Keith Krone that’s way too general and it’s not true. I’m some states, including the one I live in, the minute they enter your home you have the right to kill them with no questions asked. There is no responsibility to retreat. In others, it’s different. It’s irresponsible to post one general statement like that and think it applies to everyone because it doesn’t. Know the laws of the state you live in so you can defend yourself appropriately.
i am in active service for the Philippine Army and had been to combat in mostly jungle terrain, had my first experience in real CQB during ISIS siege in one of our city.. we never had real training for this kind of operation we had to learn through experience because there is only one unit in our branch that was specially trained for urban and CQB the Army LRR, the rest including which i belong are anti-guerrilla fighters. i would like to thank you for this video because i learned a lot.
Bro, dapat ganito ka tindi ang training sa mga pulis at sundalo natin tapos advance tech yung mga gear. Para kasing napag iiwanan na ng panahon yung trainings sa atin
O.M.G. you have done the best video of this CQB Guide till now...the final drill is amazing, simple, easy to train, but extremely effective to train. Very good job sir Eli.
@@ProjectGecko I absolutely love how you combine theoretical and simple to digest knowledge with practice in addition to your relaxed way of teaching those police officers on all the isues you brought up in the discussion
One think I do not understand at 33:42 the instructor said that his student needs to worry about the gun and corner. Can the guy tell the suspect get away from the gun, crawl to your left side so he will be far away from the gun and your only worry is the corner
I actually improved my airsoft CQB gameplay a lot after I watched this series. I was able to engage enemies simultaneously in CQB very effectively with both carbine and handgun. Thanks for the people who put the effort in producing this quality content.
This is so much more informative and entertaining than watching a movie of a military situation. It's so good to see people that are so good at what they do, in any field.
This will definitely be useful for you when you play with a 5 man, and remember, it’s ok to get Tarkov’d it happens. Learn from Mistakes and you will be fine
@@ryean1_aus Actually it helped a lot. Now, that the game has a much better sound system, sounds are less likely to come from a direct source (like through a wall) and the value of safe entry is much higher.
@Han Lockhart i think the dislike are those Guy like me who want to see how to compress a Bullpup rifle with the barrel down like in the videos 😂 just joking Amazing series
I loved the force on force, specially the guy who shot the "unarmed" contact. I think that is a great example of behavior under stress but more importantly, great example of behavior in a life threatening situation. He was focused on him almost looking like "tunnel vision", the contact did a mouvment the officer s mind perceived as "oh shit, threat!" and he fired. That was maybe the best thing that could have happened in this video. Great source of discussion there. Still, I would love to know what would have happened if there was an armed guy who had is weapon shouldered, I mean from the Internetional Humanitarian Law IHL for conflicts, he is armed, but not combatant... How would the officer's approach change in this situation in terms of manouvering, would he treat the guy as a threat, or treat him almost like a civilian? But I think that the importance in a situation like that is a positive ID of who we are dealing with, threat or no threat, compliant or not etc.
that simulation they did there perfectly shows how so many of these unarmed shootings happen with police. people think its so easy to just not shoot until they see a gun or to tase them or something, but this guy, being clearly very well trained and even doing a lot of time studying this in the classroom, still shot under stress when he saw that movement.
Martin Vikor He not just did any movement, he reached for his gun! The hand movement is what he reacts to. The mistake he made is shouting „turn around“ instead of „hands up“ first. Also a gun on the shoulder can be drawn within less than a second, so you obviously would treat him as a threat.
If you participate in a conflict in a way that contributes to the overall effort of your side, you are a combatant and therefore are a legal target. You don't have to hold a gun to be an enemy combatant, it's enough to be part of the force that conducts operations (e.g. military personnel). As long as you do not surrender, or are wounded, you can be legally targeted by the other side(s).
What I learn from this video is we get our badass ego in the way and rush into the room after hitting a target. 31:48 is a perfect example of "feeling dominate, having the upper hand and pushing forward" exposing yourself to unknown potential threats and the correction is demonstrated at 33:03
Sir. I want to thank you for these videos you post. I do shooting but then also play airsoft for force on force experience. There is no better videos on youtube than these. Keep uploading them. . . Much respect to you and all the real heros that civilians like me aspire to be.
@@Draecko Im a convicted felon of a violent crime i dont think im allowed in classes like this.. Im reformed and lookoing to be productive in society but its all baby steps.. This is the best thing i can get for now :) (i play airsoft because i cant actually go to gun ranges, etc)
I've been playing airsoft for approx 4 years now .. tomorrow iam going to a giant facility for indoor airsoft room to room CQB environment.. multiple floors ..these are great tactics to try out.
As part of anti-terrorist forces and VIP protection I can say what this guy is teaching is a completely new approach compared to what i am thought where use of violence and shock should undermine the enemy. But sometimes, even with full training, you become scared to check an unknown room. He really thought me a lot that I can put on the briefing table on the next training session. Cheers from Romania.
It's very interesting I enjoy these videos I am a Security Officer. Many officers security and law enforcement get a very basic brief training. This is more extensive to the individual I think and perhaps more officers at different training levels working together can compromise eachother while resorting to their different training foundations. If that makes sense.? I really appreciate this work may save my life or someone else.
@Chris Madison look up the physical fitness standards dude. Highschool kids crush that trash. I crush that test 3 times a year as it's part of my resume and my credentials as a security officer. And security atleased in Chicago we gotta score a 90% on our range test when cops score 70%. You ever see some of these cops completely outa shape. It's a slap in the face dude
@Chris Madison I'm not trying to say security is a higher standard. Wow I'm just saying the physical fitness standards are not hard bro at all. So relax. And security in Chicago although a defensive role and depending in which company you work for we get in messed up situations all the time and police show up to switch out cuffs and we support and work well together. Why you so mad bro I was just stating a fact that physical fitness standards should go up is all. You went all disrespectful to me.
