Guest post by Max Velocity – You can visit his website here.
The intent of this article is to act as an introduction with some
thoughts and primers for moving your family or group in high threat
environments. It is not intended to give all the answers and that would
be beyond the scope of this short piece. The type of environment
envisioned is a post-collapse situation where there has been a breakdown
in law and order. To clarify, this article is not concerned with the
sort of ‘bug-out’ movement that families may conduct in response to a
localized natural disaster, where you have to get in your car with some
basic equipment and move out of the impacted area. Rather, this is
directed at those who find they have to move locations after a
significant societal collapse has happened.
As background it is clear that to read the conventional
prepper wisdom to survive any coming apocalypse you need to be in a
fortified self-sustaining retreat somewhere out in the boonies, with
three years of food in the basement and the ability to grow food plus
animals. This is the gold standard; you will be really well positioned
if that is where you are with your preparations. The reality for many is
that they simply do not have that. For whatever reason, they may be in
an urban or suburban environment. They may have nowhere else to
realistically ‘bug out’ to. They may have a goal to achieve the retreat,
but not be there yet, or have bug out land that is fairly basic and
requires them to move to it following a collapse. So there may be a
reality gap between those that have achieved the gold standard of
location and preparations, and those that are not there yet. What I am
really concerned about here is a collapse of society, the veritable
‘TEOTWAWKI’, where it all goes to chaos, the ‘SHTF’. For most of us who
are not at the ‘gold standard’, we will be left to survive where we are,
in our suburban homes or whatever applies to you. Now, it is true that
some will be better set up than others. Reasons include location, such
as an inner city one bedroom apartment versus a big house on several
acres in a sub-division, or the amount of preps that you have: food
supplies etc.
Everything depends on the situation and the threat that emerges,
including your own personal and family situation and preparations. One
key thing is not to make assumptions now, but to remain flexible. My
advice is not to ‘head for the hills’ by reflex, because unless you have
somewhere to go you will be out there with the rest of the refugees in
the chaos. If you even have a minimal amount of preparations at home you
should shelter in place and make do the best you can. This should be a
low profile shelter in place where you set yourself up to draw
minimum attention to yourself as the waves of chaos pass. You may be
sheltering in a basement with your family, for example. Of course, if
the threat changes, then you will need to adapt to it. An organized gang
of well-armed marauders going house to house in your neighborhood would
be an example of when to make the decision to bug out. Be flexible and
don’t go the opposite of the ‘head for the hills’ mentality and die in
your basement simply because you did not want to pack up and go.
However, I think that it is given that for anyone sheltering with
supplies in this way there will at some point come one or more
challenges such as home invasion from outside groups. This will also
probably apply to those in rural retreats at some point as the horde
fans out looking to survive. Be ready to respond and defend yourself
against these challenges as necessary. Think of how it will likely be
after the event, not how things are right now. Those in the rural
retreats will probably have a rude awakening when they realize that the
horde has reached them and the demographics have changed!
I think that there are two main things that you have to achieve, phases if you like, in order to survive in the long term:
1) Have enough stores, firearms, tactical ability
and numbers if possible, as well as a covert location in order
to survive the event and the initial chaos and disorder. This is a short
to medium term goal.
2) Long term, you will need to be able to live in a
protected sustainable community. All prepper stores will run out in the
end and the only solution to survive and thrive is to be able to produce
food and protect your people and your resources.
So, unless you started in a sustainable protected retreat, you will
have to survive where you are until such time as you can get to one.
Remember that in a full TEOTWAWKI scenario there will be mass panic and
chaos as people try to find food and survive. There will be a huge
population die-off and there will likely be a delay of a year or two
before food can be produced. You have to survive from the one to the
other. Even after the die–off there will still be good and bad guys out
there. Good guys probably living in those sustainable retreats or
locations, bad guys marauding and living off what they can loot and
pillage. There may be other complicating factors, such as civil war or
foreign invasion. I use the TV series ‘Jericho’ as an example of this.
