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The Warrior Taekwondo program’s official launch in January 2001 did not mark the beginning of the U.S.
military’s martial arts training in Korea. Far from it.
American serviceman have undergone taekwondo, tang soo do, hapkido and kuk sool training on military installations since the 1950s. In fact, the legendary Chuck Norris studied tang soo do at Osan Air Force Base during the early 1960s. —WOO
Teach: hammerfist taegeuk o jang (form No. 5), moves 1-8 Practice: straight punch .... 100 reps low forearm block .... 20 reps middle forearm block ....20 reps middle knifehand block ....20 reps high forearm block ....20 reps high knifehand block ....20 reps middle inward block ....20 reps knifehand strike ....20 reps hammerfist strike ....20 reps front kick ....20 reps round kick ....20 reps side kick ....20 reps front/round kick combination ....5 reps front/side kick combination ....5 reps taegeuk il jang (form No. 1) ....1 rep taegeuk sam jang (form No. 3) ....1 rep taegeuk o jang, moves 1-8 .....5 reps breakfalls (left, right, rear) ....10 reps warrior combat defense No. 1 ....5 reps warrior combat defense No. 2....5 reps warrior combat defense No. 3....5 reps
Hail to the Chief Kim Mun-ok is the chief taekwondo instructor for the U.S. Army’s 2nd Infantry Division. In addition to leading morning training sessions with American and Korean soldiers, he manages and trains the division taekwondo team, choreographs and conducts demonstrations, organizes competitions and administers promotion tests.
Kim is well-qualified to lead the Warrior Taekwondo program. He is an eighth-degree black belt certified by the Korea Taekwondo Association and World Taekwondo Federation and an eighth-degree black belt in the Korea Hapkido Association. He began his martial arts training when he was 7 years old when Kim Ki-song, a former Korean army instructor in the Uijeongbu-Tongducheon area and a teacher of U.S. troops in the early 1970s, taught him the odokwan style of the art. His hapkido master was Kim Il-nam, current chairman of the Korea Hapkido Association.
Although classically trained, Kim remains open-minded about the martial arts and is always looking for better fighting and training methods. He holds a master’s degree in physical fitness from Seoul Sports University and recently accepted a position as vice president of the Korea Professional Taekwondo Association to further expand his knowledge and experience.
He has trained U.S. soldiers and Korean police cadets since 1981. He currently operates seven schools in his native country. Four training halls in the United States—two in California and two in South Carolina—are run by his students.
When time permits, Kim conducts seminars on self-defense and restraint techniques for the Los Angeles Police Department. —WOO
Art for Art’s Sake? No way! “Producing highly proficient taekwondo practitioners is not an objective of the Warrior Taekwondo program,” says Col.
William O. Odom. Rather, it is to use the fighting methods of traditional taekwondo to forge better soldiers. Training an individual to the level of an Olympic competitor would most likely do nothing to enhance that person’s combat readiness.
—Robert W. Young
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| U.S. Army’s 2nd Infantry Division Adopts the Time-Tested Techniques of Taekwondo
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| The Warrior Taekwondo program includes plenty of repetition of the basic moves for which the Korean art is famous. Soldiers train in their BDUs or PT uniforms. |
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| To encourage soldiers to pursue the martial arts outside of their once-a-week class, frequent competitions are held using standard taekwondo rules. |
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| Rorion Gracie (standing) teaches two soldiers how to use their forearm to escape from a head lock. |
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| In the 2nd Division, sparring sessions begin once the instructor believes his soldiers are ready. Standouts often elect to compete in sporting events like the Warrior Olympics. |
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| Primarily because of the Gracie-jujutsu influence, Warrior Taekwondo has begun incorporating more ground fighting into its curriculum. |
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| Kim Mun-ok (left) and Col. William O. Odom (center) are the men responsible for the creation of the Warrior Taekwondo program. |
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| Col. William O. Odom practices his rear naked choke on Ralek Gracie during a recent brigade grappling seminar. |
Once a week, some 14,000 soldiers in the U.S. Army’s renowned 2nd Infantry Division greet the sunrise in the Land of the Morning Calm with snap kicks and power punches reinforced by a chorus of kihap battle cries. They are part of a new training initiative designed to augment their combat readiness with traditional Korean martial arts skills. In honor of the division’s nickname of Warrior Division, the program has been dubbed Warrior Taekwondo.
