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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Combatives: Military and<br />

Police <strong>Martial</strong> Art Training<br />

Combatives is the collective term used to describe military or paramilitary<br />

training in hand-to-hand fighting. For police, the emphasis is usually on restraining<br />

the opponent, while for armies the emphasis is usually on increasing<br />

soldiers’ self-confidence and physical aggressiveness. During such<br />

training, the virtues of “national” martial arts frequently are extolled, often<br />

at the expense of actual tactical advantage.<br />

Police and militaries also have displayed considerable interest in nonlethal<br />

combatives. This term refers to methods and techniques (manual,<br />

mechanical, or chemical) that are designed and used to physically control<br />

or restrain people but, unless used with deliberate malicious intent, are unlikely<br />

to cause crippling injury or death to healthy teens or adults. Most unarmed<br />

martial art techniques fall into this category.<br />

Perhaps the first systematic attempt to use Asian martial art techniques<br />

by a modern military came in 1561, when the Ming general Qi<br />

Jiguang included moves from a Northern Shaolin sword form in his text<br />

called Ji Xiao Xin Shu (New Text of Practical Tactics). Shaolin Boxing also<br />

was mentioned, apparently because Qi believed that recruits handled their<br />

weapons more confidently if first taught to wrestle and box.<br />

During the 1590s, peasant infantry of southern Japan’s Satsuma clan<br />

were observed practicing firearm kata (forms), and in 1609 the Satsuma<br />

conquest of Okinawa owed much to the Japanese bringing 700 muskets<br />

and 30,000 bullets to what the Ryûkyûans, the native inhabitants of the island,<br />

expected to be a battle of arrows and pikes. Meanwhile in Europe the<br />

Republican Dutch began developing military musket drills. Mostly a form<br />

of industrial safety (accidental discharges pose a serious risk in closed<br />

ranks), the Dutch taught their methods using rote patterns like the Japanese<br />

kata (forms).<br />

To counter the Dutch, the French and Spanish began developing bayonets.<br />

Firearms were slow to reload in those days, and not accurate much<br />

past fifty meters. So if one could close quickly enough, then one could be<br />

inside the enemy ranks before they could reload. Originally companies of<br />

pikemen made the charge, but with the development of socket bayonets in<br />

1678, European infantrymen became musketeers.<br />

Throughout the eighteenth century, European professional soldiers<br />

concentrated mostly on developing close-order drills designed to move<br />

troops en masse, and bayonet practice consisted of little more than troops<br />

sticking straw dummies. Following the Napoleonic Wars, however, interest<br />

developed in using sword and bayonet drills as a form of physical exercise.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first such proposals came from amateurs. In 1817, for instance,<br />

the English fencing master Henry Angelo published a book that showed<br />

Combatives: Military and Police <strong>Martial</strong> Art Training 83

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