The next X Echo 1 class is scheduled for 25 April 2015 at C2 Shooting Center, Virginia Beach, VA!
This course is targeted to beginner to intermediate shooters. It is
designed to take shooters with a basic skill level and introduce drills
that emphasize the fundamentals of marksmanship while incorporating additional
skills such as malfunction clearance. If you are an intermediate level shooter, the same drills will
apply, but you can challenge yourself with them. The course will cover
intermediate level pistol techniques such as:
Marksmanship fundamentals drills
Holster draw
Slide-lock and tactical reloads
Malfunction drills
Multi-target engagement
Barricade shooting
Shooting while moving
Required equipment:
Pistol
3+ magazines
Holster
Magazine holder for at least 2 magazines
Sturdy belt
Eye/ear protection
Firearm lubricant
Cleaning kit
Water
Food (there are no quick local restaurants)
Optional equipment:
Gloves
Kneepads
Required ammunition:
Minimum of 500 rounds
Bring clothes suitable for the environment. Class will go on as long as
the range is open, whether rain, snow (it is Virginia), or shine, so
plan accordingly.
Cost is $150, and there are only 8 slots available! Message X Echo 1 with your full name and email address to sign up!
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Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Recognizing and Responding to Threats: Cooper, Boyd, Combat Hunter, and the Combined Theory
This article was first written by me,
in two parts, for the RE Factor Tactical blog. Although it was originally
published under a pen name, I am the author.
Every day, we face threats in
our lives. Whether a police officer, soldier, or simply a civilian heading home
from work, there is always a possibility that danger will enter our lives.
These threats could be something as simple as an erratic driver on the road, or
as complex as a multi-assailant home invasion. As such, it is supremely
important that we be able to spot and react to these threats. Three simple
principles - Colonel Jeff Cooper’s “Color Code,” Colonel John Boyd’s OODA Loop,
and the Marine Corps Combat Hunter program – combined with your body's inherent
threat recognition can greatly enhance your ability to see and react or avoid
dangerous situations. In the next two posts, we'll look at these
principles and see how they work together to make you safer.
Colonel Cooper's Color Code
In his book Principles of
Personal Defense, Colonel Jeff Cooper introduced a four-color system to
symbolize the varying levels of situational awareness. Loosely summarized,
these levels are:
Condition White – relaxed and
completely unaware. This is most teenagers that own smart phones, and most
people I’ve seen at the mall on any given day. Many people also assume this
condition in a familiar place, such as their home, which may or may not be
acceptable, depending on the location.
Condition Yellow – relaxed but
aware. These individuals do not anticipate a specific threat, but are observing
those around them for indicators. This is the minimum acceptable level of
awareness in the public sphere, especially when carrying a firearm.
Condition Orange – potential threat
identified. The individual begins to focus more specifically on the possible
threat, attempting to ascertain intentions. An attack from the potential threat
is expected, all that is needed is a trigger. If possible, evasive
actions are taken to avoid the potential situation.
Condition Red – threat verified. The
individual executes the necessary response to the threat, up to and including
the use of lethal force.
Some instructors also teach a
Condition Black, which was not part of Cooper's original system.
Condition Black is a complete shutdown of an individual's ability to respond
due to surprise or overload (in the scheme of fight, flight, or freeze,
Condition Black is a freeze).
Colonel Boyd's OODA Loop
Author's depiction of the OODA Loop |
The OODA (Observe, Orient, Decide,
Act) Loop was developed by Air Force Colonel John Boyd, an exceptional fighter
pilot and strategist. In its most basic interpretation, it is a decision making
cycle that allows the individual – be they soldier, armed citizen, or corporate
tycoon – to react to their rapidly changing environment at a faster, more
effective manner than their opponent. While the OODA loop is often portrayed as
a simple closed loop that must be performed faster than a given opponent to
succeed, Boyd's diagram offers a more in-depth model than most people realize.
In the Observe phase, the individual
stays alert, scanning the environment for changes or indicators of danger. If
the individual is not alert to their environment, the Loop will fail.
In the Orient phase, the individual
filters the observed changes and indicators through their previous experiences
and mental models to analyze and synthesize actionable plans. This is where a
variety of “tools in the toolbox” comes into play. The more reference points
you have to draw upon, whether from training, personal experience, or reviews
of lessons learned from others, the more likely you are to be able to formulate
multiple working plans for any given set of perceived threats, and the less
likely you are to fall into the dogma trap. Relying on a single tactic or
experience for all possible threat scenarios will cause the Loop to fail.
In the Decide phase, the individual
must choose the best option from the working plans formulated in the Orient
phase. This decision will be imperfect, as waiting for all the possible
information needed for a “perfect” decision would require waiting on the threat
to develop until it is virtually too late to respond. Having visualized or
practiced a variety of tactics and responses before the threat scenario occurs
(war-gaming) allows the decision to be made faster, sometimes even
subconsciously.
In the Act phase, the individual
implements the chosen course of action.
Throughout the OODA Loop, there is
constant feedback. No formulated plan is set in stone. There must be
flexibility to adapt as additional observations enter the equation. Also, as
shown in the diagram above, pre-briefed triggers or SOPs can shortcut or bypass
the Orient and Decide stages, allowing individuals or units to move directly
from the Observe to the Act phase. While this will shorten response time, it should
be used sparingly, as those triggers or SOPs must be regularly reevaluated to
provide up-to-date responses to an ever-changing environment.
