Officer Wwii

Sometimes, events in history to force the creation of new ideas to replace what has become obsolete. Weapons, Strategy and tactics have always been marked by change on the battlefields of history to deal with new threats.
While weapons find themselves obsolete in a museum, and outdated tactics are preserved in the text, once a martial art was considered more useful on the battlefield it still exists as a sport or as a hobby thanks to groups of enthusiasts who maintain the style to preserve part of their culture.
The list martial arts taught today is impressive, but this list shortens considerably when you look at those who could still make the class a modern combat situation. And while all martial arts are fun to watch and learn, it is important for the public to understand that arts martial style should be called "self defense" when it has modern applications. (Lot of fat: the good your whooping crane Kung Fu cons will make a semi-automatic weapons, 40 Glock!)
After years of incessant wars samurai of Japan did not have time to develop, a sport or style of hand-to-body that looked impressive. Their only concern is to survive when they were unarmed.
These schools martial arts running at the time fully aware that strikes, chokes, takedowns and kicks they were taught only wants a way to reset itself on a battlefield when you find yourself unarmed and without horses.
As Japan began to revise its medieval nation in 1868 and taking a larger role on the world stage, the battlefield elements tested their systems of unarmed combat have been updated and preserved, even under the influence of foreign military forces (Japan would Germany train its army and train Colombia's navy).
In the early 20th Century, William E. Fairbairn, a British police officer would make the long Travel by train in Judo and Jujitsu at the Kodokan Institute in Tokyo.
When WWII broke out Fairbairn and colleagues Police Officer Eric Anthony Sykes (both worked with the Shanghai Municipal Police) were heading to England to teach what they knew of unarmed combat in anticipation of a Nazi invasion.
When newly promoted colonels Fairbairn and Sykes took command of the British Homeguard (The last line of defense) was no way to do battle. Filled with older men who were not able to perform military service regular, they were armed only with hand tools and rusty rifles because the military had nothing to lose after the abandonment of Much of its equipment at Dunkirk.
This did not Fairbairn, who began to teach Homeguard what he had learned in Japan. Soon each local unit to learn the operation to disarm his attacker, take out a sentry with their bare hands, and fight with ordinary weapons, as axes and pitchforks. If England would be invaded, the population was not going to go quietly.
No sooner than the surrender was Fairbairn Sykes completed and was sent to train Allied troops in a secret camp established by the American Bureau of Strategic Services (OSS). Many Americans were skeptical about what the police officer could not tell them about fighting. (After all, the British lost the war yet.) But Fairbairn showed the effectiveness of their training on the first day of training, as he threw a big enough effort, a young American officer in the crowd Officers surprised.
Under Fairbairn Trust, these men became the first elite American special forces unit and missions processed including business guerrilla, sabotage enemy equipment, intelligence gathering and Resistance training Local. Special units worldwide have taken the war and Combat Proven training martial Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan even (ironically, is not it?).
With 1,000 field reports highlighting the successful application of this system of unarmed combat that began Japan has been refined in Europe, and tested during the Second World War is the only "martial art" with legitimate, documented and evidence of successes in combat conditions.
Because of this rich tradition and history proved, when the "passing the torch" this knowledge fell upon our shoulders, we knew we had to do something special to keep these so absolute defense "truths" in the forefront of all waste and nonsense that the modern martial arts world has become.
While we have added elements of modern education to improve the learning process, techniques and methodology of our ancestors, Samurai and World War II remain unchanged and as brutally efficient than ever.
Many martial arts are useless in real world situations. They may be fun sport and good for fitness, but they are not effective in real combat. To find a good martial art combat, we must begin by the samurai. They practiced jujutsu and designed the system with only fight against real world in mind. Refined by Europeans and the battle tested during the Second World War Jujutsu has continued to adapt the field Battle evolving.
Officers World War II PC video game Trailer
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