30:32 "streifschuss?" Haha eli erste mal deutsch reden gehört 😉 Mal wieder ein erstklassiges Video!! Danke für diese super cqb reihe, bitte noch weitere Teile und vor allem mehr Videos mit Eli 🤙🤙
I watched all of these and applied it during a 10 at home vacation using my home. Returned to train with my team and they were like who the heck are you and where is our friend......skillz level up
Boris Vos is a magnificent small unit tactics instructor. He is got the experience, and he's well spoken, conveying his thoughts with clarity, well explained. This is wnother great instructional video from him.
Great video. Eli you are an excellent instructor. Explains everything very clear. Kudo's to the man that plays the enemy for letting him hit all day for the purpose of training people.
Your videos are very informative with a lot of detail regarding techniques and procedures. I wish I had this kind of information when I was LEO. Keep them coming.
Another EXCELLENT video guys!! Learning different techniques from what I was taught as an infantry guy and then police officer for years. Always more than one way to skin a cat. Thanks Eli and UF Pro for this awesome series. Keep them coming!! Semper Fi
I've been playing a lot of Door Kickers 2. Most of my breach and clears are done using limited penetration techniques, rather than trying to ram a 12 foot long stack through a two foot wide threshold. I've had it drilled into me - speed, surprise, violence of action. Lost regional surprise means increased local speed and violence of action. Yet my instincts defied this, and aligned with the teachings here. Everything from slow pie, fast snap to 90°, more slow pie and then slam the last 30 degrees or so to the hard corner, the flinching to narrow when I see more barrels pointing my way than I'm pointing theirs, retreating through the pie matching the motion of the threat to limit exposure to fire. It feels so good to have my techniques validated so clearly throughout this course. I've also designed some levels which are designed to frustrate even active-duty personnel due to the complexity and difficulty. They're doable, but they're absolutely fucking brutal, and if it wasn't for the fact I have numerous hostages, including a US ambassador, you would never even attempt to take the fortress, you would just call in an air-strike. One of them likely wouldn't even be neutralised by a single F-18 and would likely take 3 or more 1,000lb bombs due to triple layer, air-gapped walls designed to double breaching charge expenditure which are breaking the fortress into 6 sections. There is a pathway from the 'porch' to every single room through doorways, so wall breaching charges are not necessary in theory, but if you want to get the mission done without taking extreme loss of life, you're making your own doorways to supplement the existing ones, and allowing you to shortcut a very linear layout. This is further complicated by the fact you only have 8 operators, and each operator may only carry one wall breaching charge, limiting you to either 4 triple thickness walls or 8 normal sub-dividing walls. I would be extremely interested to see how Eli would run my maps after a brief familiarisation with the game mechanics and control systems.
Imo there is a relevant aspect of the force on force room clearing exercise that lessened its realism: on engagement with a threat within in the room from 90° the threat would not just remain standing in the middle of the room after it was shot at, the threat will either disengage and retreat to their narrow angle or will engage fully on the entry way, but would not stand still as it has a natural reaction as well. Instead of telling the guys who play threat inside the room to do whatever they want, it could increase realism by instructing them with basic reaction patterns when being breached that are based on real enemy encounters.
Notice you guys use electric airsoft guns for the training. Would recommend gas blow back (GBB) airsoft rifles instead. You get much more realism and more accurate weight to the actual rifle you would be using in the field. The shooter would be also be able to actually feel the recoil of the rifle shooting and the magazines only carry 30 rounds for an M4 platform. Just a recommendation, love watching these videos and the tactics that are explained.
Playing COD, this was rule #1, making yourself small, and the target large. The slicing aspect was helpful in that it put a name to it. Control your apex, and keep the dominant position.
Great video and information. The instructor is very well educated. Though, some of the "operators" have been watching too many cool guy videos and are forgetting the basics to look good on camera.
this is so against normal doctrine where force of violence and shock factor are so drilled but this kind of thing should be taught far more. rather than just shove a full stack through the fatal funnel as fast as you can.
the head bob back into cover is soooo underated..If youve airsofted before you know that it is a very natural instinct that could save your life. I see alot of force on force training where they peek the corner with the weapon trained on that angle or perp and hold, allowing them to get shot. If you both see each other, youre both likely to engage and fire. Everything was pretty standard..but when he added the head bob back into cover after contact..at that point you know its legit and based on real experience.
