Heroes of U.S. Special Operations features Nada Bakos, Jack Murphy, Bill Janson, Brandon Webb and Dan Lake discussing where they were on September 11, 2001, and the effect it had on their military and personal lives. The show focuses on their amazing friends and heroes of U.S. Special Operations that gave all.
Episode 5: Heroes in History
Heroes of U.S. Special Operations features Nada Bakos, Jack Murphy, Bill Janson, Brandon Webb and Dan Lake discussing where they were on September 11, 2001, and the effect it had on their military and personal lives. The show focuses on their amazing friends and heroes of U.S. Special Operations that gave all.
Episode 4: Heroes & Mentors 2
Heroes of U.S. Special Operations features Nada Bakos, Jack Murphy, Bill Janson, Brandon Webb and Dan Lake discussing where they were on September 11, 2001, and the effect it had on their military and personal lives. The show focuses on their amazing friends and heroes of U.S. Special Operations that gave all.
Episode 3: Heroes & Mentors Part 1
Heroes of U.S. Special Operations features Nada Bakos, Jack Murphy, Bill Janson, Brandon Webb and Dan Lake discussing where they were on September 11, 2001, and the effect it had on their military and personal lives. The show focuses on their amazing friends and heroes of U.S. Special Operations that gave all.
Episode 2: Cut From the Same Cloth
Heroes of U.S. Special Operations features Nada Bakos, Jack Murphy, Bill Janson, Brandon Webb and Dan Lake discussing where they were on September 11, 2001, and the effect it had on their military and personal lives. The show focuses on their amazing friends and heroes of U.S. Special Operations that gave all.
Episode 1: Remembering 9/11
Heroes of U.S. Special Operations features Nada Bakos, Jack Murphy, Bill Janson, