Disclaimer:
This one is surely going to get me in
trouble. But, as I’ve never been
one to go with fads and current thinking
on most anything and I’ve never
been one to hold my tongue when I believe
something is dead wrong - here goes!
The
ground fighting and mixed martial arts
fad of the last 15 or so years is great
for sport, TV watching and for some
folks wagering on. But I really have
to say when it comes to the street
or battleground it is near useless
for actual combat against folks who
are really trying to kill you and not
just score points on you!
In real
combat the object of the game is to kill
or incapacitate the enemy, then turn
round and do it again, then turn round
and do it once more for as many bad guys
as you may be facing. In a street situtation
or battlefield there will likely be more
than one opponent to neutralize (i.e.
pc jargon for kill). So what happens
if you take an opponent to the ground
and proceed to put locks on him, choke
him, punch, knee and other wise abuse
him? I’ll tell you what happens,
that particular guy you are working on
may be in trouble but his fellow gang
members, troopers or terrorists will
knife, bayonet, rifle butt, club or otherwise
put a serious hurting on you because
while you are playing Hulk Hogan you
can only deal with one opponent. All
of the bad guys friends are free to to
do whatever they please to you. Have
you ever thought about that? Real fighting
is a multi-person melee and free for
all - when you have Gooks coming through
the wire and it’s hand-to-hand
time; there are bad guys are seemingly
everywhere.
The only
folks who need to use take downs and
ground fighting to subdue folks are cops;
that’s their job. Citizens facing
deadly force are under no compulsion
to subdue and hold a criminal for the
police! (That goes only for the US. For
you folks in Europe, where there is no
right to self defense and you’ll
get arrested for furthering violence
if you resist an attack, just lie there
and get beat up as little as possible).
Your only job is to make sure you and
yours survive the encounter as best as
you can manage.
But you’ve
been told by the Brazilian Ju Jitsu folks
that their ground fighting arts were
actually combat tested and based. Well
yes. But... All the stories about Brazilian
Ju Jitsu doing so well in actual combat
in the mob wars and so forth of Rio,
need to be looked at in the context of
the situations they found themselves
in. A former cop and Olympic Judoka friend
of mine told me that the Brazilians developed
their form of Ju Jitsu when a Japanese
Yakuza escaped prosecution in Japan,
went to Brazil and taught a particular
mob family there how to best sneak up
on Rio cops and kill them. I guess that
presents combat experience of sorts.
Let’s
look at real martial arts applied to
actual combat situations to see what
actually works. The best example and
statistics we have to date on martial
arts use in combat are those concerning
the South Korean troops that served in
the Viet Nam war. The NVA and VC totally
feared the Koreans. God bless them, the
ROK’s were ruthless! The ROK’s
are among the hardest hearted and toughest
troops on the planet; ask any one who’s
served or fought with them. They are
legends with almost entire divisions
among the ROK Marines and Paras being
made up of black belts. In Viet Nam the
only troops to consistently use their
martial arts were the ROK’s. They
used Korean style karate, and while Yodo
(Korean Judo) is commonly taught, the
military CQB techniques are entirely
punch - kick in nature.
In their
11 years of involvement in the war, with
all their major operations and areas
of responsibility (i.e. all of II Corps
and the southern part of I Corps), ROK
losses were only some 4,000 killed and
11,000 wounded out of a total of 320,000
South Korean troops who fought in the
war! Their kill ratio (how many of the
enemy died for every one of theirs killed)
in many battles was often in the triple
digits to one! As in this reference on
the ROK Marines taken from Wikipedia:
“Their
most notable operations in Vietnam
were "Operation Van Buren" and
the Battle of Hoi An. During "Operation
Van Buren", a ROKMC platoon
of about 13 soldiers wiped out
an elite North Vietnamese Army
regiment, resulting in only 2 Korean
casualties while more than 400
NVA soldiers were killed. The initial
gun battle had devolved into bloody
hand-to-hand combat”. (Note:
This is a 200 to 1 Kill ratio)!
Read
the entire entry: Wikipedia.org
Here
is another Wikipedia citation on a company
of ROK’s (less than 200 men) being
attached by two entire North Viernamese
battalions (aprox 8 companies making
the ROK’s outnumbered some 8 to
1.
“On
February 14, the North Vietnamese
40th and 60th Battalions moved
into their positions in the forest
surrounding the perimeter of the
South Korean 11th Company. The
regular VPA battalions were also
supported by one VC local force
battalion from Quang Ngai. With
their troops build up around the
area, the Communist forces planned
to cut all communication lines
and wipe out the South Korean forces
in the area.
At
dawn on February 15, the battle began
with the Viet Cong attempting to
cut through the wires of the South
Korean base. The South Korean marines
were dug in and waiting with requests
for air-support. When the North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong had penetrated Korean
positions, heavy fighting immediately
followed. Initially the outnumbered
South Koreans were pinned down, but
Communist forces' ranks soon started
to break up in heat of the battle
as the South Koreans counterattacked.
When the fighting ended more than
200 enemy bodies were left behind”.
One last
citation on the ROK Army:
“Operation
Hong Kil Dong
During Operation Hong Kil Dong (July-August
1967), the Koreans killed 638 and
lost only 26 soldiers, a kill ratio
of nearly 25 to 1. 98 crew-served
and 359 individual weapons were captured”.
As Black
Belt Magazine noted in the November 1968
issue, almost 60% of the ROK troop kills
involved only the use of hands or feet
(punch, chop and kick) and no other weapons!!!
That is real combat experience. This
is also very telling of what actually
works on the battlefield.
Yes we
all need to know how to do some wrestling.
Getting out and up from a take down,
a lock some other technique is needed
knowledge. But the thought that engagements
can be won by taking an opponent down
and working on him while on the ground
ignores the realities of the street and
battleground.
To learn
more of the ROK Marines go to:
You Tube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TIRqW38N_c
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