- "It Never Happens Here" So WHY Do We Train?
- Think 'FAST': A mnemonic to help keep you safe, by John Demand
- PoliceOne.Com Published: Are you prepared to adapt and win on the street?
- Understanding and Developing Adaptive Leadership During Pre-commissioning
- Book Review: If I Knew Then 2: Warrior Reflections
- A VISION AND THE MISSION FOR: THE FUTURE LAW ENFORCEMENT LEARNING ORGANIZATION
- Police Leaders as Educators and Trainers...Inspiring Cops to More Effective and Safe Policing
- You've Got To Have an Ace in the Hole. Are You Prepared to Adapt and Win on the Street?
- What has 2011 Taught You About Officer Safety and Effectiveness?
- Police One, column 'Staying Oriented' article #1: 'Red Teaming' the cop killer
- Mental Toughness and The Competitive Nature of Conflict
- Police Militarization, Professionalism, and the Balance of Persuasion and Force
- Mental Toughness and...The Power to Adapt
- Mental Toughness: Optimistic Enthusiasm as a Form of Realism
- Preparing for Crisis with Tactical Decision Games, After Action Reviews and Critical Question Mapping
- Great Recap of Boyd and Beyond 2011 By Scott Shipman
- Global Warrior Averting WWIII, John Poole's Latest Strategic and Tactical Insights to Protecting the Homeland
- Brain plasticity: A whole new idea for cops
- Boyd & Beyond is on for 14 & 15 October at Quantico.
- "SWARMING TACTICS" Published in the California Association of Tactical Officers official publication CATO NEWS
- Documentary: Massacre at Virginia Tech
- Book Review: TEMPO Timing, Tactics and Strategy in Narrative Driven Decision Making by Venkatesh Rao
- Fine Art, Fine Tuning Situation Awareness and Training Cops to See
- 15 Meters/11Seconds By C Flaherty and AR Green
- Too Focused? You Might Miss Something Important
- Dangerous Body Language: Digging Beyond What You See!
- Swarming & The Future of Conflict by John Arquilla and David Ronfeldt
- Swarming Tactics by Sid Heal
- More On Swarming Tactics...An Option For Law Enforcement
- Dangerous Body Language: Detecting Deception and Danger
- Cops Line of Duty Deaths Rising in 2011 "APPLYING"Lessons Learned
- Cops, Security, Citizens Need to Be Aware: Does the Climate & Environment Shift in the Wake of bin Laden's Death?
- Progress, Interrupt and Neutralize (P.I.N.) Swarming Techniques For The Tactician
- Should We Be Thinking Like the Bad Guys?
- Meet Officers Lewis and Clark-Exploring Situational Awareness
- Dangerous Body Language,The Boyd Cycle and Winning on the Street
- Dangerous Body Language: A Thousand Words...None Spoken! The Nose, Mouth and Lips
- The 10% of Mindset
- The 3 P's in Extreme Close Quarters Training: Pre-Assault Indicators, Precognitive Programming and Proximity
- Using "SURPRISE" to Set the Tempo of Confrontation...and Catching Your Adversary Unprepared
- "FRICTION" in Decision Making: Why is the Simplest Thing, So Difficult?
- Dangerous Body Language: A Thousand Words...None Spoken! Darting Eyes
- Operation Bold Strike: Follow Me Training Support Package
- Follow Me!!! Creating and Nurturing Tactical Decision Makers With Combat Tested Methodologies
- Training the Whole Circle: Blending Boyd's Cycle and Cooper's Color Codes
- Dangerous Body Language: A Thousand Words...None Spoken! "Gaze Avoidance"
- From OODA to AAADA ― A cycle for surviving violent police encounters
- Dangerous Body Language: A Thousand Words...None Spoken! The Thousand Yard Stare
- Baltimore Police Sergeants Training Using Adaptive Leadership Methodology with Don Vandergriff's AAR
- Achieving Outcomes on the Street with Integrity, Building Loyalty and Mutual Trust
- Intersecting Ideas from Cross Disciplines...and Taking Boyd's Theories Beyond
- Developing "Fingertip Feel" Shaping and Reshaping Dynamic Encounters and Gaining the Advantage
- Reducing Law Enforcement Misfortunes...What About the Street Officer?
- Can technology suck your brain dry?
