aircrew defense

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Combative Measures Instructor Training (Judo) Air Crew Self-Defense Techniques February 1963 Stead Air Force Base Student Study Guide 140004-3 (Academic) ----------------For Instructional Purposes Only--------------

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Page 1: Aircrew Defense

Combative Measures Instructor Training (Judo)

Air Crew Self-Defense Techniques

February 1963

Stead Air Force Base

Student Study Guide 140004-3 (Academic)

----------------For Instructional Purposes Only--------------

Page 2: Aircrew Defense

AIR CREW SELF-DEFENSE TECHNIQUES Presentation of Air Crew Self-Defense Techniques or Unarmed Combative Measures Training is another step the U.S. Air Force has taken to take care of its own. The crew member plays a valuable role in the defense of our nation's heritage, and he, therefore, deserves every right to continue to enjoy this heritage. To preserve this intangible property our flyers must be able to go on to an enemy target and return. To accomplish this, our country not only provides the finest equipment available for accomplishment of the primary mission, it also provides the air crewman with extensive knowledge of proven methods of survival and the equipment to enable him to effect a safe return in the event an emergency puts him into a survival or evasion situation. What with training in survival on both land and water, escape and evasion, survival weapons, resistance, and unarmed combative measures, together with the maintenance of a capable rescue service, a flyer can rest assured that every means has been taken to provide for his return. Unarmed combative measures may be considered a "last resort" method of survival. When all else fails, unarmed combative measures can be relied on as one more "ace in the hole" to call upon. It would be good to be able to say "I won't ever have to use that," but it is much better to know that you are capable of using this "ace in the hole" if the need arises. (See Figure 1.)

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The training which you will receive at this school will give you the ability to apply the principles of attack and defense, to apply effective chokes, to defend yourself against chokes and both rear and frontal body attacks. You will learn the way to use a knife as a weapon and how to defend yourself against somebody else's knife. You will learn how to deal with an enemy armed with a pistol or rifle. You will learn to maneuver for control and how to throw an attacking enemy and apply counters and combinations in hand-to-hand combat. Above all else you should learn when to attempt and when not to attempt to use knowledge and skill you will gain. PRINCIPLES OF ATTACK AND DEFENSE

Objectives The student will: 1. Be able to coordinate his movements and fall so as to facilitate accomplishment of unarmed combative techniques. 2. Understand how to deliver and avoid blows to vulnerable areas. 3. Be able to apply the techniques of mixed fighting using karate and judo movement in standing and ground positions.

Introduction Unarmed combative measures might be defined as "the amount of fighting which, if you are weaponless, is necessary to overcome your attacker." Since we talk in terms of "maximum efficiency with a minimum of effort," we seek to use the measures appropriate to any given situation. In this lesson we discover the simpler methods of moving and striking which will take care of many situations. Good body management will move you from the more dangerous positions in front of your attacker and enable you to counterattack by providing the opportunity to deliver effective blows to his most vulnerable areas. In this lesson, you will not only discover which of your attacker's vulnerable areas will be exposed to you under various types of attack, but you will also learn which blow will be effective.

Study Assignment Pages 5-16, SACM 50-10B.

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Supplementary Information Americans brought up in the environment of fair play and consideration for others are not normally proficient in disposing of an adversary in a "rough-and-tumble" fight. When it comes to "kill or be killed," you must know how to bring into play measures which you may never have considered before --in order to preserve your own life. You must be ready to gouge, kick, knee an attacker's groin, and use many other "unethical" forms of attack. You must be ready to crush an enemy's skull or separate his vertebrae with a stamp of your foot. You must be able to use knuckles, fists, and elbows as they have never been used before. When you have the enemy down, don't let him up. Kicking and stamping techniques may be used most effectively in this situation. If you have been knocked down, you should know enough about falling to fall without injury to yourself, and immediately to protect yourself from his boots or other means of attack. The trained person can be very dangerous even when on the ground. (See Figures 2, 3, 4, 5.)

