Philosophy:
The Philosophy of CKM can be broken down into three
main dimensions.
1. Ethical
2. Pragmatic
3. Dynamic
Ethical:
In CKM, the intention in any conflict situation is
to find a honourable path towards a peaceful
resolution. CKM abhors fighting. Violence is the
absolute last resort.
CKM always gives the aggressor a chance to save
face, an honourable solution as a way out without
ever compromising its own sense of self esteem. The
body says, “I don’t want to fight”. The eyes say,
“watch out”.
Many times, a fight is all about somebody’s ego,
either ours or theirs. CKM knows that fighting is
mostly avoidable and as such its practitioners do
best to deescalate any situation that could turn
violent. Every practitioner of CKM seeks to dissolve
his own individual ego through intense training and
introspection.
Precisely because every CKM technique is potentially
lethal, CKM insists that its practitioners respect
every other human being, regardless of race,
religion or gender.
Therefore, the fundamental CKM principle is this: No
first use of force.
Pragmatic:
The second principle of CKM is this: While
negotiating for peace, prepare for war.
CKM evolved in the hostile environment of the Middle
East. So, CKM intrinsically is a mature and
pragmatic body of knowledge. Though every CKM
practitioner does his best to deescalate the
conflict, CKM is not oblivious to the fact that
there are many unintelligent people out there who
might mistake a desire for peace as weakness.
So, even as CKM tries to negotiate a honourable
peace with the aggressor, the CKM student
instantly begins to prepare for combat. The CKM
starting stance for instance conceals far more than
it reveals. If there is going to be any kind of
fighting, the opponent will know nothing about what
the CKM student knows. This allows CKM to
launch the most devastating counter attacks from
what looks like an innocuous position.
CKM students are taught to loudly announcing
their intentions of not wanting to fight. This
further ensures that should the law enforcement
authorities intervene, they will have witnesses to
show that the CKM student did not want to fight
and that whatever happened subsequently was the
result of the aggression of the aggressor. Fighting
in self defence is legally ok in most countries.
Aggression and the use of excessive force is not.
Dynamic:
Static systems that claim to know all the answers
are obviously highly suspect. All bodies of
knowledge must keep evolving to keep pace with new
inputs or else they become outdated. CKM is no
different. CKM knows that criminals and terrorists
continuously keep changing their tactics. Therefore,
CKM keeps evolving to keep pace with the new tactics
and weapons of the enemy. It is totally dynamic.
Combat in the streets is totally unpredictable.
There are no rules. There is no referee who will
stop the fight, or throw in the towel. There is no
honour code. Treacherous behaviour abounds. The
attacker might pull a gun, or a knife, or have
friends lurking not too far away (a gang), it may be
two or more than two on one. Such people are capable
of stooping to any sub-human extent.
The CKM Solution: Think like a Commando. Engage and
rapidly disengage. Engage the enemy only if there is
no other choice, but if you must then finish him off
immediately. Then, rapidly disengage before his
friends come to his rescue. The goal is simple.
Survival. This is the reality of the street, not of
the dojo.
Because Moni and his senior instructors are actively
involved with teaching the elite Special Forces, CKM
keeps evolving spurred by the demands of one of the
fiercest fighting environments in the world; the
Middle East.
The third CKM principle is this: In the street there
are no rules. Train real.