in the modern military include Chinese
San Shou, Soviet
sambo, and Israeli
Kapap&
Krav Maga W. Hock Hochheim's The Scientific Fighting Congress.
The prevalence and style of combatives training often changes based on perceived need, and even in times of peace,
special forces and
commando units tend to have a much higher emphasis on close combat than most personnel, as will
paramilitary units such as police
SWAT teams.
De-emphasized in major militaries (except within the
United States Marine Corps) after
World War II,
insurgency conflicts such as the
Vietnam War,
low intensity conflict and
urban warfare tend to encourage more attention to combatives. The general discipline of close-proximity fighting with weapons is often called (
CQB) at the platoon or squad level, or
Military Operations on Urban Terrain (
MOUT) at higher tactical levels. The current
Marine Corps Martial Arts Program (MCMAP) replaced the
Marine Corps LINE combat system in 2002. The 2002
US Army field manual, written by Matt Larsen, put a much stronger emphasis on techniques such as which could be drilled for consistent individual skill and unit cohesion.
Most civilian instructors in hand-to-hand combat train
police,
martial artists or
combat sport athletes, but some may train civilians for private self-defense.
The very things which make
combatives well-adapted for military training (simplicity, ease of use, modest physical demands) also make it suitable in many ways for civilian self-defense, and the world's military forces train thousands of combatives instructors every year. Frequently emphasizing their law-enforcement, corrections or military background, many combatives instructors also offer training to law enforcement agencies, the military, private individuals,
security guards or
companies. Regulated in the
United States much as private tutors, , private
gun shops or
private security agencies, some combatives systems are expanding into other markets and niches worldwide.
Some non-military systems may include basic training in edged weapons,
baton, stick or
firearm techniques such as
point shooting. A partial list of such systems might include:
*
Bartitsu (
Edward William Barton-Wright's 1890s system)
*BlitzDefence (Developed in Germany, Based on the
Leung Ting WingTsun™ System)
*
Defendo (Bill Underwood's System; AKA Combato and Underwood Systems)
*
Defendu (developed by
William E. Fairbairn; AKA Close Quarters Combat System, Gutter Fighting, Fairbairn System)
*EBMAS (
Emin Boztepe Martial Arts System),
*
Kapap (having its origins in
Israel, the
Haganah movement)
*
Keysi Fighting Method (from
Jeet Kune Do)
*
Model Mugging (
feminist self-defense, also known as "Impact")
*
Systema (Russian Martial Art)
*
Wing Chun (Scientific-based Chinese Martial Arts System)
*
Close combat*
Close quarters battle (CQB)
*
Combat sport*
Combatives*
Duel*
Hybrid martial arts*
List of martial arts*
List of modern infantry-related terms and acronyms*
MCMAP*
Pugil stick*
Urban warfareBooks of Interest
*
Close Combat (MCRP 3-02B), USMC, February 1999. Commercial ISBN 1581600739
Get Tough! by
William E. Fairbairn, 1942. Details basic
commando techniques. Reprint ISBN 0873640020
Kill or Get Killed by
Rex Applegate, 1943. Widely redistributed within the
USMC from 1991 as FMFRP 12-80. ISBN 0873640845
*
In Search of the Warrior Spirit: Teaching Awareness Disciplines to the Green Berets by Richard Strozzi-Heckler. 3rd edition ISBN 1556434251
Fleet Marine Force Manual (FMFM) 0-7, Close Combat,
USMC, July 1993.
Combatives : FM 3-25.150 Commercial reprint of 2002 U.S. Army manual incorporates
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. ISBN 1581604483
*
Training Mission One, Training Mission Two, Training Mission Three Training Mission Four by W. Hochheim are the first four levels of a 10 level book series on Hand, Stick, Knife and Gun Self Defense. Also written by W. Hock Hochheim is Military Knife Combat and Unarmed vs. the Knife. Hock has 80+ dvds on the subject of self-defense and produces dvds by others on many defense topics through High Home Productions. They may all be purchased at www.HocksCQC.com/shop
*
Excerpts from 1942 War Department FM 21-150*
Articles on Self defence*
EBMAS*
E-Budo forum on U.S .Army FM 3-25.150*
International Close Combat Instructors Association*
United States Combative Arts Association *[https://www.infantry.army.mil/combatives/ U.S. Army 11th Infantry Regiment Combatives Training Center]
*
US Army FM 3-25-150: Combatives