NFTATraining
New member
Surprise is a tactic. Thats why swat teams break down doors and not knock on them. The end.
if someone surprises me from behind and takes my oc glock from my holster,what do i do then,shoot him (sorry) with my bug?i would not like to oc.
And you base your statement on what education? If you've been trained in advanced defensive tactics by any reputable academy you wouldn't make this statement. It's so rediculous to argue that I won't respond further. you can have the last word.There, fixed it for you so it actually lines up with reality....
Next time, you might want to consider what the actual context is, and what this forum is about....... It is NOT a military strategy or war fighting discussion, This is a place where citizens who choose to be armed come to learn about conceal/open carry from each other, not where they come to learn how to fight wars with armies...... the tactics are QUITE different in almost all cases.....
Much of my advanced tactical training used the element of surprise. I was trained to place the attacker behind the reactionary curve. Breaking the OODA loop is surprise through disruption. It is a key element of indiviual self defense. This was also hammered into my head by my father, a graduate of the United States Naval Academy and decorated Naval Officer through two wars. He was a great tactician who taught me the importance of surprise in individual conflict.Link Removed
A concealed firearm deters nothing. A concealed firearm causes no fear of consequences. A concealed firearm provides no credible threat of unacceptable counteraction.
Surprise is a tactic used to make an attack or a counterattack more effective. The key word being attack.
It is better to deter the enemy from attacking you in the first place, rather than to trust that your defenses are capable of successful elimination of the enemy after the attack has begun. There is less loss to the defending party if the attack is deterred rather than defended against.
That would be an offensive tactic not defensive.
It was just being said that "surprise" was NOT a tactic. It is. Wether it be for the offensive or not. If people are saying that the element of surprise is NOT a tactic, then I fear for their students or anyone else they teach firearms too.
Next time re-read posts BEFORE responding to them.... it was said that it is not a DEFENSIVE tactic.....
I don't care how sharp you are you can be distracted, tired, looking the other way and have a weapon pulled on you. In that instance CC would be a HUGE advantage. Not only the element of surprise but the ability to plan, distract, possibly move to a better shooting position, move away from loved ones to draw fire away from them, put yourself in front of loved ones, the possibilities are endless. If YOU are surprised and the attacker notices that YOU are armed then HE has the tactical advantage and you could be disarmed or shot.
Much of my advanced tactical training used the element of surprise. I was trained to place the attacker behind the reactionary curve. Breaking the OODA loop is surprise through disruption. It is a key element of indiviual self defense. This was also hammered into my head by my father, a graduate of the United States Naval Academy and decorated Naval Officer through two wars. He was a great tactician who taught me the importance of surprise in individual conflict.
Navy, I respond to OC threads just to rile you up. :biggrin: BTW, congrats on the promotion.
I love this. The bad guy has a gun pointed at you, his finger on the trigger. And yet you have the "tactical advantage" because you have a hidden gun? That's just impossible for me to grasp.
I love this. The bad guy has a gun pointed at you, his finger on the trigger. And yet you have the "tactical advantage" because you have a hidden gun? That's just impossible for me to grasp.
Your condescending remarks only prove what everyone else on this forum already knows. I will let you ponder what that means.
“Dumb it down?” LMAO!
You can’t go any further down than where you are pal.
Lets see if you can answer this “Einstien”:
Two people are in a gunfight and both are shooting at each other. Which one is on offense and which is on defense?
There is only one answer, lets see if you have the stones to try and answer it.
I think some of you just like to argue for the hell of it.
I did not say you had THE tactical advantage. I said "CC would be a HUGE advantage." as opposed to OC where the BG may see your weapon. You have an advantage of being able to pick your time to act, or not to act, create a distraction, before you act, and a ton of other choices. that is A tactical advantage.