When you began to talk about chaos and how it affects people in combat the following quote occurred to me: “Good order makes men bold, and confusion, cowards.”-Niccolò Machiavelli A flexible plan, and training for the kinds of circumstances they will encounter, will help keep people from panicking or making mistakes under pressure. When you talk about reactive vs. proactive engagements and mention Vietnam, you are correct. I wrote my Bachelor's history thesis on Vietnam (comparing it to the Soviet-Afghan War), and one of the big reasons for so much PTSD and low morale in the French, then US and ARVN soldiers was that (estimates vary) 80%+ of engagements were reactions to ambush. Also, 80%+ of engagements were at night. When I started studying civilian self-defense, I wasn't surprised to find similar statistics for CCW engagements. Working under an initiative deficit, when attack can come from almost anywhere at almost any time, is extremely stressful and frustrating. Skilled opponents will try to set circumstances up to use all these factors against you, because that's the best way for them to win. When I was a security guard, I learned to hate and mistrust people who kept hiding their hands or whipping them around quickly for little to no reason, or keep trying to get very close to talk. They push the envelope and dance on the edge of the fence inside the grey area; because they know police, soldiers, guards, and law-abiding citizens have very strict rules on when they can use force. So the bad guys treat them the same way tourists treat those British guards who can't speak or react to anything other than direct threat, to get better opportunities for sneak attacks or waiting for operators to make mistakes. I've seen all the 1,300+ live videos of violence on ActiveSelfProtection channel, and I've concluded that many operators and citizens could have saved their lives (or that of comrades and innocents) or avoided injury (and maybe even sparred the suspects harm) if they were allowed to take proactive action when people are feigning compliance while posturing, provoking, and pushing the boundaries to be as non-cooperative as they can without pulling agro, because they're obviously trying to lull people into a false sense of security while they wait for an opening. Several of those people should just have been punched in the face and thrown to the ground then subdued for doing what any non-special needs child should be able to see is DANGEROUS and DUMB to do to police, soldiers, guards, etc. Sadly tho, those who make the rules seem to prefer erring on the side of their enemies' benefit rather than the forces they send to do the job. Thanks for sharing this for free, the more our martial knowledge advances the more good we can do now and in future generations. The "gun dojo" culture is still only just beginning in the West. "A pint of sweat saves a gallon of blood."-General Patton
@UF PRO You mentioned Dynamic Entries have a time and place. Can you make a video about them? Specifically how they fit into the world of CQB and when and when not to apply said tactics.
Or when you don't have to identify a target because you know there's only enemy combatants inside. More like in a national defense war where everyone is evacuated and the enemy just takes over a empty city
@@macdirty869 because that's not always possible, plus okay let it be in that building you know that in the next room are enemy combatants because you already had contact
Nijat Shukurov Funny Part ... More and More Police/ Army and other Units Starting to Train CQB with Airsoft Guns, because its Save, Cost less then Simunition with Real Guns and its dont need Special Trainings Rooms.
Not a pro, but my personal overall ranking - Champion: Eli🏆🧔 #1: _Polizei POS_ (25:17 & 33:20, 2nd boy next episode) Shoot well, stay serious and make many responses to Eli.🥇👮♂️ #2: Messy top boy (7:38 but no shooting here, shown at last minute in Corner Fed demo with Eli, or the first boy in the Alpha-Bravo drill) Pay attention and ask questions.🥈👦 #3: The threat (also appears as 1st threat next episode) Fast and smart confrontation #4: _Polizei_ with round pouch (28:33, 2nd threat next episode) Aggressive and eager to learn #5/#6: _Orange Polizei_ (30:41)/Bald man with a watch (26:36) Stable performance #7/#8: _Polizei 23_ (31:22)/Bald man with sunglasses (27:26 & 29:43) Have room for improvement😒 I'm sure you'll find the same after spending 10+ hours of watching for _n_ times... 🤩
Great video, very usefull in CQB Airsoft, which is why I'm here. There is something that comes to my mind seeing this video. Non of the entrences made by the agent where harmless, and that made me think about how very stressfull and dangerous the real deal may be. It is incredibly complicated to get arround and entry like it unharmed. This is not a Hollywood production, where bad gays aren't able to hit a car from 10 m away. Nice Job.
Shoutout to the first 3 minutes of this video! I’m watching this at 2am and the resulting door crashes and explosive bangs made me feel like I was actually getting swatted! Wow
3:00 csgo team flashers never end till banned. Had to make dumb comment. Still amazing video amazing knowledge and once again thanks for your service and support to the community to make it a better place much love.
Love it man great work. I think it deserves to be mentioned that most homes around the globe will not stop a round. We need to realize that the human mind will not necessarily stop shooting because you duck behind a wall. Chances are the shooter will continue firing past the wall because they will overshoot the target. That means if you simply duck behind the wall quickly there is a potential to be shot through the wall. I think changing levels at this point would be a good idea. What are your thoughts?
TL;DR: Unarmed guy situation: Instead of shouting „Police, turn around“ as a first order, he should have shouted firstly „Police, Hands up!“, right? The one example where the guy inside was "unarmed": He yells „Police, turn around!“, the guy just normally turns around with his hands down, sees some armed man pointing a gun at him, and then imidiatley, as a reflex, reaches for his gun; his hands were clearly relatively close to his weapon, so maybe he instinctively, out of his self-preservation, thought its better to defend himself activly, rather than give up.. Ok, now wouldn‘t it be better if instead of >slicing >slicing >seeing him > aim > yell „police, turn around!“ if he would have > aim > (but) yell „police, hands up“ , maybe follow up imidiatly with „don‘t move!“ and only if he has hands up, „turn around“ .. „come here“ and so fort. I mean its obviously better, isnt it, for various reasons. For example, if the guy, anyways has an intent to shot no matter what, you can tell that way faster and much safer. If he doesn‘t take his hands up, you know he isn‘t complying, while on the other hand, with yelling „turn around“, and he turns around, he actually is complying and also he is a big step closer to aim at you, meanwhile you‘re not even sure already, if he has the basic will to comply so far.. So the question could be, is there a certain situation, where it makes sense to shout the first order to „turn around“? I mean I‘m asking myself why this police officer went forward with it that way and if he learned and trained it that way? I came to the conclusion that this as a first order is a big no no - in general. You‘re basically asking a guy, who already has a gun in his hands possibly (you can‘t see it) to turn towards you with the gun, psychologically not giving him the chance to surrender. Hope this makes sense. Obviously I‘m nor police nor milittary and just thought about this myself if it wasn‘t clear enough. Thank you for the interessting video Grüsse aus der Schweiz
No rules in War. Deeply. Eat or be Eaten. Kill or be Killed. Your *Morals will get you killed for your enemies do not care of *Your Right or Wrong. Only *Theirs. Hard truth. Easy actually but your acceptance of this is what is really hard. Cheers Champions.