The Mission Soon after he assumed command of the 2nd Infantry Division in 2000, Maj. Gen. Russel L. Honoré asked his unit commanders to draw up a list of programs and activities they thought should be started, stopped and continued.
I suggested creating a division taekwondo team, and he liked the idea.
He then proposed reinstating a division- wide taekwondo program, which had been done away with some 25 years before.
Honoré immediately remembered all the benefits taekwondo training had bestowed upon him when he was a young lieutenant in the division during the early 1970s. He then charged me with the task of creating the program.
As commander of the 2nd Brigade, I had already instituted a combatives program composed of taekwondo strikes and Gracie- jujutsu grappling. Honoré acknowledged that and explained that he wanted an enlarged program that would: • increase the soldiers’ confidence by developing competence in basic selfdefense techniques • improve physical fitness • develop discipline and teamwork through the memorization and practice of forms • foster an appreciation for Korean culture and inspire soldiers to learn more about their host country • provide a basic knowledge of taekwondo upon which soldiers can build their skill through off-duty training with local instructors and/or participation in unit taekwondo clubs • establish a venue for competition between the 2nd Division and South Korean army units • allow soldiers to progress as far as brown belt during their one-year tour of duty.
The Process I enlisted Kim Mun-ok to help me develop the program. An eighth-degree master of taekwondo and hapkido, Kim had more than 20 years of experience teaching U.S. soldiers in Korea. He and I determined that proficiency in taekwondo requires at least two years of study with two to three classes a week. At the same time, we knew we would be limited to one relatively short session a week. We remained confident we could achieve all the division commander’s objectives, but we admitted to ourselves that once-a-week workouts would not produce proficient taekwondo practitioners unless the soldiers sought additional instruction.
Kim and I then set about developing the Warrior Taekwondo program.
It had to be composed of instruction that was modified to fit the somewhat unique conditions under which the 2nd Infantry Division operates. They include: • one weekly session of about 40 minutes • soldiers with limited martial arts experience • irregular schedules caused by military duties • an outdoor training environment with a variety of surfaces • soldiers who are wearing a physicaltraining (PT) uniform and running shoes or a battle-dress uniform (BDU) and combat boots.
The program we devised would be taught during each unit’s morning PT period. It consisted of four progressive modules, each of which was based on 12 practice sessions per quarter. Each session would consist of no less than a 15-minute warm-up run prior to the martial arts instruction. The actual taekwondo training would stress the repetition of techniques to ensure that soldiers receive maximum cardiovascular benefit.
As the soldiers’ proficiency increased, the program would allow for less time to be spent learning and more time to be spent practicing. Progression to a higher module would require the men and women to demonstrate proficiency in all the techniques included in their current module. Of course, advancement rates would vary according to each soldier’s aptitude, previous experience and commitment to obtaining supplemental instruction.
The Launch Warrior Taekwondo started in January 2001 with mandatory weekly training at the company level. By February 1, all units in the 2nd Division had come onboard. Kim was hired as chief instructor and charged with overseeing the execution of the program, ensuring uniform training and sustaining the continuity of the program despite the relatively high turnover of American soldiers, who normally spend one year in country. Kim hired eight Korean instructors to assist him with morning visits to the 17 camps (military bases) at which the division’s units are stationed.
Kim conducted Warrior Taekwondo’s first Train-the-Trainer program in March 2001. It was an intensive fiveday instructor-development course designed to hone the skills of soldiers with prior martial arts experience and teach them how to teach others. To ensure that each company-sized unit (about 100 soldiers) had at least one certified instructor, the division adopted a plan to run the course every three months.