So, if you survived the event and were not already in that ideal
retreat, you then have to move. Did you hide and protect your bug out
vehicle with a supply of stored gas? Are you going to have to walk, or
use other modes of transport? The key thing is that your group will have
to make it to somewhere where they can be accepted by a current
sustainable community, or move onto land where they can create one. This
will involve travel of some sort and also the ability to defend your
group while moving from A to B. If it is true TEOTWAWKI, then it could
go on for years and you may have to travel to establish a farm
somewhere. If you are going to be taken in by a community or small town
that is sustaining itself, then you have to show your worth in some way.
This can also become relevant to those who find themselves in the ‘gold
standard’ prepper retreat location, because some of the factors may
change to make that position no longer tenable. So, at some point it may
be relevant to all that they will have to move in vehicles in a post
collapse environment. Some good feedback that I have received is about
communities in good defendable locations and the potential to take in
good people after a collapse. The reasoning from one prepper was that
although the community needed to be defended, good people could be
screened and admitted and lodge with some of the elderly folk who have
land but lack physical muscle to get things done. It smacks of a return
to an older model of society where communities and villages mucked in
together and children were looked after by the whole village while
others worked the land.
If you have to conduct vehicle movement in a post collapse
environment then you will need to assume an extant threat. Such a threat
will take the form, in simple terms, of armed groups and
individuals who will seek to impinge on you and your family’s freedom,
property or life for their own ends. There could be road blocks, ambush,
mobs, tricks and all sorts of threats. You will also have to consider
the extent that any law enforcement remains active, which could also
include emergency or martial law. For example, if you are moving you
will have to assess the situations as they appear and decide whether you
are facing a legal checkpoint (i.e. military/law enforcement) versus
perhaps an illegal roadblock with bad intent versus perhaps an ‘illegal’
one with simply defensive intent, such as one set up by a community
militia to defend a town. The types of threat are numerous and to fully
define them is also beyond the scope of this article; suffice to say
that the means (firearms) are out there and the intent and motive will
exist for the ‘bad guys’ to wish to do you harm. This is particularly
true if you are moving with supplies in a collapse situation. Therefore,
you will need to consider the adoption of defensive tactics and
capabilities in order to mitigate against the threat.
Please put out of your mind any assumptions that you may have already
about how you will move in this kind of environment. I am not
advocating the use of children as ‘shooters’, the open display of
weapons out of car windows, or even the positioning of a ‘shooter’ in a
sunroof. In short, this is not about going ‘Mad Max’. You will need to
consider the ‘profile’ that you adopt, which means how your vehicle
packet appears as you are moving along the roads and at halts, and will
also have implications for the professionalism that you display. You can
adopt either a ‘high’ or ‘low’ profile (or posture) and I would
advocate that in this situation, as a family or group of civilians
moving in a potentially hostile post collapse environment, that you
adopt the lower end of the profile scale. This does not impact your
defensive capability, and it could be said you make you a more inviting
target if you look ‘softer’. However, you do not want to incite action
against you by hostiles and there may well still be elements of military
or law enforcement working out there and you don’t want to find
yourself arrested or engaged by these elements because you
yourselves are seen as a lawless threat. This is not a discussion about
creating tactical teams or quick reaction forces, which I have written
about elsewhere and will be useful in other circumstances; it is more
about mitigating risk to a family or friends group moving cross country.
Consider how you can maintain a defensive capability while also
presenting a low profile. For example, consider your vehicles. Families
often have minivans. These are not seen as cool or tactical at all, but
if you put the seats down in the back you have a huge cargo space.
Loading this with supplies would allow you to carry them while not
making it look so obvious, less obvious than loading a pick-up or a
trailer for example. Wear your load/ammunition carrying equipment in a
way that is comfortable for sitting in a vehicle but less obvious –
perhaps putting a shirt over top of a load carrying vest, and keeping
weapons down but accessible. If you have to get out and stand by your
vehicle you can do so with your weapon in a ready position, but you can
also leave it on the seat next to you and readily available, depending
on the situation and the profile you wish to portray. Consider these
things.
Remember that your vehicle gives you no protection. Rifle rounds will
cut through the vehicle like a ‘knife through butter’. The only
‘hardened’ areas in a normal civilian vehicle are the engine block and
the metal parts of the wheels. This is why if you are taking fire
position next to a vehicle, you want to shelter by the engine or wheel
wells; preferably you will then move away from the vehicle into a fire
position in hard cover. You should consider how you may be able to
change this by creating better ballistic protection in the vehicles.
