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The Source
By
Peter Robins
You may well have pondered this question a thousand times in your close
quarter combat training - where did this come from? What was the
source? How did it come about?
Of course close combat is as old as man - from the very first we have
fought each other, for food, territory or personal gain - but when did
this close combat become a virtual science? This is we something we can
define quite accurately.
Close quarter combat training reached its zenith in the Second World
War - beginning in 1940 when two remarkable men arrived home to their
native England after long service out in China. One had been a
businessman and also a police special (reserve officer) the other a
regular police officer. Both had served in the Shanghai Municipal
Police (SMP) arguably the best trained police force the world has yet
seen.
Who were these men? The former was Eric Anthony Sykes, the latter
William Ewart Fairbairn. Both had been in China for many years and met
up in the early 1920's in Shanghai that infamous city, known as the
Paris of the East. Shanghai is still regarded as having been one of the
world's toughest and most dangerous cities, and in the 20's and 30's so
it was. It was a unique place in that it was a foreign settlement and
municipality situated next to the old Chinese city and self governing.
It was home to a thriving and mixed population and also home to a
seething Chinese population. The Settlement had no definite borders and
so in and out flowed all kinds of problems - mostly in the form of
trouble makers and criminals. Chinese gangs abounded and with them came
organized crime on a huge and terrifying scale. To keep law and order
in this melting pot was the SMP. They were a multi national force of
Chinese, Japanese, Sikhs and "Foreign" Officers (mainly British) from
all over the world. At its peak the SMP numbered about 6,000 men.
All
officers were armed,
with baton
and pistol, and were also trained in empty hand techniques to a high
degree of skill and confidence. This covered arrest and restraint
techniques and also self protection, the latter is still being
overlooked or ignored today! The SMP knew that the former was of little
value without the latter being present. The man responsible for
developing the force's skills in defensive skills was W.E. Fairbairn.
He had joined the SMP in 1907 and had risen through the ranks to become
by 1935 an Assistant Commissioner. He had been their Chief Instructor
in close combat and firearms training. As well as this he had devised,
trained and led the world's first dedicated Riot Squad called the
Reserve Unit (RU) . As well as covering all riots and street
disturbances the RU also were on call to attend special problems where
the local station could not contain the situation. These would cover
such happenings as kidnap, armed robberies and siege problems. They
also acted a special guards to high risk cargoes, to high risk persons
and at courts. In short they were the forerunners of all of today's
SWAT, HRT and ERT teams.
E.A. Sykes had worked on the RU, with Fairbairn, as the officer in
charge of a specialist sniper team. He also had extensive knowledge of
unarmed fighting skills. Fairbairn had in his time in Shanghai devoted
much time to training in these arts from many different sources. It was
these skills that he honed to pass on to his men and to develop his own
method of self protection called Defendu.
Both men retired in 1940 and returned to Britain at war, to find that
it was under dire threat of invasion from Nazi Germany. Hitler had put
into motion his plan called "Operation Sealion" in which he was going
to invade from France and put in place a massive force to occupy and
control most of Britain. The threat was in place directly after the
disastrous rout of the Allied forces in Holland, Belgium and France.
This culminated at a place called Dunkirk where by nothing short of a
miracle Britain managed to evacuate about a quarter of a million men.
They returned to our shores leaving behind a massive amount of arms and
ammunition. So it was that that the Nazis were poised to invade a
country with little, save courage and spirit, to defend with. While the
army reformed another miracle was needed. To my mind this came about
when Fairbairn and Sykes offered their unique services to the War
Office. They were taken on as Captain Instructors and sent up to the
newly formed Special Training Center (STC) at Lochailort in Scotland.
This was to be the least known but most important battle school of all.
Gathered here were the best instructors that Britain had to quickly
train officers and specialist units to take the fight back to the Nazis.
It had been at last realized that the trench warfare mentality of the
First World War was outdated and useless. What was needed was the
mentality of attack and not defense, as had been the case in the past.
To help weld together this attitude being fostered and taught at the
STC, Fairbairn and Sykes were instrumental in teaching pistol and Tommy
gun shooting, Knife and Unarmed Combat to all who passed through the
hallowed gates. A point worth knowing is that Fairbairn was then 55
years of age, Sykes was 57!
What must be
made clear and it is
something that is often misunderstood
- Defendu was the system developed for the SMP and other police forces
of the East; it formed the foundation for what they taught during the
war, but was not the same. Defendu was for mainly arrest and restraint
and self protection, albeit under often dangerous circumstances - the
system(s) taught during the war were for killing and maiming in most
instances. Therein lies the subtle but important difference. Many
people today mix the two up!
Their unique, simple, direct and devastating techniques were taught to
countless men who took these valuable lessons back to their own units
and passed them on. No one who attended the STC ever forgot these two
men and what they gave of them selves to their classes in the way of
skills and perhaps more importantly in confidence and self esteem.
The mindset of Attack or at worst Counter Attack was emphasized
throughout the training time allotted to Fairbairn and Sykes. It was not wasted.
They taught there for two years and it could be said that close quarter
combat training reached its zenith at the STC, even though they went on
to teach at other establishments. Fairbairn left Britain in 1942 and
traveled to Canada and the United States to work with the OSS and other
units. Sykes remained in Britain traveling extensively. They left
behind them a great legacy. It deserves to be carried on to the coming
generations of men who will go in harm's way for the greater good of
all.
Fairbairn and Sykes created different cadres of instructors in every
school they went to and so built up a network of exceptionally skilled
instructors to "spread the gospel". At the end of the war these men
quietly went back to their families and loved ones to try to catch up
with the missing years in their personal lives. Years taken away from
them by the onslaught of war. It is to these specially picked men that
we also owe a debt of gratitude. We also owe them a debt of honor in
that any teaching or training in the name of Fairbairn and Sykes should
only benefit the "good guys". In their memory I would ask you to join
me in doing that - that debt is just too great to do otherwise. |