The Curriculum Warrior Taekwondo includes all the moves for which the Korean art is renowned: kicks, punches, open-hand strikes, sweeps, blocks, breakfalls, stances and so on. Soldiers also drill in the modernized taegeuk forms, which date from the early 1980s.
One specialized component of the program is called “warrior combat defenses.”
The fighting sequences are basically one-step sparring techniques.
They are simple and direct—typically following a block-strike-takedown-finish progression. Since Kim attended the most recent brigade Gracie-jujutsu seminar, held in April 2002, he has expressed an interest in incorporating some ground techniques into additional warrior combat defenses.
All soldiers who participate in Warrior Taekwondo spar. It is considered an essential component of their realitybased martial arts preparation. The unit trainer determines when a student is ready to begin. Most start within the first three months. To date, sparring has been more sport-oriented than practical.
The objective is to make a little contact, to experience hitting and getting hit, to get the heart pumping and to build confidence. It is not to batter one’s fellow soldiers.
To get an idea of the type of training being conducted, consider the following outline, which is taken from the first lesson of the brown-belt module taught after 24 weeks of training): The second week of brown-belt training adds instruction in the elbow strike and backfist, as well as in moves 9-20 of taegeuk o jang. After that comes rigorous practice of all the above-mentioned techniques and 20 repetitions of the elbow strike and backfist. The third week adds the back kick. The fourth week adds the round kick/back kick combination and warrior combat defense No. 4. The fifth week adds warrior combat defense No. 5 and No. 6.
The sixth week through the 11th week teach no new techniques, but everything that has been learned is further ingrained into each soldier’s psyche.
The 12th week culminates in the brownbelt test.
The Future In August 2001 the division formed a demonstration and competition team, which will maintain a membership of 16 to 20 soldiers. It has been tasked with promoting the practice of the art and serving as an ambassadorial force during visits to and competitions with Korean military units. Kim, his assistants and members of the All-Army Taekwondo Team are serving as coaches. In February 2002 the team won the Eighth Army Championship, and in March 2002 it placed four soldiers on the All-Army Taekwondo Team.
Kim Mun-ok will continue to provide opportunities for his students to engage in weekend competitions and participate in local qualifiers that lead up to the Division Taekwondo Championship, held every September, and the All-Army Championship, held in the spring.
He is also investigating ways to make the training a bit more hardcore.
Although there is currently lots of contact in the division’s competitions, which follow standard taekwondo rules, there is little contact in the unit classes (except during the execution of the self-defense techniques). The trend is to gradually move away from forms practice and increase the emphasis on self-defense techniques.
One option that has been discussed involves teaching only one form as a warm-up, cool-down and team-building drill, and then focusing the rest of the workout on fighting.
Before more contact can be made, units will have to procure chest protectors, groin cups, headgear, and shin and forearm pads. As the program matures to the point where more soldiers have sufficient skill to warrant additional full-contact training, obtaining authorization for the purchase should be easier.
Under the supervision of Kim and his assistant instructors, Warrior Taekwondo is an unrivaled success. In addition to developing hand-to-hand combat skill, it boosts the confidence and discipline of every soldier who serves in the 2nd Infantry Division. And with the projects that are planned—one of which involves expanding the program to all U.S. forces in Korea—things will only get better.
The content of this article does not necessarily reflect the official views of the U.S. government, the Department of Defense or the U.S. Army.
Before being reassigned to Norfolk, Virginia, Col. William O. Odom was the senior advisor for the 2nd Infantry Division’s Warrior Taekwondo program. He started taekwondo training in Bangkok, Thailand, in 1968 under Kim Jin-sung. His principal instructor since 1970 has been James K. Roberts Sr. of Springfield, Virginia.
Odom won a gold medal in forms and fighting in the senior black-belt division at the 1999 AAU National Taekwondo Championships. He has also studied tang soo do, jeet kune do, Japanese jujutsu and Gracie jujutsu.
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