my dad was an unarmed combat instructor who taught me a lot from a young age. He was very polite and courteous fellow . but i did once see him drop a man much bigger and taller than him in about 1.5 seconds. He was fast and deadly. He turned 60 and drank a lot and walking home from the pub in the dark he was bashed by a gang and left for dead behind a hedge row. he wasn't found until next morning and never recovered. It's sad there are people out there who could do this to an old man who served his country.
I also was a son of a Military man Navy he was a UDT i in 1950 he went to Korea where he served 1 tours then in 1953 he started going to Vietnam for many different deployments tours also EOD training for south Vietnamese soldiers. He also showed me many fighting skills , and philosophies. In some very hard ways (which now would be consider abuse LOL) that the ability to ignore pain and keep focus at the same time trumps strength every time. I am so sorry about your pops , Please know I am grateful for his serves for my freedom My pops didn't drink but after all that Combat time he had zero tolerance , his had broken my nose more than 3 times knocked me out once or twice but I forgave him , And thanked him for showing me right from wrong , manners , respect, tactics EOD/IUD training Aikido how to shot, set traps for 2 and 4 legged game , to be decisive, honest and to own your actions , keep unknowns out of your GRID, and their rights end where your nose begins I MISS HIM EVERYDAY because as hard as he was , we also had just as much fun
-Clean shaven, brown haired jumpsuit guy is Ken Good, former SEAL. -Mustache jumpsuit guy is Dave Maynard, former SEAL, then security contractor in Iraq. -Blonde jumpsuit guy is Barry Dueck, former Marine and winner of numerous 3-gun competitions. Barry went on to found SureFire's Suppressor Division and Dueck Defense. Ken and Dave had a training company called Combative Concepts in the 90's, Barry was one of the instructors. They formed the original SureFire Institute in 1997. They developed ground breaking low-light tactics doctrine, much of which forms the basis for most law enforcement low-light tactic taught today. Some of their doctrine was also incorporated into current military low-light tactics. The instructor in the gi is James Williams, all around martial art guy with background in boxing, wrestling, kick boxing, Systema, Aiki Jujutsu and BJJ. James continues to teach in Encinitas, CA, designs knives sold by CRKT (i.e. Hissatsu) and has a Japanese import company (Bugie Trading Company). These guys were innovators and made a real contribution to forward both low-light tactics and integrated combatives.
idk I if I buy this series of combative training.I mean redirecting and armlocks war is chaos period!!!The fact is of you don't have killer instinct then all your techniques won't mean shot.The team's and its operator's are second to none no doubt.But jujitsu techniques better be used in a stealth mode perspective when you're in a hazardous environment like the middle east and elsewhere.Jujitsu is a trapping range martial art where to have to be close to an opponent.In my opinion the ground is the last place to wanna be in a close quarter combat situation.Especially when there are firearms going off in every direction.My next comment would be wasn't Paul vunak responsible for training the team's during this time as well???idk but I feel his approach made more sense as far as hand to hand combat.
Never ID people like this. Be a patriot. Keep who they are to yourself. Work for the team. I notice you use the term tardterminator to ID yourself. But you out two SEALS?! Jackass!
I remember buying this on VHS from my "Army/Navy" store years ago. Back when I wanted to be a Navy SEAL and started to do all the researching you could back then.
This seems like Ninjustsu/Taijustsu, Aikido, and something else. It's not quite so easy to perform those techniques during combat and while your opponent is opposing you and you're not extremely relaxed. But these dudes look and speak like they know exactly what they are doing, especially the instructor and the guy with the bush bushstache. The philosophy and technique are correlative and solid. Excellent video!
I still have that video on VHS and also taught some of its techniques (long gun retention and prisoner handling), as Navy Force Protection Trainer back then on the USS Iwo Jima (LHD-7), to the duty section for ship security training.
"I was a seal,I must be amazing then,hey where is everyone going?" I love the whole epic movie just to slap a pair of cuffs on,with quite flaky takedowns...
Great respect to our SpecOps community and we thank them for their service and we are forever grateful. This is just my opinion but, I think Mr. Williams is the last person should be teaching the Navy Seals. He is a good martial ARTIST but I cannot trust my life from a person who never seen or experienced real combat. I know James served in the military but I also know he did not experienced combat. One of his student got hurt real bad using his techniques and that speaks volumes.
As someone with just a little martial arts training, a lot of those moves are difficult to pull off in a real confrontation situation. Unless you train a lot. A LOT.
thats true aikido is nothing ,if you want to learn real close combats for real scenarion you have to do goju ryu karate from okinanwa@@dickwellington8578
It should be , it's genius is its simplicity , the triangulation , the center of mass , camming or deflecting I think is brilliant , fight smarter not harder
Paul was trained by Jerry Peterson in the SCARS program when he was going through seal training. Scars was created by a Master in Kung Fu San Soo. This Aikido was never taught to Seals.