Shintaro Koujiro I’m expecting any police of the western world to understand and speak English perfectly. If they don’t they should just not be armed and being assigned sticking fines on cars...
I'm watching these videos exactly for that montage you put in the beginning. I want to be prepared in case I only have 3 second before my door is busted down.
The thing that not covered herr is that guy can not move from room, but move out just gun and do a blind fire, because he already know the disposition. So just standing out the door is very dangerous thing. And if so happen that next what attacker should do is to throw a granade into the room, or take cover in a near room or conner. Also thinking that wal will protect you is very bad. Most of the wall can be pierced with 9mm ordinary ammo, and more heavy ammo can hit you even behind a concrete wal. So the best tactic here is to know the structure ow the wall and always move. Defender shouldnt know your current disposition. And if he saw you somewhere you already shouldnt be there. The same thing can be using for attacking, you get image from the ro with cammera, etc and then instead to move into it you can just shoot through the wall knowing where is you opponent stand
I’d like to thank you for giving me this information so I can now clear my house every time I enter a new room. I’ve been watching a lot of your vids and I would say I’m now an expert of sweeping my house. 😂😂😂
I can't be the only one who walks around the house now clearing all the rooms in my mind after watching this series.
Poodz same here brother
SHOULDER CHECK....take your time...take your time
Wife thinks I'm losing it
@@thinkaboutit8760 Hahaha mine too.
Same here 🇺🇸
Can’t believe I’m watching such a high quality material on CQB for free. This is amazing material. Thank you Eli.
wasnt really good CQB
@@SlavUnion drop a good one then
Me an illustrator and Designer who works from a home studio: Nice now I can clear my home.
As a self employed photographer I can now fight my way through all the Uncle Bills with their SLRs they bought from Best Buy
Im an artist as well. I'm so intrigued by this shit it's like I'm watching a drawing tutorial... what da fak 😂
Seconded. You don’t clear your home. Call 911. Arm yourself, Barricade. Being the aggressor even in your own home is looked down upon by the courts.
Keith Krone that’s way too general and it’s not true. I’m some states, including the one I live in, the minute they enter your home you have the right to kill them with no questions asked. There is no responsibility to retreat. In others, it’s different. It’s irresponsible to post one general statement like that and think it applies to everyone because it doesn’t. Know the laws of the state you live in so you can defend yourself appropriately.
Me a programmer who sometimes plays airsoft: nice, now I can clear those rentals
i am in active service for the Philippine Army and had been to combat in mostly jungle terrain, had my first experience in real CQB during ISIS siege in one of our city.. we never had real training for this kind of operation we had to learn through experience because there is only one unit in our branch that was specially trained for urban and CQB the Army LRR, the rest including which i belong are anti-guerrilla fighters. i would like to thank you for this video because i learned a lot.
Gladly brother. Take care.
Bro, dapat ganito ka tindi ang training sa mga pulis at sundalo natin tapos advance tech yung mga gear. Para kasing napag iiwanan na ng panahon yung trainings sa atin
Salamat sa serbisyo!
@that scaucy man 2.0 trained na ang mga sundalo at pulis natin. Kaya nga sinabi ko kailangan ng mas matindi pang training at gear tech.
salamat for you service
O.M.G. you have done the best video of this CQB Guide till now...the final drill is amazing, simple, easy to train, but extremely effective to train. Very good job sir Eli.
Thank you Santos i appreciate.
Absolutely agree. By far the most informative yet simple video
@@ProjectGecko I absolutely love how you combine theoretical and simple to digest knowledge with practice in addition to your relaxed way of teaching those police officers on all the isues you brought up in the discussion
One think I do not understand at 33:42 the instructor said that his student needs to worry about the gun and corner. Can the guy tell the suspect get away from the gun, crawl to your left side so he will be far away from the gun and your only worry is the corner
I think it's valuable to know even for non-military people. Thanks for sharing the surviving base knowledge for ones who can't afford such courses
The opening video makes me so glad that I'm just watching this to learn airsoft instead of actually having to fight for my life.
Jef Pauwels see I’m using this to learn about CQB as I am a infantry US Marine. These are the exact ways you would clear a room in real life.
Same, it's very effective for milsim games
Learning in case anyone breaks into my house, imagine using these skills against an amateur thief…
@@BloodySurprises never underestimate your enemy.
I actually improved my airsoft CQB gameplay a lot after I watched this series. I was able to engage enemies simultaneously in CQB very effectively with both carbine and handgun. Thanks for the people who put the effort in producing this quality content.
This is so much more informative and entertaining than watching a movie of a military situation. It's so good to see people that are so good at what they do, in any field.
Thank you UF PRO! Now I can test my CQB skills in Escape from Tarkov, when I'm clueless about how to approach an unknown room!
I was just about to do same thing
How'd it work out for you?
This will definitely be useful for you when you play with a 5 man, and remember, it’s ok to get Tarkov’d it happens. Learn from Mistakes and you will be fine
@@ryean1_aus Actually it helped a lot. Now, that the game has a much better sound system, sounds are less likely to come from a direct source (like through a wall) and the value of safe entry is much higher.
R6s is good for this too.
