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Combat 56 designates a fight technique invented by a Polish officer Arkadiusz Kups, former commando unit of elite. This technique was developed for the troop of special elite (the 56th Company) conceived to act behind lines enemies.
Major Kups was the author of the idea to utilize different practical technniques in a close-contact-combat. The idea was to be developed it a system, that should be supposed easily and quickly by instructing. The quintessence is to attack the soft and vulnerable parts of the human body and to utilize natural impulses, in order to protect (attack strategy and defense strategy) itself against attacks. Major is the name most commonly given to the military rank equivalent to NATO rank code OF-3. ...
In order to act effectively or to be able to defend itself in the near battle were many battle sport type as well as for example judo which comes out without steps and blows, visibly unfit. Jump to: navigation, search Judo (Japanese: æé JÅ«dÅ; literally gentle way) is a martial art, a sport and a philosophy which originated in Japan. ...
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combat 56[[de:Combat
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Development of the boot was begun as early as 1955 in an attempt to produce a good combat boot and to overcome the problems encountered in the footwear used during WW2 and Korea.
These boots were modeled on the WW2, 43 patt combat boot and had a buckled cuff at the ankle, and a Swiss Vibram style mountain boot sole.
Development of spike protective combat boots was begun in Oct 1961 at the Natick Labs when it was discovered that VC guerrillas were using sharp pointed, poisoned stakes, in ground traps.
Combat battalions could be ready in 30 days after mobilization, one brigade of each division in 90 days, and entire divisions within a year, depending on the urgency of the situation.
Reconstituting combat units with individual replacements takes time that may not be available if the number of combat battalions is small, so a capability for rapid unit replacement could be valuable.
Those combat organizations are used to augment the active divisions of four Army corps, fulfill missions other than the two MRCs, continue forward deployment in Europe, and provide a fifth corps as a hedge against the unexpected.