These Aikijujutsu moves are no joke. But they are advanced skills and it takes awhile to be able to use it in real situations. The advantage is it takes little strength or effort. Just uses leverage and breaking opponents balance. Therefore less energy to perform. It's also just a demonstration, they are just learning technique not going at it for real and they aren't trying to fight or spar.From what I understand Navy SEAL's mostly train in JKD ( esp by Paul Vunak ) and also SCARS and SAFTA , which is really just another name for Kung Fu San Soo. Easier to learn and is a lot of " quick kill " moves and lots of strikes to the vital weakest points. I think they just wanted to check this guys stuff out.
Robert Sadora and it's ironic how many of them I've heard in interviews say they'll just want to knock the opponent out lol like a brawler , that's understandable to I mean if someone grabs a hold of you then I could see a lot of this stuff being important but hell yeah just drop em lol
I once heard an milatree man say we should all be tactically effecient as civilians i believe this is true and want to be the saltiest frostiest civilian tht walks one day. Permanently injured i would be shit at BUDS training but i will do pt in honor of the fallen love you guys never give up we need you!
What the hell is a milatree? Have the the trees become self aware and are arming themselves on order to avenge the billions of their own that were slaughtered to make furniture and baseball bats? We should all be terrified!
Very educative display. What about distorting the center of mass by a sideway shuffle? The video focused on "triangulation point", which can be adequate, pragmatic or better; in the video in the meaning of elongating / opposing the line of attack. This is functional as a principle. Particularly in throws. But what about confined spaces? There's always the need of shuffling sideways. Which is also the fundamental defensive move in asian martial arts; divert from the direction of attack - counterattack.
They were all training in BJJ when this video was made (James wrestled and boxed as well). I've been choked out and arm barred by everyone in that video (and returned the favor of course). I love BJJ but it has limitations in a team CQB environment. Aiki-jūjutsu (not to be confused with Aikido) -- as James taught it to this crew -- does have some practical application in conjunction with a carbine/long gun, as well as H2H, in close quarters.
This is what he said "At this point I have a problem, I have a weapon in my hand and I have a prisoner" that prisoner was face down on the ground. That's what I would call "Insecure." From my perspective, it's the prisoner who has the problem. What kind of position would he need to be in to not have a problem? Because your standing over the prisoner and you are the one brandishing a weapon, that looks like your in control to me and things can't get much better than that.
It's good to see that there is/are "schools" of H2H Combat that apply the use of Principles, that have direct application in combat, such as "invisible ties, Relaxation, etc. Some of these that are found in Aikido. I think that it's very important to train people to work against multiple opponents because of the fact that you're not really capable of fighting one opponent at any given moment if you cannot manage multiple opponents at any given moment as the same skill sets apply to H2H combat effectiveness overall. One of the Chinese Martial Arts Teachings was that, of the two great powers Speed and Strength, Speed was the greatest, by far. That would suggest that anything that takes longer than a fast jab, considerably lessens your combat potential. This also suggests that any kind of grappling should be avoided. I would also like to point out that if an opponent grabs/attacks you with one hand . . . you are essentially fighting a one handed opponent, and if an opponent grabs/attacks you with two hands . . .well what more can I say.
Shall I repeat again? Vulnak moves as if he's pregnant lady ( no speed/ no power/ no nothing) He have heard some, but he is not REAL KILLER dude like a NAVY SEAL MAN.
+Dmitry Volkov Have you ever realized he's a INSTRUCTOR?! TO THE SEAL IN THE BACK?! In don't care, you have no actual respect to a TEACHER, since he's so "pregnant", I'd love to see you teach these Navy Seals.
So what? If he was instructor for SEALs we all should admire? I've met some real instructors of your seals and they ARE- NO JOKE! Move like panthers and can tear you in a half of a sec! Paul Vulnak was just a kid of old days practicing some Bruce Lee type like moves. Navy seals are not BatMan or SuperMan type crowd! They are just soldier folks- that's it!
All based on traditional martial arts. It amazes me that mma people particularly rubbish traditional martial arts yet navy Seals learn these methods. They must be effective.
It's funny how at the modern days where a man can be killed precisely from atleast 5km we need to learn hand-2-hand combat. Nice video, nice moves, just finds it funny.
I like to imagine this guy running for his life,crying for his mommy like a little girl and a slightly bigger guy chasing him through the desert because his Democracy launcher jammed
this looks like it's geared more for policemen then the military I had this tape back in the late 90's as part of a series of tapes, can't remember the company though.again this stuff looks to mild for the battlefield and some of the moves require a lot of space to perform,would like to see them try it in a foxhole.