- Organizational Culture: Is Yours Congruent with What You Do?
- Fighting Complacency Reminder: Nothing We Do is Routine, NOTHING!!!
- Street Level Red Teaming: The Cop Killer
- Street Level Red Teaming: Assessing The Situation From the Adversarial Point of View
- Take A.I.M. and Prepare To Win Dynamic Encounters
- Don't Charge Police for Mistakes
- What is a Threat?
- Benefits of Conditioning Our Decision Making...The Boyd Cycle
- Superior Situational Awareness and Decision Making...Attributes And Skills of Full Spectrum Officers
- Earning "The Right to Lead" With Character and Courage
- JUSTIFIED: Are You Serious? The Balancing Act of Persuasion, and Reasonable Force
- Adaptive Leader Methodology: An Alternative for Better Outcomes
- When Do We Teach the Basics?
- Evolving Threats Small Arms and Small Unit Swarming Tactics as Tools of Terror...Are We Up To the Challenge?
- Positive Leadership: Invest in People Building a Culture of Innovation
- Harnessing The Street Cops Wisdom: Taking Whole of Conflict...And Effective Full Spectrum Responses
- Beyond Active Response: An Operational Concept for Police Counterterrorism Response
- The Badge: Much More Than a Piece of Medal
- Wellbeing Check to Knife Attack: Anticipation-The Double Edged Sword and its Affect on Winning and Losing, Up Close and Personal
- Fast Transients, Manipulating the Tempo of Conflict: Disrupting and Confusing Our Adversary via Full Spectrum Response
- Leadership By Wandering Around!
- Defeat into Victory: Battling a Tough Climate with Faith, Perseverance and Lessons Learned
- Evolving Threats and the Fourth Generation Warfare Problem Here at Home
- We were ready, they weren't...40 + Years after Newhall, Are We Applying Lessons Learned?
- When Violence Prevention Fails, Planning Must Enhance Strategy
- After Action Review: Is It a Tool Used to Learn and Become More Effective or a Tool Used to Punish?
- Maintaining Mental Calmness and Not Losing Our Cool
- Evolution of Strategy and Tactics to Ongoing Deadly Action "Active Shootings" and Operational Art
- Interaction, Insight and Imagination, and Initiative...The Building Blocks of Police Operational Art
- Coffee and Conversation: Is "Officer Friendly" a Factor to Consider in Engagements with Our Adversary?
- "Sharpening Our Orientation" and Reducing Officers Killed in the Line of Duty
- Coffee and Conversation: Police Make Mistakes But Seldom Admit Them! What's Reasonable?
- Coffee and Conversation: The Tactical Decision Maker: The Devil's Definitely in the Details
- Coffee and Conversation: "Self Awareness" The Forgotten Attribute of Decision Making
- Coffee and Conversation: Issues that Affect Law Enforcement and Security: Walking our Talk to Officer Safety
- Coffee and Conversation: Issues that Affect Law Enforcement and Security: The Inevitable Failure of Suburbia?
- Officer Created Jeopardy: Reduce it with a Strategic and Tactical Mind
- Law Enforcement and the Utility of Force...Why Cops Can't Shoot Like the Lone Ranger?
- Tactics: Applying Methods to Madness
The LESC Newsletter: People Ideas and Hardware in that Order!" Strengths and Weaknesses" Issue 6
Creating Awareness and Situational Understanding for Those Who Protect and Serve!
The Tactical Concept is Strengths and Weaknesses
Focus Effort, Your Strengths…on Adversarial Weaknesses
“Employment of this concept of surfaces and gaps, then, gives us many advantages over what could be called slower moving forms of combat, where strengths is thrown against strength. Attacking through gaps, avoiding surfaces, gives us an advantage of economy of force. If we are pitting strength against strength, assaulting enemy strong points, we are consuming our manpower as well as ammunition and supplies as we go along. If we go through the gaps, we are practicing economy of force. We are reaching our objective without using up our men. We are leaving the enemy behind. Because we are moving faster, we have the advantage of rapid exploitation.” ~COL Mike Wyly
The concept of strength verses weakness is an important concept to be calculated on both the friendly and adversarial sides of conflicting situations. How we observe and orient to this concept in the mist of conflict while according with an adversary requires knowledge and the ability to apply this knowledge to strategy, operational art and tactics. This has a great bearing on the decisions and actions we make and take in handling dynamic encounters.
