In 1941, Applegate was developing armed and unarmed close quarter combat 
courses for the US Army at Camp Ritchie when he was recruited by Wild Bill 
Donovan for the OSS, specifically to build and run what was called "The 
School for Spies and Assassins", the location of which is now Camp 
David.[2] Donovan had Applegate learn all that he could about armed and 
unarmed fighting from William E. Fairbairn to form a brutal and effective 
system. He was the close-combat coordinator for all clandestine missions 
and this role brought him into contact with other fighters and martial 
artists of the time period such as a Finnish soldier who killed 21 Russians 
with a knife and the founder of the British SAS: David Stirling.[3]

Boulder, Colorado: Paladin Press, 1976. Reprint. Hardcover. Navy Blue cloth 
with title in gilt on cover. Octavo. Inscribed, signed and dated [October 
1993] by the author on the front endpaper. xiii,421 pages, index. Profusely 
illustrated with text photos and drawings. Introduction by no less than 
Bill Jordan, author of "No Second Place Winner". Colonel Applegate was THE 
recognized authority on unarmed combat techniques. Near Fine. Item #84462 

"This edition is being published at a time when the world is in a state of 
unrest. Race riots, intolerance, Communist-inspired mob violence, and 
nationalism emphasize the importance of mob control by the established 
forces of law and order. Three new chapters have been added on the 
techniques involved. in riot control..." (from Publisher's Foreword). 

"In 1941 Applegate was developing armed and unarmed close quarter combat 
courses for the US Army Office of Strategic Services (O.S.S), specifically 
to build and run what was called 'The School for Spies and Assassins', 
Applegate was assigned to learn all that he could about armed and unarmed 
fighting from William E. Fairbairn (who worked in a then-very-dangerous 
Shanghai in the 1920's) to form a brutal and effective system. He was the 
close-combat coordinator for all clandestine missions and this role brought 
him into contact with other fighters and martial artists of the time period 
such as a Finnish soldier who killed 21 Russians with a knife and the 
founder of the British SAS: David Stirling.. At one point during the war, 
Applegate served as the personal bodyguard to President Franklin D 
Roosevelt. (paraphrased from Wikipedia entry).
Kill Or Get Killed Rex Applegate

*DOWNLOAD* https://t.co/ZoK29bTH4I


Geoff (Tank)Todd was originally trained by the late Harry Baldock, a World 
War II New Zealand Army Unarmed Combat chief instructor who learned his 
skills from the British. Harry instructed in New Zealand from 1927 until 
his retirement in 1982 when he handed the school over to Geoff Todd. Geoff 
Todd travelled to New York on Harry Baldock's advice to train under Charles 
Nelson a veteran of the Guardal Canal and a marine corps hand to hand 
combat instructor of over ten years. In Charles Nelson's retirement from 
the Marine Corps he opened hisSchool of Self Defence in New York City 
specialising in self-defence, hand-to-hand combat and police training. This 
was the first self defence facility in the United States.

Always hungry for more knowledge Geoff has been trained and certified up to 
Master chief instructor by some of the modern-day military Master chiefs of 
close combat as well. These modern-day Master chief's include Captain 
BenMängels a former chief instructor to the South African military elite 
and police as well as the British elite. US Army Special Forces Master 
chief instructor Lawrence Jordan.

>From research, association and training with exponents trained by New 
Zealand's late elite forces close combat expert Shocker Shaw who was 
trained by the feared and famous British Unarmed Combat expert Mad Mike 
Calvert. Geoff has preserved a valuable part of New Zealand's close combat 
history. After over 25 years of training, instructing and research and 
development Mr Geoff Todd is the only living individual to be collectively 
trained by Colonel Rex Applegate, Charles Nelson, Harry Baldock and from 
these individuals and others to learn the skills of Fairbairn, Sykes, 
Biddle, O'Neill, Kelly, Shaw and Calvert.

Combined with his training and qualifications from the modern-day 
expertsMängels, and Jordan as well as his association with the leading 
international instructors of the International Close Combat 
InstructorsAssociation Geoff Todd has a pedigree in military close combat 
and self defence unequalled by any living individual. From exponent 
training under Harry Baldock through to hand-to-hand combat and specialist 
self defence training under Charles Nelson and special operations armed and 
unarmed combat under Colonel Rex Applegate to passing his Special Forces 
Combative instructor qualification course and achieving Master Chief 
Instructor status, Geoff Todd has moved up through the ranks and has been 
trained and qualified by the world's best, past and present.

