New soldiers begin their Combatives training on day three of Initial Military Training, at the same time that they are first issued their rifle.
The drill can be completed in less than a minute and can be done repeatedly with varying levels of resistance to maximize training benefits. For example, Drill One teaches several techniques: escaping blows, maintaining the mount, escaping the mount, maintaining the guard, passing the guard, assuming side control, maintaining side control, preventing and assuming the mount. They are taught as small, easily repeatable drills, in which practitioners could learn multiple related techniques rapidly.
The initial techniques are simply a learning metaphor useful for teaching more important concepts, such as dominating an opponent with superior body position during ground grappling or how to control someone during clinch fighting. The main idea is that all real ability is developed after the initial training and only if training becomes routine. The aim of the regimen is to teach soldiers how to train rather than attempting to give them the perfect techniques for any given situation. Students are taught techniques from the 20 versions of FM 3-25.150 (Combatives), also written by Larsen. In 2001, Matt Larsen, then a Sergeant First Class, established the United States Army Combatives School at Fort Benning. In recent years the major tenets of MAC, namely "live" training and using competitions as a tool to motivate soldiers and units to higher levels of training, have been adopted by many of the major combatives systems such as Krav Maga and the Russian military hand-to-hand combat system. The Modern Army Combatives Program was adopted as the basis for the Air Force Combatives Program in January 2008.
In August 2007, MAC training became required in every Army unit by Army regulation 350-1. MAC draws from systems such as wrestling, Krav Maga, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, judo, sambo, Muay Thai, boxing and eskrima, which could be trained "live" and can be fully integrated into current close quarters battle tactics and training methods.
While the United States Marine Corps replaced its LINE combat system with Marine Corps Martial Arts Program in 2002, The United States Army adopted the Modern Army Combatives (MAC) program the same year with the publishing of Field Manual 3-25.150. 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 may embassy guards or paramilitary units such as police SWAT teams.ĭe-emphasized in the United States after World War II, insurgency conflicts such as the Vietnam War, low intensity conflict, and urban warfare tend to encourage more attention to combatives. Other combatives systems having their origins in the modern military include Chinese Sanshou, Soviet Bojewoje (Combat) Sambo, and Israeli Kapap. Fairbairn often referred to the technique as "gutter fighting", a term which Applegate used, along with "the Fairbairn system". Fairbairn at one point called this system Defendu and published on it, as did their American colleague Rex Applegate.
Similar training was provided to British Commandos, the First Special Service Force, Office of Strategic Services, Army Rangers, and Marine Raiders. Also known for their eponymous Fairbairn-Sykes Fighting Knife, Fairbairn and Sykes had worked in the British Armed Forces and helped teach the Shanghai Municipal Police (SMP) quick, effective, and simple techniques for fighting with or without weapons in melee situations. Sometimes called Close-Quarters Combat ( CQC or close combat), World War II-era American combatives were largely developed by Britain's William E.