The concept strength and weakness, also known as surfaces and gaps, is the idea of exploiting your adversary’s weaknesses with your strengths. There is a give and take, to conflict, moves and countermoves on both the friendly and adversarial side. This interaction takes place in both defensive and offensive positions which is sometimes forgotten in haste to respond and resolve a situation. Our goal is an honest assessment both implicitly and explicitly (when possible) of strengths and weaknesses and then exploiting those weakness of our adversary using our strengths as the conflict unfolds. This ability to make an assessment on the fly when risk is high and time is scarce is the key to reshaping the adversary or opponent so mistakes are made that opens opportunity(s) allowing us to take a position of advantage.
Sounds rather simple yet in most instances those of us in the protection professions (law enforcement, safety and security, military) usually grasp this idea solely as one of action verses reaction, size and strength, armed verses unarmed and I am stronger and faster than him! We outnumber him! Let’s go get him! We are the good guys, let’s go! Get inside! Hurry Up! Move your *ss! Etc.
These are just a few of examples of statements during a response to a crisis that feed the beast of emotional and sometimes reckless responses, over rapid decision making and the strategic and tactical approach. This type of attrition mindset and reaction to handling crisis situations is more strength verses strength than employing strengths against an adversary’s weakness.
What role does strength or weakness play in our assessment of the situation and how we respond? Does knowledge of strength and weakness based on the unfolding situation help us in assessing what’s going on? And how does an appropriate assessment of both adversarial and friendly strengths and weaknesses affect our decisions and actions? Do we even use these concepts in assessing ourselves and our adversary’s to gain an advantage?
Being able to make the assessments of where an adversary’s strengths and weakness are in the physical, moral and mental realms such as, physical size, strength, skill, knowledge, mindset, motive, intent, training and experience (street & formal), emotional control, reputation, etc, as well our self- assessment on the fly as to how we match up in these categories are all critical in our orientation, decision making and actions we will take in a given situation.
Although the mental mindset of “we will prevail” is important the intuitive assessment of strengths and weaknesses is as critical to being successful, at winning without further escalation if possible. If voluntary compliance and a peaceful resolution is not possible and the situation is escalating because our adversary has chosen to take the situation to a higher level which requires rapid decisions and force utilization. We can through foreknowledge of strengths and weaknesses in combination with interaction with the adversary, other responders and our environment utilize force options that give us the clear advantage as the situation evolves placing us in a position to win.
When talking strengths and weaknesses we must also consider the environment and who has the strength of better positioning verses the weak points that can be exploited. Take for example responding to a home, classroom or office? Who has the stronger position the person held up inside for whatever evil reason or those responding to resolve the crisis? Do the doors and windows, terrain and micro terrain give the advantage to the friendly or adversarial side of the equation? Who can see who, and who has more concealment and knows the environment better? Who can better utilize the windows and doors to a clearer advantage when it’s known a confrontation may be about to occur? The walls of the home, classroom or office are they a strength that offers you some type of cover or concealment or are they a weakness that offers no real cover and hardly any concealment?
What about during motor vehicle stop? Is the stronger position leaving the subject in the car and an officer walk up and make contact or are we better off using a walk back approach where the subject is told to get out of the vehicle and walk back to the officer? Is it strength tactically to have the subject of a vehicle stop sitting in his vehicle with his hands positioned so they can be seen clearly as you approach or should you have him out on the street on even ground with you? What’s the position of strength and does it ever change based on the circumstances?
Does your patrol car offer enough cover or is there a better position you could take if you come under hostile attack? What about where the stop takes place is it the strongest position that offers you the advantage or has your adversary intentionally stopped and set up at an advantageous position for him?
I know that these things we are discussing here seam basic and elementary when thought about either prior to or after an event or crisis takes place. But are we using these necessary concepts of strength verses weakness during a conflict? I mean are we actually applying them so that we truly gain the advantage. My estimate is the 5% with the proper mindset and attitude are using these skills while most officers are not and this is dangerous ground for us the good guys to be on. It costs us dearly each year in injuries and deaths. I believe preventable injuries and deaths if we just took the time to exercise our observation-orientation- decision and action cycles to the point we apply, what we should know how to apply, in real world encounters.