The Todd System of Close Combat is a combination of the best of the best, 
past and present and includes 25 years and over 100,000 hours of his 
full-time commitment to developing a system that is practical, effective, 
battle proven and a true military science. The Todd system with over 50 
specialist module's, is current and correct and has been tested in the 
research and development phases as well as in urban and military special 
operations, the system has proven itself time and time again.

The Todd System has been and is continuing to be instructed to regular and 
elite forces to this day. Following in the direction of his former 
instructor's Geoff Todd realises his responsibility to the service 
personnel he trains and takes this responsibility most seriously. He works 
for the love of his trade and has a commitment to that trade and the people 
he trains. A heavy weight rests upon his shoulders when you consider those 
he trains, life or death may well depend upon his commitment to excellence. 
He considers himself a caretaker of the close combat doctrine at this point 
in time and is fully committed to the continued research development and 
improvement of his close combat system. His duty is not only to ensure the 
best in skills but the continuation of the close combat practices and 
teachings well into the future and as such and unselfishly he trains 
several assistants of the highest calibre to continue with the work that 
was handed on to him by his former instructors and be current assistant 
instructors to the Todd Group.

There is nothing Geoff considers more deadly close or final than 
battlefield close combat and this is his motivation and commitment to the 
preservation, improvement and continuation of excellence in the field of 
true military close combat.

He is a current Military Special Operations Master chief instructor and a 
director of the International Close Combat InstructorsAssociation.

I have had many visitors from around the world very interested in the 
combined skills of Col Applegate and myself and equally interested in the 
history lineage and collection of historical material I possess.

Others only met the Col at trade shows or stopped in for a visit, certainly 
never trained from him. He told me he would never instruct Special 
Operation Close Combat skills to anyone if they were not qualified military 
close combat instructors beforehand.

I recorded every detail he showed me and have used many of the combat 
proven principles he versed me in with skills and programs design and still 
do to this day, including the design of knifes, batons and equipment.

In 1989 Col Applegate told me of his first meeting with Fairbairn. He was 
in the UK and partaking in a demo for the Brass up on a raised platform 
when Fairbairn requested Col Applegate attack him. Col Applegate described 
Fairbairn as a crusty old Brit and protested he was afraid he might kill 
him if he attacked him outright.

Bellavia was awarded the Medal of Honor in recognition of his heroic 
actions of Nov. 10, 2004, when he killed five enemy fighters during a 
chaotic battle inside an enemy-held house during the second battle of 
Fallujah, rescuing an entire squad in the process.

But after killing four insurgents, Bellavia was confronted by a wounded 
fighter who engaged him in hand-to-hand combat, forcing the soldier to pull 
out his
Gerber Rex Applegate folding knife and kill him.

Today, we have folks like Massad Ayoob and others whose teachings are 
founded on those principles developed by Applegate and Cooper with emphasis 
on modern combat and weaponry. The need to learn how to shoot instinctively 
is no greater today than in the past. It can make the difference between 
being killed and going home to your family.

When it comes to preparing oneself for a violent street encounter, 
grappling or going to the ground (ie, the street) might not be the wisest 
choice for a number of reasons. Same goes for learning complex small joint 
holds, like finger or elbow locks, because with the huge adrenaline dump 
that goes with being attacked suddenly, your fine motor skills deteriorate 
very rapidly. (see Bruce Siddle's excellent book called "Sharpening the 
Warrior's Edge" for more detail about this).

What does work best in short violent street encounters are gross motor 
skill movements (knees, headbutts, elbows, etc) which direct maximum force 
against your adversary's weakest areas. There are no better manuals of 
study than these listed below. (yes they are old school, but definitely not 
outdated! The links to the books below are in pdf format)

"*Get Tough*" by William E Fairbairn. Fairbairn was a British soldier, and 
police officer who was for most of his early career stationed in the former 
British territory of Shanghai, where he was forced into kill-or-be-killed 
street fight on a regular basis. His relatively short book encompasses all 
of the basic, easy to learn and apply gross-motor self defense skills - 
which are still the best to this day.

Few *GURPS* players are shooters; for them, the most accessible sources to 
see tactical shooting are films and TV. While much of this medium is 
larger-than-life even when that isn't immediately apparent, there are some 
examples that are *reasonably* realistic. The following selection is useful 
for the visualization of how relevant styles, advantages, perks, skills, 
techniques, and guns look in action. The descriptions may contain spoilers!
eebf2c3492

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