Karate Myint Kywe
(Myoma Myint Kywe)
True karate is never old. Real karate is ever fresh
|
ကမၻာ့ႏိုင္ငံမ်ားကို ကၽြန္ေတာ္ေရာက္ရွိစဥ္ Army combative
training
တပ္မေတာ္ တိုက္ခိုက္ေရး သင္တန္းမ်ား၊ Close Quarter Combat (CQC) Training
and Army commando
training
သင္တန္းမ်ား၊ Police combative training and Police commando
training
ရဲတပ္ဖြဲ႕တိုက္ခိုက္ေရး သင္တန္းမ်ား၊ REAL ကရာေတးသင္တန္းမ်ား၊ လက္နက္မဲ့ တိုက္ခိုက္ေရးကိုယ္ခံပညာ (Combative training and powerful Combat
karate ကရာေတးေလ့က်င့္သူမ်ား မ်ားျပားစြာေတြ႔ရွိခဲ့ရပါသည္။
(Sport ကရာေတးပညာရပ္သည္ ကမၻာ့ႏိုင္ငံမ်ား တပ္မေတာ္တိုက္ခိုက္ေရးသင္တန္းမ်ား၊ ရဲတပ္ဖြဲ႕တိုက္ခိုက္ေရး သင္တန္းမ်ား၌္ ယေန႔အခါ လြန္စြာေခတ္မစားေတာ့ေခ်။)
(Sport ကရာေတးပညာရပ္သည္ ကမၻာ့ႏိုင္ငံမ်ား တပ္မေတာ္တိုက္ခိုက္ေရးသင္တန္းမ်ား၊ ရဲတပ္ဖြဲ႕တိုက္ခိုက္ေရး သင္တန္းမ်ား၌္ ယေန႔အခါ လြန္စြာေခတ္မစားေတာ့ေခ်။)
Combative (close combat) is a
term for hand-to-hand combat training and
techniques. While the term hand-to-hand combat (sometimes abbreviated as
HTH or H2H) originally referred principally to engagements by military personnel on the battlefield, it can also refer to any personal physical
engagement by two or more combatants, including police officers and civilians. There are several
reasons that the combative course is taught:
·
To
educate soldiers on how to protect themselves against threats without using
their firearms
·
To
provide a non-lethal response to situations on the battlefield
·
To
instill the 'warrior instinct' to provide the necessary aggression to meet the
enemy unflinchingly
Combative
courses have been taught by the United States Military Academy for its entire
history. Military martial arts systems are fighting martial arts styles developed for real-life combat. They focus
on areas such as self-defense, grappling and weapons training.
The program develops confidence not
only in individual Marine combat skills, Bristol said, "but also in the
skills of your fellow Marines," because battlefield combat requires
teamwork. Marines who learn lethal combat skills are expected -- and required
-- to use them responsibly, he said.
"The program teaches the
ability to kill, but it is also tightly balanced with ethics," Bristol
said, as part of the Corps' definition of a warrior.
"A Marine (is) highly skilled
in lethal technique who can function appropriately in any environment. That
includes the battlefield to his or her place as a citizen in society," he
said.
Army recruits en route to become
infantrymen at Fort Benning, Ga., get 15 hours of hand-to-hand combat
instruction over 14 weeks as part of the infantry's One Station Unit Training
program, said installation spokesperson Elsie Jackson. Troops attending the
post's elite Ranger School receive an additional 18 hours of hand-to-hand
combative training, including boxing, she added.
Army Special Forces students at Fort
Bragg, N.C., receive extensive hand-to-hand combat training, said Carol P.
Darby, spokesperson for U.S. Army Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg.
"Over a period of about one
year, students in the Special Forces qualification course receive about 30 to
40 hours of combative training," Darby said. This training, she added,
begins with basic hand-to-hand moves and advances as students progress through
the qualification course.
U.S.
Army military police at Fort Benning, Ga., practice hand-to-hand combat
techniques.