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Feet are fine defensive weapons and will keep your attacker at a respectful distance. If he does attempt to get inside your guard, you can inflict damage in varying degrees, depending on where you direct your blows. Vulnerable areas are the kneecap, groin, abdomen, ribs, throat, and face. One important thing to remember is to fight defensively until you have your opponent off balance. Give way as your adversary presses to the attack. This should effect his off-balance. He expects to have his attack resisted, therefore, he exerts enough force to accomplish his attack. If you "give way" and do not provide the resistance he expects, you will maintain good balance while he puts himself in an off-balance position which makes it hard for him to defend himself.

Question What is meant by "giving way" under attack, and how will it affect your attacker? Have you ever seen a person try to force himself into a room when the door is locked? He puts his shoulder to it and pushes. If it doesn't give on the first try, he will again try, using additional force. Now, what would happen if someone unlocked the door and turned the knob just as he was giving it the third try? He would probably charge through and fall on his face! The same principles would apply if you "gave way" under a similar type of attack. Add knowledge of the karate striking techniques of the vulnerable areas, and his helplessness in off-balance position gives you a decided advantage.

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The measures you should take when your attacker is off-balance, or when you are in a close quarter fighting situation are predominantly striking techniques. One well-directed blow can save you much struggling. After you have learned the art of body movement and balance, the next step is to learn to inflict damage on your attacker. You will learn how to deliver blows most effectively, and what areas of the body to strike. This training is called "karate." It is derived from an ancient form of fighting originating in the Far East. Here you use your natural weapons. Your hands, feet, elbows, and knees make fine offensive weapons, and they can be an effective deterrent in defense against many types of attack. Evan an attacker wielding a knife, a gun, or a stick can be overcome if you properly apply the principles and techniques which you will learn during this training. (See Figures 5A, 5B.)

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CHOKES AND DEFENSE AGAINST REAR AND FRONTAL BODY ATTACKS

Objectives The student will: 1. Warm up and review the previous lesson. 2. Be able to defend himself against and apply chokes. 3. Be able to defend himself against body attacks. 4. Be able to follow through and put his attacker at a disadvantage and disable him.

Introduction In hand-to-hand fighting with an enemy, you must expect the dirtiest, most unethical type of fighting you have ever been exposed to, and you must be prepared to resort to such tactics yourself. This lesson deals with the simplest and quickest ways of gaining the advantage over an enemy regardless of the type of attack he may use. One of the simplest means of gaining this advantage is to use your foot, knee, or elbow as a weapon. No matter what type of unarmed attack he makes, he must bring himself within range of your natural weapons. If he should grab you from behind, for example, a well placed elbow blow, or a stamp to his shin or arch should force him to release you. Against close in frontal attacks, a knee blow delivered to the groin should do the trick. If he should attempt to choke you, these same blows can be the means of preventing this action. You will also learn how to apply many chokes, without exposing yourself to the same dangers your attacker does when he attempts to choke you.

Study Assignment Pages 26-41, SACM 50-10B.

Supplementary Information Choking is one of the most useful methods of disposing of an enemy when it is necessary in an escape or evasion situation. (See Figures 6, 7, 7A.) A guard or sentry, who is posted well away from camp, can be quietly and efficiently taken care of in this manner, without arousing anyone with excessive noise.

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Question When is it not advisable to attempt to silence a guard with a choke? Choking is also effective in hand-to-hand combat. The use of the garrote, collar, and bare arm will provide a man with several choking methods to be used under various situations. With the exception of the garrote, the chokes taught in this course are used in the sport of judo. In judo, they are only used to make your opponent submit. If he doesn't indicate submission in time, he may very well be choked into unconsciousness, as the chokes take effect quite rapidly. In the sport of judo, after a man has been choked, a little resuscitation is all that is necessary for complete recuperation. In combat, however, these same chokes can be used to kill depending on how long the choke is held. When the collar choke or garrote is used, pressure is applied to the carotid arteries of the neck, thereby interrupting the circulation of blood to the brain. It requires only a few seconds to "black out" a person with this type of choke. In judo, joint-locking, like the chokes, is another method of getting your opponent to submit. Application of pressure to the elbow or shoulder joint will cause immediate submission before the joint can be damaged. Unlike the chokes, joint-locking causes excruciating pain, and your opponent will not hesitate to surrender. In the case of hand-to-hand combat with an enemy, you will not be concerned with making him "give up."

