Fourth Wall Moment: I
started this blog because a crashing computer hard drive ate six
chapters of a book I was writing about Making America Violent Again.
The first chapter of that book set the stage for the rest of the book.
It was about the ambush.
Violent crimes are all
some type of ambush. In Army doctrine, we divide ambushes into “near”
and “far.” Near ambushes are those that occur within hand grenade
range, and far ambushes are those that occur outside of hand grenade
range. In a near ambush, a unit throws hand grenades and attacks. This
is a battle drill that does not have to be thought about or specified
in orders. In a far ambush, they break contact, get out of the kill
zone and prepare a plan.
How does this relate to
self-defense? Well, almost all violent crime is a near ambush; home
invasions perhaps are the exception. But, a mugging, a sexual assault, a
random assault and battery are all near ambushes and we have to prepare
battle drills to defeat them. A battle drill is a set response to a
specific type of attack. Throwing hand grenades and then charging is
just that; a simple, set response to an ambush at close range. To
defeat the ambush, the unit becomes infinitely more aggressive than the
ambushing force. That is exactly how to defeat a criminal ambush as
well: become the aggressor. In my classes I talk about “the switch”
that has to be thrown to turn a student from citizen to killer in an
instant. The secret to developing the switch is the same secret that
the military uses to develop battle drills: repetitive training on the
same simple tasks over and over again.
In armed self-defense
shooting the most important skill is not hitting the target. That is
almost guaranteed at the one- to two-foot range of most self-defense
shootings. The most important skill is getting the gun out. This is
why most firing ranges, especially indoor firing ranges, are useless for
self-defense training. Presenting a firearm—that is drawing, pointing
and (if necessary) aiming—is far more important to practice than the
actual putting a hole in a piece of paper at an unrealistic distance.
The second most important thing to train is retaining the Weapon.
Remember, you may have to fight to the Weapon and fight over the Weapon
before you ever fight with the Weapon. That principle is the
hardest for me to teach, that carrying a pistol does not by itself
guarantee one their safety, because most violent crime does not occur at
the standard twenty-five yard pistol range. If
a bad person is sticking a gun in your face at six inches, drawing your
gun and shooting first is not going to happen even if you are Wild Bill
Hickok.
In that situation, if
you decide to defend yourself, you will need to have some empty hand
skills as well as a very efficient method of presenting the Weapon and
engaging at close range. That is a battle drill. The purpose of the
book I was writing was to overcome the illusion that gun-armed,
primitive-armed and unarmed self-defense are distinct disciplines. I
know many martial artists who do not believe in guns because they think
their skills are good enough to defend themselves without a firearm. I
don’t care if you are the reincarnation of Bruce Lee and Bodhidharma
into Brock Lesner, if somebody shoots you from ten feet away, you will
lose. I also know many concealed firearms carriers who believe that the
tool will do all of the fighting for them. I don’t care if you’re Doc
Holliday either, if somebody is pummeling the hell out of you while you
do nothing but fumble for your gun, you too are going to lose. I refer
to both types of people by the same title: VICTIM.
The solution to both of
these flawed ways of thinking is to adopt the philosophy that the
defender is the Weapon, not the tool. Then, whether there is a tool or
not, a person can defend themselves as the Weapon. If there is a tool,
it is simply an extension of one’s body, which is the Weapon. This is a
philosophy that both fighters and competitive shooters understand, but
for some reason when it comes to unarmed and armed self-defense, the
practitioners do not grasp it as easily. Because half of them want it
to be easy, and the other half think making it easy is somehow
“cheating.” All combat is cheating, first of all, and it’s never easy.
If you don’t need to “cheat” to win, it is not really a self-defense
situation.
This is another good
point to bring up here, the difference between sport and self-defense.
You can’t “cheat” if there are no rules. Only sports have rules. Even
MMA has rules. Real combat does not have rules. Self-defense situation
is individual combat, it is life or death, kill or be killed. In those
situations, you do whatever it takes to not be the loser. Therefore in
my opinion, the only unarmed moves you should make are the ones that
are expressly banned by the UFC. Eye gouges, throat punches, elbows to
the soft spot on the top of the head, neck breaks, et cetera. That is
“cheating,” and self-defense IS cheating.
That is the point of
the near ambush battle drill, to use the hand grenades as a method of
cheating, to take away the enemy’s Initiative. Initiative is the most
important aspect of combat. Whoever has the Initiative at the end
of an engagement, is the winner. Law abiding citizens do not have the
luxury of the Initiative at the beginning of a self-defense engagement
as we do not chose the times and places where we get mugged. So, what
we have to do is take away the Initiative from the enemy, then with the
Initiative, eliminate the threat. All unarmed self-defense techniques
teach this. The mugging scene in the movie Collateral is a great
example of this principle when you have a tool to extend your body
(which you should watch on youtube). But, notice in the movie, Tom
Cruises’ first move is unarmed, he takes away the Initiative, removing
himself from muzzle direction, then draws and fires, finishing the
engagement with the Initiative firmly in his grasp. That is a very good
fictional depiction of armed self-defense (and just an awesome movie),
but you have to ignore the fact that he’s the bad guy.
Conclusion, if you
noticed in this blog I capitalized the words Weapon and Initiative.
These are the first two principles I used to teach my soldiers. W is
for Weapon. The person is the Weapon, not the knife or gun. If you
adopt that mentality, then any tool you use is an extension of the
Weapon. Which means anything can be used to augment your body from a B2
bomber to a beer bottle; make them extensions of your body and Be The
Weapon. But remember, the First Rule of Unarmed Combat: Don’t Get Into
It! Arm yourself with something, which can be anything. Next, I is for
Initiative. Whoever has the Initiative at the end of an engagement is
the winner. All combat is fundamentally a struggle over the
Initiative. You have to develop battle drills to seize the Initiative
from an attacker, and then finish that attacker using the tools you have
access to. Last thing I will say is this: if you are not prepared to
be as violent as necessary, to kill an attacker to save your life or the
lives of others, do not carry a lethal weapon. In which case, you will
be a VICTIM. Despite what your granola-loving hippy kindergarten
teacher told you, violence itself is not the enemy; in a near ambush,
violence is the only way to defeat the enemy. Make America Violent Again.