Col Rex Applegate and the Ultimate Book on Defensive Tactics Kill Or Get Killed
Author: Damian Ross
Date Posted: November 07, 2008
There are a lot of books out there about close combat, a few are
even worth reading, but the quintessential close quarters combat
and defensive tactics book is Kill or Get Killed. If you want to
get an inside look at the skills that will help you survive real
combat you need to read Kill or Get Killed. In the pages of this
classic work is everything you need to know about close combat and
self defense as well as how to handle riots and firefights. First
published in 1943 to help Allied soldiers in their fight against
the Axis powers, it has been revised several times. Even to this
day it still helps police officers and soldiers in countless situations.
Its author Colonel Rex Applegate learned close combat from the best,
and what he wrote cannot be ignored by anyone serious about being
a modern warrior.
Born in Oregon on June 21 1914 Applegate's family tree includes
heroes of the American Revolution and pioneers who settled in the
Pacific Northwest. Applegate grew up in Oregon and early on he developed
a love for the wilderness. One of his first teachers was his Uncle
Gus Peret, an employee of Remington firearms, who taught the young
Applegate not to aim at targets, but to point and shoot instinctively
and convulsively. By the time Rex Applegate graduated the University
of Oregon with a business degree he was already a crack shot. The
6'3" and powerfully built Applegate excelled at football. But it
was here Applegate began his military career when he took part in
the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC). His first assignment
would be with the 3rd Infantry Division, an Army Reserve unit that
was based out of Fort Lewis Washington.
Prior to the outbreak of World War II Applegate spent his spare
time doing research into firefights. His thirst for knowledge about
real hand to hand gun fights began extensive research that included
police reports and accounts of gunfighters in the old west. The
research supported what he already believed; police officers and
soldiers weren't being taught what they needed to know to survive
a real life gun fight.
Applegate was openly critical of the training the military provided,
but instead of getting the proverbial "shaft" he was given an opportunity.
Col. Applegate received a commission in the regular Army. When the
United States joined the fight against the Axis powers Applegate
was eager to go, but he would instead be recruited into America's
fledgling clandestine intelligence community.
Before WWII there were no elite military units or intelligence
gathering agencies. Any units that had existed prior to the war
had long since been disbanded. There weren't even facilities to
train new personnel. In the wake of Japan's 1941 attack the military
rushed to adapt to meet the new threat, so the Allies began from
scratch, setting secret training camps like Camp Richie in Maryland
all over North America and England. Applegate along with others
was called in to make the best recruits even better, so the Allies
could take the war to the Axis.
Before any recruits could be trained, the instructors had to be
trained. They were given a crash course in combat martial arts by
British Colonel William E. Fairbairn. At the start of training most
of the American instructors thought they had little to learn from
the British who had only been losing the war up to that point. Though
Fairbairn was a veteran police officer and Royal Marine he looked
too many like a kindly gray haired school teacher and was hardly
intimidating. Fairbairn put an end to any of the misconceptions
the American instructors might have had when Fairbairn took on the
much stronger and larger Applegate tossed with him with ease into
a crowd during a self defense demonstration. From that point forward
everyone was willing to listen to what Fairbairn had to say when
it came to hand to hand combat.
Though exact numbers are unknown it is believed that some 10,000
recruits trained at Camp Richie where they learned how to take out
enemy sentries, hand-to-hand combat, close combat shooting, and
other espionage techniques. It was at Camp Ritchie that Applegate
and Fairbairn discovered they shared similar views on shooting.
Col Applegate quickly learned the importance of martial arts in
close combat situations. A point should be made that both men and
women received the same training at Camp Ritchie. Many of those
men and women were deployed throughout Europe and the Pacific. Commandos
and secret agents would help turn the tide of the war, and would
set the ground work for Special Forces units in the future.
After the war Applegate would continue to have adventures and keep
learning. He would go south of the border as a representative for
several American firearms manufactures, and would advise Mexican
soldiers and police officers on how to deal with riots and guerilla
fighters. At first they didn't think they could learn much from
a gringo, but is short time Col Rex Applegate's skills impressed
and training were so effective that to this day, his methods are
still taught in Mexico.
When Applegate returned to the United States, he would travel and
lecture about tactics and training for both law enforcement and
military organizations. He would advise the military in during the
Korean and Vietnam wars. He authored a number of books and even
helped design a number of combat knives (the most famous is the
applegate-fairbairn fighting knife). He would continue to update
his master work Kill or Get Killed, incorporating changes in technology,
but the fundamentals always remained sound. If you're serious about
learning about close quarter combat tactics then you'd better pickup
a copy.
About The Author
MartialArts
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Self Defense
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
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