LINE (combat System) - History

History

USMC:

LINE was adopted by the Marine Corps in 1989 at a Course Content Review Board (CRB) at Quantico, Virginia. All techniques were demonstrated for and deemed medically feasible by the Armed Forces Medical Examiner (given a single attack opponent) and a board of forensic pathologists from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) in 1991. LINE was replaced by the Marine Corps Martial Arts Program (MCMAP) by Marine Corps Order 1500.54, published in 2002, although it had been actually dropped in 1998, as a "revolutionary step in the development of martial arts skills for Marines and replaces all other close-combat related systems preceding its introduction." Military combatives instruction programs- and the contracts awarded for it- are undertaken through a system of competition, in which the systems are compared by review boards, and presented by individual subject matter experts. Review boards may, from time to time, choose one system over another, based on the changing needs of the Marine Corps or other military service. In the case of LINE Combatives, the system was repeatedly reviewed and approved for training by many units over more than two decades. LINE Combatives continues to be one of only two systems reviewed and consulted upon by specially tasked and appointed boards of military medical examiners.

The LINE Combatives system is presently sought by advanced students, officers, and military personnel throughout the special operations, high risk law enforcement, government agency, and private contractor industries.

Units trained include (but are not limited to):

  • 1st SWTG, United States Army
  • 1st SFG, United States Army
  • 3rd SFG, United States Army
  • 5th SFG, United States Army
  • 7th SFG, United States Army
  • 10th SFG, United States Army
  • 19th SFG, United States Army
  • 20th SFG, United States Army
  • SEAL Team II, United States Navy
  • 82nd Airborne Division, United States Army
  • 101st Airborne Division, United States Army
  • 3rd Infantry Division, United States Army
  • 4th Infantry Division, United States Army
  • 172nd Infantry Brigade Stryker, United States Army
  • SOC South, United States Army
  • 1st COSCOM, United States Army
  • 96th Civil Affairs, United States Army
  • 32nd MedCom, United States Army
  • 44th MedCom, United States Army
  • 112th Signal Bn, United States Army
  • 27th Engineer Bn, United States Army
  • 8th PsyOps, United States Army
  • 9th PsyOps, United States Army
  • CGSC, United States Army
  • 5th ASOS, United States Air Force
  • 22nd STS, United States Air Force
  • 5th CBCG, United States Air Force

US Army Special Forces:

The LINE System was adopted in 1998 by U.S. Army Special Forces at the Special Forces Qualification Course (SFQC). Primary instruction took place during phase II and was remediated in phases III and V at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. LINE was replaced by the Modern Army Combatives Program (MACP) in October 2007.

In 2007 the Chief of Staff of the Air Force read an article in the Air Force Times about Airmen training in the LINE system and ordered a review of all hand-to-hand combat in the Air Force which resulted in the Air Force adopting a program based upon the Army Combatives Program.

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