Question

If you succeed in getting a joint-lock on the enemy, what is your next step? Once in position to apply the lock, apply the force necessary to break the arm or shoulder. This will severely incapacitate your enemy, and it is quite possible that the pain will render him unconscious for a time. You will then be in a better position to take any further measures you deem necessary to continue your escape. USE OF AND DEFENSE AGAINST THE KNIFE

Objectives

The student will: 1. Warm up and review the previous lesson. 2. Understand how to use a knife effectively. 3. Understand how to defend against a knife attack. 4. Be able to use and defend against a club. 5. Be able to engage successfully in mixed randori-style, karate, knife, and club fighting.

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Introduction

Most aircrew members carry a knife as part of their equipment on combat missions, but few ever expect to use it as a means of defense and offense in personal combat. With very little training, a knife can be a formidable piece of emergency armament. If you find yourself without the regular sidearm, you may have to rely on your knife. A sentry may have to be taken out, in order for you to pass a remote post. An unsympathetic enemy civilian may resent your intrusion and attack with some crude weapon. A knife can be a real asset in these and similar circumstances.

Study Assignment Pages 42-54, SACM 50-10B.

Supplementary Information Although it would be a rare occasion when you must defend yourself against an enemy armed with only a knife, the possibility is ever present. To prepare for this eventuality, a portion of this course is devoted to knife fighting. Naturally a person who is well trained in handling a knife will be a difficult opponent to cope with. He can, however, be defeated with no other weapons than your hands and feet. The knife attacker can be held at a distance and made to respect a safety range by the proper use of kicking techniques. The length of an outstretched leg is normally quite a bit greater than that of the extended arm with a knife held in the hand. If the attacker attempts to press the attack, a few feints in the direction of his extended knee or groin will slow him down considerably. Scooping up a handful of dirt and throwing it in the attacker's face will also be a distraction, and possibly afford the opportunity to counter. Of course, if you can find a stick of almost any length to aid in your defense, you are in a much better position to overcome the enemy. The stick can be used both as an offensive and a defensive weapon. No attacker with a knife can take liberties with an individual holding even a short stick (fourteen to sixteen inches). A longer stick would naturally be much more effective. If your only weapon is a knife, your enemy will have to respect your weapon as much as you respect his. You should be fighting a defensive battle in any instance. The object is to make him come off balance by causing him to commit himself to a definite threat. Your counter will require short slashing movements at any exposed part of his body, after he has missed his thrust and thus created the off-balance needed for your advantage.

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Question Since your use of the knife would be primarily defensive, when would be the most opportune time to go on the offense? If he can be incapacitated, by several slashes to the wrist or leg, your eventual success is practically assured. Thus, with your defensive knife fighting, you are looking for one of two situations to present itself: One, the opportunity to incapacitate him with your defensive counter slashes; two, finding him completely off balance by his lunge so that he is momentarily defenseless. In either of these situations, he can be considered "ready for the kill."

USE OF AND DEFENSE AGAINST A PISTORL OR RIFLE

Objectives The student will: 1. Warm up and review the previous lesson. 2. Understand the use of and defense against a pistol or rifle. 3. Be able to disarm an enemy with a pistol or rifle. 4. Be able to successfully engage in standing and ground randori. Introduction An enemy soldier or guard holding you at gunpoint will make several mistakes, unless he is well trained in handling prisoners. One mistake on the enemy's part is all that is needed to enable a trained individual to successfully disarm the soldier or guard. The impatient guard can give you the opportunity for action when, to get you to move faster, he prods you in the back with his weapon. Or the gloating, overconfident captor may give you the opportunity when he sticks his weapon in your stomach to accentuate his orders. However, these instances may be rare. You must try to induce the wary guard into committing the one blunder which you can use to best advantage. The trained person is much harder to cope with because he will usually maintain a discreet distance. Disarming a person who holds a gun on you is always dangerous; nevertheless, it can be done with a better than even chance for success, if you choose the proper psychological moment. (See Figure 8.)

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Study Assignment Pages 55-63, SACM 50-10B.

