Cqb Tactics | Powerpoint [portable]

For more information on CQB tactics and training, check out the following resources:

moves opposite, capturing the secondary hard corner.

in CQB does not mean reckless haste. It means a "careful hurry" — controlled efficiency that uses the vital seconds provided by surprise to maximum advantage. Your presentation should emphasize that speed is achieved through meticulous planning and rehearsed tactics, allowing operators to reach the objective with an undetected approach and use multiple entry points to flood the target site.

Do you need detailed for the instructor?

The following structure outlines the "detailed piece" typically found in a standard CQB tactics PowerPoint: Core Principles

Which of those would you like, or specify another non-actionable direction?

Which do you focus on? (e.g., dynamic, deliberate/hybrid, LP/high-threat)

Friendly Operators (labeled 1, 2, 3, 4). Red Shapes/Crosshairs: Known or suspected Hostile Threats.

The team slices the pie, clearing the room inch-by-inch from the outside.

The narrow choke point of a doorway or hallway where incoming fire is most concentrated. Surviving the fatal funnel requires moving through or away from it immediately.

Catching the threat off-guard to delay their reaction time.

In the world of tactical instruction, a "CQB Tactics PowerPoint" often follows a narrative of high-stakes precision, moving from theory to the "flash" of action The Story of the "Fatal Funnel"

Beyond door placement, rooms vary in shape. with four corners are the most common in training environments, but real operations encounter linear rooms (hallways, tunnels, elongated spaces), L‑shaped rooms (box rooms with rectangular extensions), and irregular rooms with unpredictable configurations. Your presentation should prepare operators for these variations, emphasizing that empty shoot‑house rooms with perfect geometry create "empty room syndrome" — dangerous training scars that fail in operational settings.

— Dedicated slides for Surprise, Speed, and Violence of Action. Use high-contrast bullet points.

. It includes standardized reporting procedures and the phases of an assault (Approach, Assault, Reorganization).

For more information on CQB tactics and training, check out the following resources:

moves opposite, capturing the secondary hard corner.

in CQB does not mean reckless haste. It means a "careful hurry" — controlled efficiency that uses the vital seconds provided by surprise to maximum advantage. Your presentation should emphasize that speed is achieved through meticulous planning and rehearsed tactics, allowing operators to reach the objective with an undetected approach and use multiple entry points to flood the target site.

Do you need detailed for the instructor?

The following structure outlines the "detailed piece" typically found in a standard CQB tactics PowerPoint: Core Principles

Which of those would you like, or specify another non-actionable direction?

Which do you focus on? (e.g., dynamic, deliberate/hybrid, LP/high-threat)

Friendly Operators (labeled 1, 2, 3, 4). Red Shapes/Crosshairs: Known or suspected Hostile Threats.

The team slices the pie, clearing the room inch-by-inch from the outside.

The narrow choke point of a doorway or hallway where incoming fire is most concentrated. Surviving the fatal funnel requires moving through or away from it immediately.

Catching the threat off-guard to delay their reaction time.

In the world of tactical instruction, a "CQB Tactics PowerPoint" often follows a narrative of high-stakes precision, moving from theory to the "flash" of action The Story of the "Fatal Funnel"

Beyond door placement, rooms vary in shape. with four corners are the most common in training environments, but real operations encounter linear rooms (hallways, tunnels, elongated spaces), L‑shaped rooms (box rooms with rectangular extensions), and irregular rooms with unpredictable configurations. Your presentation should prepare operators for these variations, emphasizing that empty shoot‑house rooms with perfect geometry create "empty room syndrome" — dangerous training scars that fail in operational settings.

— Dedicated slides for Surprise, Speed, and Violence of Action. Use high-contrast bullet points.

. It includes standardized reporting procedures and the phases of an assault (Approach, Assault, Reorganization).