Those dislikes are the uneducated, keep it up ufpro love these videos it helps.
thank you!
probably anti-gun vegans
@Han Lockhart i think the dislike are those Guy like me who want to see how to compress a Bullpup rifle with the barrel down like in the videos 😂 just joking Amazing series
I think they are criminal who hates Police 😁
Probably snackbars
love this series! excellent information
I loved the force on force, specially the guy who shot the "unarmed" contact. I think that is a great example of behavior under stress but more importantly, great example of behavior in a life threatening situation. He was focused on him almost looking like "tunnel vision", the contact did a mouvment the officer s mind perceived as "oh shit, threat!" and he fired. That was maybe the best thing that could have happened in this video. Great source of discussion there. Still, I would love to know what would have happened if there was an armed guy who had is weapon shouldered, I mean from the Internetional Humanitarian Law IHL for conflicts, he is armed, but not combatant... How would the officer's approach change in this situation in terms of manouvering, would he treat the guy as a threat, or treat him almost like a civilian? But I think that the importance in a situation like that is a positive ID of who we are dealing with, threat or no threat, compliant or not etc.
that simulation they did there perfectly shows how so many of these unarmed shootings happen with police. people think its so easy to just not shoot until they see a gun or to tase them or something, but this guy, being clearly very well trained and even doing a lot of time studying this in the classroom, still shot under stress when he saw that movement.
Martin Vikor
He not just did any movement, he reached for his gun! The hand movement is what he reacts to.
The mistake he made is shouting „turn around“ instead of „hands up“ first.
Also a gun on the shoulder can be drawn within less than a second, so you obviously would treat him as a threat.
If you participate in a conflict in a way that contributes to the overall effort of your side, you are a combatant and therefore are a legal target. You don't have to hold a gun to be an enemy combatant, it's enough to be part of the force that conducts operations (e.g. military personnel). As long as you do not surrender, or are wounded, you can be legally targeted by the other side(s).
@@Tall0n3 what about medical personeel? They are not engageable targets, aren't they?
@@MV-gc6du a gun placed on your shoulder... Drawn min less then 1 sec? Who the hell can do that, Jerry Michulek?
What I learn from this video is we get our badass ego in the way and rush into the room after hitting a target. 31:48 is a perfect example of "feeling dominate, having the upper hand and pushing forward" exposing yourself to unknown potential threats and the correction is demonstrated at 33:03
100%. Exposure.
Sir. I want to thank you for these videos you post. I do shooting but then also play airsoft for force on force experience. There is no better videos on youtube than these. Keep uploading them. . . Much respect to you and all the real heros that civilians like me aspire to be.
thank you for your kind words
thank you!
Make more longer videos like this!
Brethem Jackson they do, go look at there channel. The last 6 out of 8 videos have all been 25-45mins long
Or, you know, sign up and do the class.
@@Draecko Im a convicted felon of a violent crime i dont think im allowed in classes like this.. Im reformed and lookoing to be productive in society but its all baby steps.. This is the best thing i can get for now :) (i play airsoft because i cant actually go to gun ranges, etc)
@@jcr17 HAHAHA BRUH.
Good luck on getting better.
@@jcr17 wtf did you do?? Lmfao…
Hahaha I just saw the thumbnail of the video and I heard “Make sense?” in my head with his voice, awesome hahaha
Used this series to develop a 1/2 man room clearing class for our Force on Force evals at my work. Thanks Eli
That video that you played of teams breaching, brought back memories. That was intense, good segway. As always your videos are the best and thanks.
I've been playing airsoft for approx 4 years now .. tomorrow iam going to a giant facility for indoor airsoft room to room CQB environment.. multiple floors ..these are great tactics to try out.
I'd like to see Eli go over his carrier set up and explain why he set it up that way.
I like that because it highlights human factor. And that’s really where anyone can improve beyond basic skills in any disciplines.
As part of anti-terrorist forces and VIP protection I can say what this guy is teaching is a completely new approach compared to what i am thought where use of violence and shock should undermine the enemy. But sometimes, even with full training, you become scared to check an unknown room.
He really thought me a lot that I can put on the briefing table on the next training session. Cheers from Romania.
It's very interesting I enjoy these videos I am a Security Officer. Many officers security and law enforcement get a very basic brief training. This is more extensive to the individual I think and perhaps more officers at different training levels working together can compromise eachother while resorting to their different training foundations. If that makes sense.? I really appreciate this work may save my life or someone else.
@Chris Madison still no excuse to not raise the bar. Set the standard and then raise the bar.
@Chris Madison na bro the physical fitness standards for LE are a walk in the park bro.
@Chris Madison look up the physical fitness standards dude. Highschool kids crush that trash. I crush that test 3 times a year as it's part of my resume and my credentials as a security officer. And security atleased in Chicago we gotta score a 90% on our range test when cops score 70%. You ever see some of these cops completely outa shape. It's a slap in the face dude
@Chris Madison I'm not trying to say security is a higher standard. Wow I'm just saying the physical fitness standards are not hard bro at all. So relax. And security in Chicago although a defensive role and depending in which company you work for we get in messed up situations all the time and police show up to switch out cuffs and we support and work well together. Why you so mad bro I was just stating a fact that physical fitness standards should go up is all. You went all disrespectful to me.
I agree! I’m a USMC Infantry and these are WAYY more helpful than some of the training I’ve gotten.
So much value in this video. The long videos are great, thank you!
thank you!
Such talented instructor. Amazing analytical skills. Best wishes to him and to everyone in the team.
Amazing information. Amazing instructor.
30:32 "streifschuss?" Haha eli erste mal deutsch reden gehört 😉
Mal wieder ein erstklassiges Video!! Danke für diese super cqb reihe, bitte noch weitere Teile und vor allem mehr Videos mit Eli 🤙🤙
Idiots edit.