Supplementary Information Usually the enemy soldier who confronts you will be armed with a pistol or rifle. An untrained person, because he lacks confidence, normally considers this a hopeless situation and resigns himself to his fate. A trained individual, however, is already in the process of evaluating the situation and figuring his chances of escape. At the first command, he knows enough to give way by obeying all orders quickly; he is also aware of the safety range, line of fire, and anything else about his captor that may give him an idea of how he can effect an escape. He is alert (See Figures 9-10) and waiting for the psychological time to act, and has concentrated his gaze on the eyes of his captor. Your captor's eyes will normally be a clue to his next move.

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As long as his gaze is fixed on your upraised arms or in that general vicinity, he is alert for any move you may make. This is not the time to attempt to disarm him. The psychological time to act is at that moment when he takes his eyes away from their original focal point. At this time, you captor's mind is not on you or your possible intentions, but on the object of his gaze -- your weapon or your pockets. He is not concentrating on the pulling of the trigger. If it is your gun he wants, or something in your pockets, his mind is occupied with these thoughts. It is well known that the mind cannot maintain two separate thoughts with equal concentration, therefore, when he is looking at the weapon in your holster or your pockets, his mind is not on the gun in his hand, much less on squeezing the trigger if you move. So when his eyes turn away from their original focal point, it is time for you to make your move, providing of course, the safety range is adequate. You know exactly what you are going to do, he does not. By the time he is aware of your movement, he must do several things. He must recover from the sensation, then interpret what has taken place, and finally pull the trigger. All this takes time, probably more time than it will take you to move your body out of the line of fire as you deflect the weapon, and use whatever follow-up is necessary.

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Question What is meant by "psychological timing"? In an attempt to disarm a person who has a pistol or rifle pointed at you, it is particularly important to evaluate the line of fire. The direction in which you move is dictated by the direction in which the weapon points in relation to your body. If the weapon is centered on your body, the direction (left or right) you choose is optional. However, if the weapon is pointed to your right side, your chances will be much better if you move your body to the left. This cuts down the amount of time your body is exposed to the weapon as you move out of the line of fire. For example, assume that the body is twelve inches across. If the weapon were pointed at the middle of the right side of your body and you moved to your right, nine inches of your body would pass the muzzle, whereas if you moved to the left, only three inches would be exposed to the muzzle. In other words, if you moved in the wrong direction, your body would be exposed to the line of fire three times as long as it would have been if you had moved properly.

Question What is meant by the "line of fire"? "Safety range" has been mentioned several times. The term should be clarified at this point. "Safety range" is that distance from the weapon (be it a knife, gun, stick or anything else) which permits you to act with a definite margin of safety. If you are to attempt to disarm a person holding a pistol or rifle on you, his weapon must be close enough that you can reach it with a minimum of forward motion. If the weapon is behind you, you must feel it poking into your back before it is advisable for you to attempt disarming. If you can feel the weapon in your back, you know where it is. If you can't feel it, you do not know whether it is one inch or several feet from you. If a knife is the weapon your attacker is wielding, the safety range is different. Here, you should keep several feet between you and your attacker. If you are close, he can cut you without too much effort on his part. If you are six feet or more away from him, he will have to lunge to reach you. This gives you time to move out of the line of his thrust and be ready to take whatever counter-measures are necessary to dispose of your attacker. THROWS, COUNTERS, COMBINATIONS, AND MANEUVERS FOR CONTROL

Objectives The student will: 1. Warm up and review the fundamentals of attack and defense, defense against body attacks, use of knife, and defense against knife, club, pistol, and rifle. 2. Be able to throw an enemy.

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3. Be able to perform combinations and maneuver for control. 4. Be able to successfully engage in general randori, using all techniques covered previously and to include counters to ground holddowns and chokes.

Introduction Throwing is a simple way of using your attacker's momentum and strength to your advantage. There is no mystery involved in the fact that a 100 pounder can throw a 200 pounder with no apparent effort. The law of physics regarding inertia is the "big secret." Since a body in motion tends to remain in motion, it only requires a little redirection of this motion to cause the person "in motion" to lose balance and fall. When you throw an opponent, you not only inflict serious injury as a result of his contact with the ground, but you are also in a position to control him as he lies on the ground and to use any other measures you may deem necessary at the time.