When you factor in that statistically most cops killed in the line of duty are killed at close distances within 21 feet, 7 yards and more than half of these taking places at even closer ranges. We must consider is distance always strength or are there times when closing distance is more a strength than keeping distance? There are countless incidents where we have been put at an extreme disadvantage by creating distance only to give the adversary more time to react or to be out gunned with more advanced weapons or skills such as a long gun verses a handgun.
Sometimes our own past training and associative barriers (what we believe to be the best option) is a weakness if we fail to understand that reacting based on a canned response. Responding based on yesterday’s battle and “we have always done it this way” is the only thought that goes into handling today’s situation are often how we handle or attempt to handle every similar problem or crisis. This type of a response is just frankly not good enough if safety and professional handling is the goal.
Knowing and being able to apply a vast array of tactics leads to formlessness and the ability to keep hidden your intentions, causing the adversary to be indecisive. The adversary will modify his original anticipations, vary his tactics or view your actions as a preconceived plan; this depends on his evaluation of the unfolding circumstances. This is an obvious strength for the friendly situation as it opens opportunities (weaknesses, gaps) useful in trying to resolve conflict.
We must consider the psychological and physiological factors as well such as fear and emotions, fight or flight response and the ability to stay mentally calm under pressure and think verses react. Do we understand both the strengths and weaknesses of fear? As Gavin Debecker states in his landmark book, The Gift of Fear “Controlled fear makes you fast, strong, impervious to pain and mentally sharp.” Most people, including those in the protection professions do not understand fear and why we have it in us, most think being afraid is a bad thing, a weakness and it is if we allow it to take over our thoughts and emotions and we are frozen and unable to act but if we channel it for what it’s meant for, an early warning indicator of potential danger then the strength of controlled fear helps prepare us for what lies ahead.
Who is more aware and sensitive to the situation? Not sensitive in the sense of sitting, holding hands and singing Kumbaya but in the sense of understanding the full range of forces (mental, moral and physical) that define ones situation and therefore the ability to anticipate the various possibilities and outcomes that could take place. The strength here belongs to the one who possess this ability of a fine tuned awareness and intuitive sensitivity to the tactical situation. He who is more adaptable and agile with the ability to use a variety of tactics in an effort to deceive and reshape the adversaries Boyd Cycle to the point they are incapable of responding effectively and possibly comply.
Strength and weakness also shows itself in the moral realm of conflict in our understanding of the laws, rules and regulations, policies and procedures, these rules of engagement are a strength for us on the friendly side in the aftermath of an event or crisis because they hold us to certain ethical, moral and legal standards. The lack of these same types of rules in our adversary can give them an advantage at the tactical level of an encounter, because they have a lot less to think about in this realm related to these particular rules, this does leave the adversary more options. All the more reason we should understand strength verses weakness so we can calculate these factors into the equation and reduce friction in our decision making.
The concept of strength verses weakness should be learned, understood and utilized in every encounter we find ourselves in. If we do not utilize the concept you can be rest assured your adversary will.
Although deadly assaults on protection professionals takes place up close and personal I contend what gets us hurt or killed happens within the last hundred yards (and further), in the mistakes we make tactically in our approaches and in our failure to assess strengths and weaknesses appropriately. Are our approaches based on even considering the strength verses weakness equation? And if so is there a better way to respond if in fact we do consider the stronger verses weaker position? If so are we doing it?
Yes we must prepare to react in certain spontaneous situations but the unknown adversary lying in wait is a rare occurrence compared to the call outs to disturbances, suspicious persons, and unknown risk situations such as motor vehicle stops and suspicious persons etc.
A protection professional does not postpone making decisions. He thinks a great deal before taking action. He must consider his training, as well as his responsibilities and duties. Understanding the adversary’s strengths and weaknesses and his potential might in a given set of conditions is not enough. It’s incomplete unless one knows how to target one’s forces (mental, moral and physical) against the adversary weakness. The responding personnel must have an appreciation for the concept of weakness and strength. The strength verses weakness concepts go beyond just the physical to include the mental and moral realms of conflict and also include the environment, leadership and knowledge.