This is insane. You usually pay hundreds of dollars for this kind of training. Keep up the amazing work
More like this one with situations, please!
Nice work fellas! Regards from Romania 🇷🇴.
Thank you!
Thus guy is a great teacher, relaxed and clear. Awesome stuff.
i watched this about a year back and back to revisit the video good information and better techniques than ive seen from other operators
Really great editing. It builds suspense. The whole episode feels like a tactical briefing before a combat scene
I watched all of these and applied it during a 10 at home vacation using my home.
Returned to train with my team and they were like who the heck are you and where is our friend......skillz level up
Boris Vos is a magnificent small unit tactics instructor. He is got the experience, and he's well spoken, conveying his thoughts with clarity, well explained. This is wnother great instructional video from him.
Great video. Eli you are an excellent instructor. Explains everything very clear.
Kudo's to the man that plays the enemy for letting him hit all day for the purpose of training people.
Very useful information. And these guys looked bad ass during the Force on Force stage.
Your videos are very informative with a lot of detail regarding techniques and procedures. I wish I had this kind of information when I was LEO. Keep them coming.
Very good training, I am from Brazil and I am learning to much here in this channel.
Another EXCELLENT video guys!! Learning different techniques from what I was taught as an infantry guy and then police officer for years. Always more than one way to skin a cat. Thanks Eli and UF Pro for this awesome series. Keep them coming!! Semper Fi
thanks my man
I've been playing a lot of Door Kickers 2.
Most of my breach and clears are done using limited penetration techniques, rather than trying to ram a 12 foot long stack through a two foot wide threshold.
I've had it drilled into me - speed, surprise, violence of action. Lost regional surprise means increased local speed and violence of action.
Yet my instincts defied this, and aligned with the teachings here. Everything from slow pie, fast snap to 90°, more slow pie and then slam the last 30 degrees or so to the hard corner, the flinching to narrow when I see more barrels pointing my way than I'm pointing theirs, retreating through the pie matching the motion of the threat to limit exposure to fire.
It feels so good to have my techniques validated so clearly throughout this course.
I've also designed some levels which are designed to frustrate even active-duty personnel due to the complexity and difficulty.
They're doable, but they're absolutely fucking brutal, and if it wasn't for the fact I have numerous hostages, including a US ambassador, you would never even attempt to take the fortress, you would just call in an air-strike. One of them likely wouldn't even be neutralised by a single F-18 and would likely take 3 or more 1,000lb bombs due to triple layer, air-gapped walls designed to double breaching charge expenditure which are breaking the fortress into 6 sections. There is a pathway from the 'porch' to every single room through doorways, so wall breaching charges are not necessary in theory, but if you want to get the mission done without taking extreme loss of life, you're making your own doorways to supplement the existing ones, and allowing you to shortcut a very linear layout. This is further complicated by the fact you only have 8 operators, and each operator may only carry one wall breaching charge, limiting you to either 4 triple thickness walls or 8 normal sub-dividing walls.
I would be extremely interested to see how Eli would run my maps after a brief familiarisation with the game mechanics and control systems.
I hate how there are a lot views here but no one subs to this channel >:(
This channel deserves a million subs!
I like how everyone is there to learn understand and move forward together
Imo there is a relevant aspect of the force on force room clearing exercise that lessened its realism: on engagement with a threat within in the room from 90° the threat would not just remain standing in the middle of the room after it was shot at, the threat will either disengage and retreat to their narrow angle or will engage fully on the entry way, but would not stand still as it has a natural reaction as well. Instead of telling the guys who play threat inside the room to do whatever they want, it could increase realism by instructing them with basic reaction patterns when being breached that are based on real enemy encounters.
Helping me get better at home defense every week. Can't thank you enough for this content. Many many blessings
Notice you guys use electric airsoft guns for the training. Would recommend gas blow back (GBB) airsoft rifles instead. You get much more realism and more accurate weight to the actual rifle you would be using in the field. The shooter would be also be able to actually feel the recoil of the rifle shooting and the magazines only carry 30 rounds for an M4 platform. Just a recommendation, love watching these videos and the tactics that are explained.
I own a gas blow back airsoft gun. I don't "do" airsoft. It's *just* for training.
Im pretty sure they do live fire training lmfao and in CQB they tend to do point shooting alot(kinda like hipfiring)
plus trigger pull/reactivity is very close if not similar to the real gun
Playing COD, this was rule #1, making yourself small, and the target large. The slicing aspect was helpful in that it put a name to it. Control your apex, and keep the dominant position.
Great video. Thank you. I love this video just as much as your video on weapon flow in close quarters.
Sht starts getting real around the 3 minute mark. Thanks for all the hard work.
Great video and information. The instructor is very well educated. Though, some of the "operators" have been watching too many cool guy videos and are forgetting the basics to look good on camera.
Always pay attention to the feets.
these videos are exceptionally well made and actually have content to learn from.
This is gold standard training I have not been exposed to, bravo new sub.
this is so against normal doctrine where force of violence and shock factor are so drilled but this kind of thing should be taught far more. rather than just shove a full stack through the fatal funnel as fast as you can.
Exactly.
Amazing Information passed along. Thank you for taking the time to share your knowledge.
glad to bro
the head bob back into cover is soooo underated..If youve airsofted before you know that it is a very natural instinct that could save your life. I see alot of force on force training where they peek the corner with the weapon trained on that angle or perp and hold, allowing them to get shot. If you both see each other, youre both likely to engage and fire. Everything was pretty standard..but when he added the head bob back into cover after contact..at that point you know its legit and based on real experience.
Bailing is a natural reaction to sudden threat for some people too.