Photo courtesy U.S. Army. |
After troops graduate from initial
Special Forces training and are assigned to their operational groups, they
undergo more specialized hand-to-hand combative training, tailored to the
mission needs of each unit, said Maj. Jonathan B. Withington, spokesman for
U.S. Army Special Forces Command at Fort Bragg.
The Navy and Air Force also provide
hand-to-hand and martial arts training, but normally only for members of
special operations and law enforcement units. Air Force and Navy recruits don't
receive bayonet or hand-to-hand combat training, according to service
officials.
Most
of these specialized martial arts programs been developed by countries with
large militaries such as the United States, Russia, China, Japan, Korea, and
Israel. Military organizations have
always taught some sort of unarmed combat for conditioning and as a supplement
to armed combat.
Close
combat using firearms or other distance weapons by military combatants at the tactical level is modernly referred
to as close quarter battle. The U.S. Army uses the term combative to describe various
military fighting systems used in hand-to-hand combat training, systems which
may include modern eclectic style techniques from
several different martial arts and combat sports.
Close
Quarter Combat
(CQC) training involves using basic, natural movement to overcome larger and
better armed adversaries. This course allows for a minimal amount of training
with maximum results. CQC training begins with rifles, pistols, knives,
ropes, and carabineers, and then moves to the most advanced fighting--unarmed
fighting. The objective is to insure that the student can survive zero-sum
(life or death) conflicts using improvised weapons.
Soldiers of China
were trained in unarmed combat as early as the Yellow Emperor (2600 BCE). Chinese
martial arts is the most
oldest of all martial arts and it is possible to trace its roots back more than
4,600 years. The earliest
form of Chinese martial arts is those practised by soldiers for direct use in
battlefield combat.
Ancient legend states that weapons
and hand-to-hand martial arts’ techniques were propagated by China’s
Yellow Emperor. Before he rose to the imperial throne in 2698 BC, the Yellow
Emperor had been a notable general and had already written at length on
elevated subjects such as astrology, Chinese medicine and the Martial Arts.
Most
militaries teach some form of unarmed combat but often it is a form of mixed martial arts where military personnel might learn a
combination of martial arts techniques such as Karate kicks, Jujitsu techniques, basic
self-defense against weapons, etc.
Just over 10 years ago, the
military made it mandatory for every soldier to learn Karate (Asian
martial arts).
As the military tends to be more active in peacekeeping missions than
traditional warfare, soldiers are told to learn martial arts so they will
have the skills to restrain civilians and build confidence in the army. To
enhance the army’s reputation among civilians, it is necessary for soldiers not
to overreact when faced with a hostile situation.
COMBAT
Karate
(Unarmed martial arts) is a popular Japanese martial arts style that was originally
developed on the islands of Okinawa. It focuses on punches, elbow strikes, knee strikes, kicks and weapons training that focus
on joint locks, holds, takedown (grappling), and throws. It tries to redirect
or manipulate the force of an attack in order to defeat the attacker.
In
martial arts and combat sports, a takedown
is a technique that involves off-balancing an opponent and bringing him or her
to the ground, typically with the attacker landing on top.
Martial
arts are codified systems and traditions of combat practices, which are practiced for a variety of reasons:
self-defense, competition, physical health and
fitness, entertainment, as well as mental, physical, and spiritual development.
Sinking
or Swimming!
Surrender
to Struggling!
沈むまたはスイミング!
苦労に降伏!
苦労に降伏!
私たちは日本空手を練習してください!。
私たちは日本空手を練習してください!。
私は空手を愛した。私は空手の精神を尊重しています。私たちは、とても光栄と空手の値と共に感動です。
http://karateandknowledge.blogspot.com/p/a-brief-history-of-chinese-martial-arts.html
http://www.combatical.com/p/1-fundamentals-of-close-combat.html
http://www.combatical.com/p/4-strikes.html
http://www.ukknifedefence.com/page/military_close_quarter_combatives
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkZTzWIy7-Y