Buttstroke


A buttstroke or butt-stroking is the act striking someone with the buttstock of a rifle, shotgun, or similar long gun. It is a common case of the use of a firearm as a blunt weapon. Buttstroke is among the major offensive techniques with the rifle and bayonet in close-at-hand combat and is the recommended method of close combat if the rifleman has no bayonet or sidearm available.

Effectiveness

Despite technological changes modern soldiers continue to report that hand to hand combat is a continued occurrence in the field, with soldiers stressing the importance of training in grappling and the use of weapons in hand-to-hand combat.

Techniques

Buttstrokes are implemented by a variety of combatants, often trained in a series of transitioned movements to prevent wasted motion and ensure that aggressor is able to make repeated attacks or quickly parry or guard following a failed attempt. Buttstrokes can be combined with kicking and kneeing an opponents lower body to further increase effectiveness and provide more variety to routes of attack.
Buttstrokes carry the risk of damaging ones weapon and by some schools of thought are considered best a method of last resort, recommending the use of bayonets if possible when engaged in close quarters combat. Even if relying primarily on bayonets, a buttstroke may still prove effective as a transitional move following a failed bayonet charge, bringing the butt of the gun in a vertical, upward swing into the combatants groin.
Part of the butt stroke training regiment involves hitting padded dummies, alongside working through drills with partners in order to avoid damaging ones weapon.

United States Techniques

The 1918 United States Navy Landing-force Manual describes the following techniques of buttstroking which would be adopted by the United States National Guard and other branches of the military:

Trench or Vertical Butt Strokes