For an excellent article on the OODA Loop as it relates to higher-level decision making outside of the personal defense arena, see an article by the Art of Manliness.
The Marine Corps Combat Hunter
Program
The Combat Hunter program was
developed by the Marine Corps in early 2007 on order from General James
Mattis. Mattis realized that Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan were
essentially in a reactive state when fighting the insurgents - they would
patrol, but often times they were letting their guard slip, following set patterns,
and they didn't know how to recognize threats in the crowds that often
surrounded them on their patrols. Mattis directed the development of a
program that would instill the same qualities in his Marines that a hunter
would use when stalking their prey. The Combat Hunter program focuses on
four main aspects:
- Observation: be able to effectively use day, night, and thermal optics to observe and survey their operating areas, collect information and report to higher.
- Combat Tracking: be able to see, identify, interpret, and follow tracks.
- Combat Profiling: once the 6 Domains of Human Profiling are understood, they will be able to proactively identify baselines and anomalies which will drive their decisions.
- Combat Policing: be able to understand the basic principles of policing, how to effectively interact with the local populace during an insurgency, and the dynamics of Criminal and Insurgent networks.
Graphic by author. Content Copyright Patrick Van Horne and Jason Riley. |
Graphic by author. Content Copyright Patrick Van Horne and Jason Riley. |
As you observe your environment, you
keep in mind these six domains, constantly asking yourself: what do the
behaviors exhibited by the individuals I am observing tell me? Does an
individual seem to be in charge or dominant? Do others act submissively
toward or treat an individual with deference? Are people avoiding a
particular location, route, or person? Is an individual displaying the
involuntary physiological signs of excitement or nervousness?
Are people pulled toward or pushed away from a person or location?
As you ask these questions, you must
compare your observations to a baseline, or what is normal for the environment
you are in. If you frequent an area, whether because you live, work,
play, or patrol there, you get an idea of how people act, how people move, and
who the "bosses" are. You must be ever vigilant for anomalies,
or changes that fall above or below the baseline. Is a normally busy
shopping center or intersection suddenly empty? Are the people who
inhabit that area suddenly showing deference to an individual who doesn't
appear to belong?
In the Combat Hunter program, these
observations drive the Combat Rule of Three. According to the authors, if
you have any three of the above indicators, you must make a decision (Baseline
+ Anomaly = Decision). In Left of Bang, they describe only three
possible decisions: Prepare to kill, Capture, or Make Contact. For a
civilian going about their daily life, these would obviously be
different. Your average civilian does not capture or detain individuals,
although a police officer or security officer might. Police officers or
security officers may also make contact in order to question an individual,
where as a civilian may choose to simply evade that individual unless
unavoidable. Preparing to kill, however, is a reaction that military,
police, and civilians may have to make, although the criteria under which they
may make the preparations would differ.
For more information on the Combat Hunter Program, visit the CP Journal.
Tying it together
So how do these three schools of
thought tie together to benefit you? As you've already seen, observation
is a key to all three, and rightly so. As author Gavin de Becker points
out in his book The Gift of Fear, our bodies' intuition is usually right
in two ways: when you get that "feeling," it is in response to
something, and that "feeling" is your body's way of trying to warn
you. Intuition is also always learning as you add experiences, constantly
modifying its responses. If any of this sounds familiar, you may have
been paying attention in the Orient section of the OODA Loop. Humans, however,
often marginalize their intuition, or interpret it wrongly. If you are in
Condition White, even though your intuition may try to warn you of danger, your
lack of active awareness will more than likely cause you to marginalize,
rationalize, or even outright ignore that warning.
If I were to create a diagram that shows the
relationship between these three systems, it would look like the diagram
below. Call it the Combined Theory of Situational Awareness. Keep
in mind that this diagram is specifically oriented toward self-defense, and
doesn't necessarily apply to some of the other ways OODA could be used, such as
corporate decision-making.
Your observations made in Condition
Yellow (Kinesic, Biometric, Proxemic, Geographic, Iconographic, and Atmospheric)
are oriented through your prior training and experiences (you compare your
observations to a baseline looking for anomalies) to detect possible
threats. If a possible threat is detected, you move to Condition Orange,
evaluating the threat through continued observation and orientation while
developing and deciding on a plan of action.
You may also develop a plan to avoid the potential threat altogether and
implement that plan. If the threat is confirmed, you go to condition red
and act on your chosen plan of action, which may include the use of deadly
force if warranted. While it sounds (and looks) complicated, having
already developed a baseline, having a large "toolbox" to draw from,
and constantly mentally war-gaming can make this an almost subconscious
process.
About the author:
X Echo 1 is a 10 year
veteran of the US Coast Guard, where he has served at various units including
the International Training Division and Maritime Security Response Team.
He has held qualifications including Deployable Team Leader/Instructor, Direct
Action Section Team Leader, and Precision Marksman – Observer. He has
deployed/instructed on five continents and served in quick reaction force roles
for multiple National Special Security Events in the US.
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