Study Assignment Pages 17-20, SACM 50-10B.

Supplementary Information In a judo contest, it is fairly difficult for a man to throw his opponent if the skills of the two are relatively equal. The greater the skill differential, the easier it becomes for the one to throw the other. In hand-to-hand fighting, however, it requires very little skill to be able to throw an opponent. This is due to the element of surprise. In the first place, your enemy is not aware of your capability nor of your intention to throw him. Secondly, he is too intent on what he is trying to accomplish to use good judgment. Again, you should be fighting defensively to set up the right off-balance situation. As he pushes you, he is off balance to the front and can be thrown in this direction if you use his momentum to your advantage. By the same token, if he is tugging or pulling at you, he is off balance to the rear. Your throwing effort should be in the rearward direction. Knowing the fundamentals of a few throws, and an understanding of the principles involved, makes throwing an unsuspecting attacker fairly easy.

Question In what direction would you throw a person who was starting to swing at you? Two examples of practical throwing methods are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. In Figure 11, the air crewman being attacked has been pushed backward. He has immediately given way under the force of his attacker's forward motion. By grabbing the attacker's arms and lowering his own body to the ground, the air crewman has increased the attacker's momentum and

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redirected his force. Now the attacker is off balance and cannot stop his forward movement. As the airman rolls on his back he brings his right leg up into the groin of his enemy and continues to pull on the enemy's arms. His attacker will continue to move over airman's body. By continuing to hold his attacker's arms, the air crewman will cause him to "flip over" to land on his head or back and suffer some injury or at least be "shaken up" considerably. This should make the enemy easy prey for the follow up.

In the second example, Figures 12, 13, 14, the off balance is to the rear. The crew member has been attacked from behind. By quickly "giving way" (in this case backing up quickly as the attacker pulls) the attacker has been off-balanced. He did not expect this reaction (non-resistance) to his pull. Now, as the attacker loses his balance the air crewman quickly makes a half pivot and places a leg behind the enemy. This action alone would probably cause the attacker to fall backward. However, to insure the fall and maintain complete control of the action, both legs of the attacker are grabbed at the knees and raised in a scooping motion. If the enemy continues to maintain his grasp, the airman need only drive the enemy into the ground by falling on him. The landing should be pretty rough on the attacker, and the air crewman is in good position to deliver destructive hand, elbow, knee, or foot blows depending on his own position when the attacker hits the ground. (See Figure 14.) One of the main points to remember in considering the use of throwing techniques is that the attacker expects you to resist his efforts in the accepted way, with resistance. If you "give way" and do not supply the resistance he is expecting, he is momentarily off balance, both mentally and physically. This is your opportunity to throw, and remember, always throw in the direction of his off-balance.

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In every situation, it is most advisable to get your opponent off balance before going on the offensive. His off-balance renders him ineffective in his own defense. Your balance permits you to counterattack without any delay or lost motion. Guards or sentinels can be taken out effectively through the use of choking techniques. However, it may not be advisable to apply these techniques to security personnel in or around an enemy's prison camp. In such situations attacks on these individuals would result in reprisals against your fellow prisoners and you. Any escape from a POW camp involving disabled or dead guards would only serve to lessen your chances of effecting your ultimate escape. They would be missed from their posts too soon to afford you sufficient time to get far enough away from the camp. With the whole countryside alerted, your chances would be pretty slim.

REVIEW AND TEST OF AIRCREW SELF-DEFENSE TECHNIQUES

Objectives The student will: 1. Review all critical techniques and procedures. 2. Be given a practical test covering all critical elements of aircrew self-defense techniques.

Introduction In the review of all critical items, you will have an additional opportunity to practice techniques and refresh your memory. Speed will not be essential for the test since the emphasis is placed on the mechanics of the techniques being evaluated.

Study Assignment Pages 1, 2, 64-85, SACM 50-10B.

Supplementary Information There is no intention to make gun disarming or any other phase of this training sound easy to perform. Many things must be considered. The element of surprise, for example, is of the utmost importance. Without it very little can be accomplished. No one will willingly permit himself to be kicked, choked, or disarmed. This must be accomplished through surprise.