Buttstroke

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Illustration from a WW2 US Army field manual: "Smash following vertical butt stroke."

A buttstroke or butt-stroking is the act of striking someone with the

firearm as a blunt weapon. Buttstroke is among the major offensive techniques with the rifle and bayonet in close-at-hand combat and is the recommended method of close combat if the rifleman has no bayonet or sidearm available.[1][2]

Effectiveness

U.S. Air Force
trainee demonstrating a butt stroke on a strike dummy

Despite technological changes, modern

Techniques

Buttstrokes are implemented by a variety of combatants, often trained in a series of transitioned movements to prevent wasted motion and ensure that the aggressor is able to make repeated attacks or quickly parry or guard following a failed attempt.[2][4] Buttstrokes can be combined with kicking and kneeing an opponent's lower body to further increase effectiveness and provide more variety to routes of attack.[5][6]

Buttstrokes carry the risk of damaging one's weapon, and, by some schools of thought, are considered best a method of last resort, recommending the use of bayonets, if possible, when engaged in close quarters combat.[7] Even if relying primarily on bayonets, a buttstroke may still prove effective as a transitional move following a failed bayonet charge, bringing the butt of the gun in a vertical, upward swing into the combatant's groin.[7]

Part of the butt stroke training regimen involves hitting padded dummies, alongside working through drills with partners in order to avoid damaging one's weapon.[5][7][8]

United States Techniques

The 1918

United States National Guard and other branches of the military:[2][4][5][9][10][11]

Trench or Vertical Butt Strokes

Open Ground or Horizontal Butt Strokes

  • Buttstroke I – Advancing the rear foot, with a half-arm blow swing the butt up at the opponent's jaw with your right hand holding onto the small of the stock.
  • Buttstroke II – If the opponent jumps back, causing the first stroke to miss, the rifle will come into a horizontal position over the left shoulder, butt leading. The attacker will then step in with the rear foot and slash the bayonet into the opponent's face.

See also

  • Bayonet charge
  • Hardtack – Hard biscuit historically eaten by soldiers, who would sometimes soften them with a rifle strike
  • Pistol-whipping

References

  1. .
  2. ^ a b c Corps, United States Marine (1965). Marine Bayonet Training. Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps.
  3. ^ Jensen, Peter R. (2014-11-19). "Hand-to-Hand Combat and the Use of Combatives Skills: An Analysis of United States Army Post Combat Surveys from 2004-2008". Archived from the original on July 27, 2020. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ a b Wood, Sterling A. (1940). Riot Control by the National Guard. Military service publishing Company.
  5. ^ a b c Bond, Paul Stanley; Ellis, Olin Oglesby; Garey, Enoch Barton; McMurray, Thomas Leroy (1921). The Red, White and Blue Manuals: ... a Text Book for the Citizens' Military Training Camp. New York City, NY: Johns Hopkins Press. p. 11.
  6. ^ Military Science and Tactics. Vol. 2. University co-operative store. 1921.
  7. ^ a b c The Leatherneck. Vol. 35. Madison, Wisconsin: Leatherneck Association. 1952. p. 46.
  8. ^ Moss, James Alfred (1917). Trench Warfare. Geo. Banta publishing Company. p. 196.
  9. ^ Landing-force Manual, United States Navy, 1918 By United States Navy Dept, United States, pp. 508-510 (public domain)
  10. .
  11. ^ 2015 MCMAP Publications Combined: USMC Martial Arts Instructor Course Student Outline; Tan, Gray, Green, Brown & Black Belt; Gear List & Log; The High Intensity Tactical Training Methodology & More. Jeffrey Frank Jones. 2019-02-26.