When you began to talk about chaos and how it affects people in combat the following quote occurred to me: “Good order makes men bold, and confusion, cowards.”-Niccolò Machiavelli A flexible plan, and training for the kinds of circumstances they will encounter, will help keep people from panicking or making mistakes under pressure.
When you talk about reactive vs. proactive engagements and mention Vietnam, you are correct. I wrote my Bachelor's history thesis on Vietnam (comparing it to the Soviet-Afghan War), and one of the big reasons for so much PTSD and low morale in the French, then US and ARVN soldiers was that (estimates vary) 80%+ of engagements were reactions to ambush. Also, 80%+ of engagements were at night. When I started studying civilian self-defense, I wasn't surprised to find similar statistics for CCW engagements. Working under an initiative deficit, when attack can come from almost anywhere at almost any time, is extremely stressful and frustrating. Skilled opponents will try to set circumstances up to use all these factors against you, because that's the best way for them to win.
When I was a security guard, I learned to hate and mistrust people who kept hiding their hands or whipping them around quickly for little to no reason, or keep trying to get very close to talk. They push the envelope and dance on the edge of the fence inside the grey area; because they know police, soldiers, guards, and law-abiding citizens have very strict rules on when they can use force. So the bad guys treat them the same way tourists treat those British guards who can't speak or react to anything other than direct threat, to get better opportunities for sneak attacks or waiting for operators to make mistakes. I've seen all the 1,300+ live videos of violence on ActiveSelfProtection channel, and I've concluded that many operators and citizens could have saved their lives (or that of comrades and innocents) or avoided injury (and maybe even sparred the suspects harm) if they were allowed to take proactive action when people are feigning compliance while posturing, provoking, and pushing the boundaries to be as non-cooperative as they can without pulling agro, because they're obviously trying to lull people into a false sense of security while they wait for an opening. Several of those people should just have been punched in the face and thrown to the ground then subdued for doing what any non-special needs child should be able to see is DANGEROUS and DUMB to do to police, soldiers, guards, etc. Sadly tho, those who make the rules seem to prefer erring on the side of their enemies' benefit rather than the forces they send to do the job.
Thanks for sharing this for free, the more our martial knowledge advances the more good we can do now and in future generations. The "gun dojo" culture is still only just beginning in the West.
"A pint of sweat saves a gallon of blood."-General Patton
What do you mean by initiative deficit?
@@ryean1_aus probably loss of advantage
These videos have helped me survive fire fights in my tactical shooter games.
Started playing airsoft and this is gonna be handy for the squad when we run drills. Subbed
Work on your cardio. That will make a much bigger difference.
@UF PRO You mentioned Dynamic Entries have a time and place. Can you make a video about them? Specifically how they fit into the world of CQB and when and when not to apply said tactics.
Receiving accurate fire, lost hallway control, etc.
Or when you don't have to identify a target because you know there's only enemy combatants inside. More like in a national defense war where everyone is evacuated and the enemy just takes over a empty city
@@Keka-vg3ut That doesn't make sense. Why would you go in then at all, if there is no reason. Just kill them with heavy weapons from the outside.
@@macdirty869 because that's not always possible, plus okay let it be in that building you know that in the next room are enemy combatants because you already had contact
@@macdirty869 I'm talking about a war at home, do you want to destroy your own cities and retreat until there is nothing left?
It is time to unpack my airsoft...
Nijat Shukurov Funny Part ... More and More Police/ Army and other Units Starting to Train CQB with Airsoft Guns, because its Save, Cost less then Simunition with Real Guns and its dont need Special Trainings Rooms.
Clearing home during quarantine - stonks
Gonna buy some and start clearing my home
Airsoft can be fantastic training aids for force on force.
Love this series, keep it up UF pro and Eli🙏
Not a pro, but my personal overall ranking - Champion: Eli🏆🧔
#1: _Polizei POS_ (25:17 & 33:20, 2nd boy next episode) Shoot well, stay serious and make many responses to Eli.🥇👮♂️
#2: Messy top boy (7:38 but no shooting here, shown at last minute in Corner Fed demo with Eli, or the first boy in the Alpha-Bravo drill) Pay attention and ask questions.🥈👦
#3: The threat (also appears as 1st threat next episode) Fast and smart
confrontation
#4: _Polizei_ with round pouch (28:33, 2nd threat next episode) Aggressive and eager to learn
#5/#6: _Orange Polizei_ (30:41)/Bald man with a watch (26:36) Stable performance
#7/#8: _Polizei 23_ (31:22)/Bald man with sunglasses (27:26 & 29:43) Have room for improvement😒
I'm sure you'll find the same after spending 10+ hours of watching for _n_ times... 🤩
Great video, very usefull in CQB Airsoft, which is why I'm here.
There is something that comes to my mind seeing this video. Non of the entrences made by the agent where harmless, and that made me think about how very stressfull and dangerous the real deal may be. It is incredibly complicated to get arround and entry like it unharmed. This is not a Hollywood production, where bad gays aren't able to hit a car from 10 m away.
Nice Job.
Some of them were bbs that bounced off the door/roof but yeah it was still about 50/50.
Was surprised how many were to the hands/fingers.
I actually use all this. This is pure quality. Fan for Life. Not fucking fluff amazing. I would battle with these individuals
Its good to know when the right time
Great thought provoking info. Awesome vid. 🎯
These are incredible videos - so much learning AND production value O.O
Very educational I would like to see a longer video digging in a little bit deeper
You mean like the whole series consisting of hours of content?
been waiting for new episodes. thank you so much
That's awesome! These military action heroes were really look like real-life LVN Action Heroes!