This article only touches on the concepts of strength verses weakness and by no means offers all examples, of where they lie and how to exploit them there are too numerous layers of conflict to do so. Conflict is to complex too do merely one thing and results cannot be predicted because strategy and tactics depend upon the strategies of our adversary and behavior changes the environment meaning we must be prepared to adapt based on what’s important now in this, today’s situation…
Plus the goal of my writing on these concepts is to get each of us to think and open our minds to learn, unlearn and relearn based on our experience and the experience of others so that we create and nurture readiness and adaptability. To prepare we must do a lot of this work ourselves if seeking the advantage and winning in complex and chaotic situations is truly our goal.
You can make comments here at the bottom of this newsletter. A discourse on these topics only helps develop our strategies through operational art and tactics which prepare us to not only survive but win in all realms including in the aftermath of dealing with conflict and violence.
Stay Oriented!
Fred
Information and Intelligence
The articles, police, security, university and campus related news and related reports as well as the programs of instruction posted in this newsletter are believed by me to be of value to those who protect and serve and will keep the process of evolutionary learning and adaptability alive and well in our professions so we train to make a difference! A difference in how we, observe our surroundings and orient to the whole situation as it unfolds. In an effort to make good intuitive and explicit decisions based on time and risk that can be adapted and applied through various actions while enhancing officer safety and the safety of those we protect.
Please remember the newsletter is linked to the WWW.LESC.NET the LESC blog, where we can discuss these issues and any other topic you would like to bring up. In the end learning, education and training are linked and it takes collaborative efforts by all to make the difference that is needed. Feel free to make comments positive or negative and bring up any topics you wish to be discussed.
Articles
- Law Enforcement & Security Consulting, Inc (LESC) Most Read Articles with Fred Leland
- Use of force models in LE training By Matt Simmonds
- Preventing Another Mumbai: Building a Police Operational Art by John Sullivan and Adam Elkus
- Future Conflict: Criminal Insurgencies, Gangs and Intelligence by John P. Sullivan, Small Wars Journal
- How the Brain Makes Quick Decisions Brain Research Says Short-Term Memory Influences Our Snap Decisions
- The "D" in OODA By: Frank Borelli
- Slowing down your opponent's OODA Loop by Spartan Cops
- What is a Policeman Video by Paul Harvey
News
- Compartmentalizing Security: Checklists & Stovepipes
- Federal Protective Service Failing in Duties, According to GAO
- Five bullets can't stop Va. officer from doing his job
- Tenn. officer on life support after shooting
- More cops patrolling solo in "rolling coffins" after cutbacks
- Boston officers disciplined in steroid scandal
- N.J. officer shoots man who tried to run him over
- Agencies Clash on Military's Border Role At Issue: Which One Directs Troops in Anti-Drug Mission
- Economic frustration, workplace violence linked
- Prominent Iowa football coach dies after shooting
- Team prepared to defuse crisis situations
- Officers still hospitalized; chief describes chaotic day
- Police: Conn. man dies after Taser hit
Reports
- Summer 2009 The Case Head The Official Publication of the Massachusetts Firearms Instructors & Armorers Association
- Homeland Security Report NO. 99 from Homeland Security Group and Tony Davis
- Force Science News #97: Ohio Trainer Makes the Case for Single-Officer Entry Against Active Killers
- Burn with Kearns Fitness Newsletter Playtime My Turn with Kevin Kearns
- Stress and Your Performance
Recommended Books to Enhance Adaptability
- Inside the Mind of a Teen Killer
- The Medici Effect
- Terror at Beslan
- The Utility of Force
- The Unthinkable
- The Survivors Club
- Force Under Pressure
- Stoning the Keepers of The Gate
- The Sling and the Stone
LESC Upcoming Workshops
- The Basic Firearms Safety Course: Saturday July 18th VFW Hall Robins Road Walpole, MA
- Threat Assessment and Management Workshop Wednesday July 29th Presented by Fred Leland
A little fun: Can we drop formalities, have fun and still be professional?
One night an armed masked burglar broke into a store that sold T-shirts. Before leaving, he saw a video camera that would transfer an image of one’s face onto a T-shirt and decided to get one for himself. However, the camera not only recorded his face allowing the police to know who to look for, but when police caught up with him, he was wearing the T-shirt.
“Human beings, who are almost unique in having the ability to learn from the experience of others, are also remarkable for their apparent disinclination to do so.”~ Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001), "Last Chance to See"