Wearing body armor is a help but provides little protection to the side
of torso and thighs that are vulnerable to side shots as you are
driving. Younger kids will also not be wearing it. You should consider
how you can better ballistically protect the vehicle and occupants from
this kind of threat. You can fix steel plate to the inside of doors if
you have the capability. You could put all the seats down in the back of
a van and put in an open top steel box with access doors to shelter the
kids in. If you can’t go this far, you can consider other types of
ballistic protection by where people sit, even phone books will stop a
round! Spare body armor and ballistic plates lining the side of the
vehicle, other types or hardened material will also work including
creating a space inside the load you are carrying in which to shelter
kids. You also need to know that in a normal car, the ballistic
protection thing works both ways: the vehicle skin will not stop
incoming rounds, which also means that you can fire out through the
vehicle if you need to. Don’t worry about winding windows down, you can
fire out through the glass or body of the vehicle as you need to.
Seat belts are always a good idea, but the need for them can be
countered by the need to keep speed low in order to be able to view the
road ahead and try to avoid threats as they emerge ahead, particularly
as you come around bends. I say this not because I advocate not using
seat belts, but because kid’s car seats can be a problem for protection
and also getting the kids out of the car in a hurry. They keep the kids
sitting up high and if there is a contact involving enemy fire everyone
needs to be as low as possible in the foot wells of the vehicles.
Consider not using car seats and moving at slower tactical speeds. Also
consider putting seats down and having the kids sitting on the floor, or
perhaps secure the car seats to strong points in the floor rather than
up on the vehicle seats. Consider how you will do this.
You may be a small group of family or friends that has to move
locations. The worst case is that you will move in one vehicle. You may
well be limited in terms of who is trained and equipped to be tactically
useful in defense of your group. Hopefully it is not just one of the
spouses that is tactically able, or a single parent family moving. The
time to train, prepare and get the right equipment and firearms is now.
If you have one vehicle you are very vulnerable and have no tactical
options or redundancy. A normal standard type family often has two
spouses, kids and a couple of cars. This is still worst case but may be
reality: if you have no more numbers to make up a tactical convoy then
take both vehicles. One of the spouses drives the first vehicle in a
recce function, perhaps carrying the stores, while the other spouse
drives the second vehicle with the kids and other supplies. As you move
keep a ‘tactical’ bound between vehicles, even at stops, where possible.
A ‘tactical bound’ is a distance that depends on the ground and will
vary, but in simple terms it is enough distance so that the second
vehicle is not involved in the contact that the first one gets in to.
Keep a bit of space there. Consider the use of more vehicles because it
will give you tactical options and better allow you to protect the kids
or other ‘protected persons’. More vehicles allow you to carry more
supplies. Trailers will detract from your tactical mobility options,
including reversing in a crisis, and therefore if you can move the
stores into the vehicles you will be better off.
The single family unit moving is still a worst case situation that
can be mitigated a little by moving in two vehicles. Ideally, you will
want to get together with a group or other family(s) where you have
enough ‘shooters’ and drivers to create a minimum three vehicle packet.
This will allow you to create a tactical close protection packet where
you have an advance vehicle, a middle vehicle(s) for the protected
personnel and a rear chase or counter attack (CAT) vehicle. This will
greatly enhance your tactical options, redundancy and protection of the
loved ones. This could even consist of variations such as an RV in the
center with the protected personnel in, with front and rear protection
vehicles.
As you are driving, the driver’s job is to drive and he should
preferably be capable as a ‘shooter’ but primarily the vehicle is his
‘weapon’ and the means to keep people safe. The other ‘shooters’ will be
assigned observation sectors of responsibility as they move along the
route. You should adopt a safe tactical speed that will give you warning
of any dangers ahead and hopefully allow you to avoid them. Your
primary focus should be on safety and the avoidance of danger. Invest
time in route planning. Don’t be afraid to stop and move forward on foot
to observe the route ahead, or turn around and go another way. Make
sure you adopt the tactical bounds between vehicles and if you stop for
any reason, such as to change a tire, fill up gas from your stored gas
cans, or even for the night, you need to adopt a good tactical position
and cover your sectors to protect the convoy. For longer term halts,
such as overnight, conceal the vehicles off the road and post sentries.