Good channel with good impressions for training with the comrades.
the target fixation thing is SO REAL in video game. often my KD went 1 step forward 2 step back because of it
You are an amazing teacher!! Very professional and the way you can explain and demonstrate is just fabulous! Thank you!
Shoutout to the first 3 minutes of this video!
I’m watching this at 2am and the resulting door crashes and explosive bangs made me feel like I was actually getting swatted!
Wow
I will unironically use this tactic the next time there's a spider in my room.
great drills and technique. will put them to good use
Great information! Thanks for giving it to us! Definetly gonna buy your gear once i need some!
Nice little detail at the end!
Thoughts on blind fire? Seems like a very effective way once I identified the threat in the room
Thank you sir....make me think about my drills in another way...🤜💥🤛
Thanks,for all video.
All of Pro's guide to CQB video is nice and true That's very real of cqb
Very impressive sir.
3:00 csgo team flashers never end till banned. Had to make dumb comment. Still amazing video amazing knowledge and once again thanks for your service and support to the community to make it a better place much love.
More training videos, please. These are amazing!
These tactics are great. As a siege player I can logically clear a building in a controlled matter!
Love it man great work. I think it deserves to be mentioned that most homes around the globe will not stop a round. We need to realize that the human mind will not necessarily stop shooting because you duck behind a wall. Chances are the shooter will continue firing past the wall because they will overshoot the target. That means if you simply duck behind the wall quickly there is a potential to be shot through the wall. I think changing levels at this point would be a good idea. What are your thoughts?
100% true. As the same can be said whilst stacking. This is a risk.
TL;DR: Unarmed guy situation: Instead of shouting „Police, turn around“ as a first order, he should have shouted firstly „Police, Hands up!“, right?
The one example where the guy inside was "unarmed": He yells „Police, turn around!“, the guy just normally turns around with his hands down, sees some armed man pointing a gun at him, and then imidiatley, as a reflex, reaches for his gun; his hands were clearly relatively close to his weapon, so maybe he instinctively, out of his self-preservation, thought its better to defend himself activly, rather than give up..
Ok, now wouldn‘t it be better if instead of >slicing >slicing >seeing him > aim > yell „police, turn around!“
if he would have > aim > (but) yell „police, hands up“ , maybe follow up imidiatly with „don‘t move!“
and only if he has hands up, „turn around“ .. „come here“ and so fort.
I mean its obviously better, isnt it, for various reasons. For example, if the guy, anyways has an intent to shot no matter what, you can tell that way faster and much safer. If he doesn‘t take his hands up, you know he isn‘t complying, while on the other hand, with yelling „turn around“, and he turns around, he actually is complying and also he is a big step closer to aim at you, meanwhile you‘re not even sure already, if he has the basic will to comply so far..
So the question could be, is there a certain situation, where it makes sense to shout the first order to „turn around“? I mean I‘m asking myself why this police officer went forward with it that way and if he learned and trained it that way?
I came to the conclusion that this as a first order is a big no no - in general. You‘re basically asking a guy, who already has a gun in his hands possibly (you can‘t see it) to turn towards you with the gun, psychologically not giving him the chance to surrender. Hope this makes sense.
Obviously I‘m nor police nor milittary and just thought about this myself if it wasn‘t clear enough.
Thank you for the interessting video
Grüsse aus der Schweiz
You are right. Hands up, head down, slowly turn around to face me (or direction of my voice). Get hand control before you ask them to move.
You are right but do keep in mind those are German Police Officers and their native Language isn´t English , so give em some slack :P
No rules in War. Deeply. Eat or be Eaten. Kill or be Killed. Your *Morals will get you killed for your enemies do not care of *Your Right or Wrong. Only *Theirs.
Hard truth. Easy actually but your acceptance of this is what is really hard.
Cheers Champions.
Shintaro Koujiro I’m expecting any police of the western world to understand and speak English perfectly. If they don’t they should just not be armed and being assigned sticking fines on cars...
@@kingmichaeltheearchangel3593 except this isn't war these are police
*"slice space entries are like an ambush in motion."* 29:52
Another great vid and teachings, superb! 👍🏼
I'm watching these videos exactly for that montage you put in the beginning. I want to be prepared in case I only have 3 second before my door is busted down.
Keep up this videos, they are great! I am very thankfull.
The thing that not covered herr is that guy can not move from room, but move out just gun and do a blind fire, because he already know the disposition.
So just standing out the door is very dangerous thing. And if so happen that next what attacker should do is to throw a granade into the room, or take cover in a near room or conner.
Also thinking that wal will protect you is very bad. Most of the wall can be pierced with 9mm ordinary ammo, and more heavy ammo can hit you even behind a concrete wal.
So the best tactic here is to know the structure ow the wall and always move. Defender shouldnt know your current disposition. And if he saw you somewhere you already shouldnt be there.
The same thing can be using for attacking, you get image from the ro with cammera, etc and then instead to move into it you can just shoot through the wall knowing where is you opponent stand
Bravo, bravo, bravísimo 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 excellent explanation, outstandingly developed drill 💎💎💎💎
I’d like to thank you for giving me this information so I can now clear my house every time I enter a new room. I’ve been watching a lot of your vids and I would say I’m now an expert of sweeping my house. 😂😂😂
Thanks for the videos, the series is the best I have seen. Learned a great a lot and thing perfectly works for ous airsoft killhouse.
This long videos are great. The whole serie is pretty awsome to watch!
Thank you for sharing your experience with us!!
You are welcome 😎🤙
Top-notch, excellent well done
Amazing knowledge. Thank you.
😎🤙