As you move, you will need to have any music off and consider having the
windows open in unarmored vehicles in rural areas in order to be able
to hear and get a better feel for the environment, particularly if you
stop for any reason. But if you are anywhere where there is the
potential for people or mobs then you need to have the doors locked and
the windows up to reduce the risk of entry and even people getting
snatched from vehicles.
If you are driving and you come under enemy fire (’contact’) then you
are in the enemy ‘killing area’ also known as the ‘X’ and the key thing
is to get off the X as rapidly as possible. You may take casualties but
you still need to get out of there and consolidate at a secured rally
point. This is where any added ballistic protection will be priceless. A
problem you may have is if you have a vehicle(s) immobilized by enemy
fire on the X. These situations and the counter drills are covered in
detail in ‘Contact! A Tactical Manual for Post Collapse Survival’.
Briefly, you have to get the personnel off the X and this can either be
with a rescue vehicle moving back into the killing area under cover fire
and ‘cross decking’ the personnel, or alternatively the personnel in
the immobilized vehicle(s) will have to fire and move off the X to
rejoin the group under covering fire. Consider that for an unarmored
vehicle one of the reasons that it may potentially be immobilized is
that the driver has been shot. This is not truly immobilized in the
sense that the engine or tires have not been shot out. Survivability
will be greatly increased by the use of run-flat tires and added
ballistic protection. If the driver is shot then you may be able to
rapidly pull them out of their seat into the back of the vehicle and
take their place. For an automatic transmission it may be that the
passenger can simply jam his foot onto the accelerator from the
passenger seat and drive the vehicle out. Consider how you will do this
and have a drill for it. If you can’t accomplish this quickly, then you
are for all intents and purposes in an immobilized vehicle and you will
have to dismount to fire positions before either being rescued or
fighting out of the ambush. Be aware that any vehicle immobilized on the
X becomes a ‘bullet magnet’ and you do not want to be inside it,
static, for any more than a few seconds.
You will want to consider whether you are moving by day or by night.
The situation will dictate but in general if you don’t have night vision
equipment for driving, which means driving with headlights, then you
should move during the day. This will allow you to scan and observe and
your movement will also be less obvious without your headlights as it
would be at night. You will need to give consideration to the threats
you may encounter and drill your team accordingly. You may have to
respond to roadside ambush, and this may be with the road open or
blocked and with your vehicles perhaps becoming immobilized or receiving
casualties. You will also have to work out how you will respond to
roadblocks, both legal and illegal and what you will do if you
observe them early of if you drive into one without prior warning. It is
important that your practice these ‘actions on’ drills so that you will
be able to respond in a crisis. You should even practice ‘cross
decking’ and getting the kids out of the vehicles in an emergency, so
that they know what to expect and are not surprised when you start
giving them commands to ‘get down’ or get out of the vehicles. You can
train this kind of muscle memory drill in the same way that kids do fire
drills and ‘stop drop and roll’ at school.
If you do find yourself in a position where it is the protected
vehicle that is immobilized and under fire, then there needs to be at
least on adult acting as the protection person and directing the
protected personnel to stay low and crawl, while the other spouse or
team members provide covering fire. You should be able to identify what
hard cover is (cover from fire, not just view) and also what is ‘dead
ground’, which is ground that the enemy cannot see into i.e. folds in
the ground and ditches etc. This will allow the protection person to
identify areas where they may keep the kids while waiting for a rescue
vehicle, or alternatively allow them to crawl out of the killing area in
cover while others in the team fire and move. The more vehicles and
team members you have in your group, the more potential there is for
covering fire from the flanks of the killing area, and the more people
available to fire and move and also carry any casualties. The reality
of a family or group of families or friends on the move is that there
will be a mix of the tactically able, the young and the old and infirm.
This article has not been about tactical teams and conducting tactical
operations, that is a separate subject: it is about creating a tactical
capability within your group where those that are able protect those
that are not. This kind of specialization will enhance the survivability
of those in your group.
Max Velocity
http://maxvelocitytactical.com/
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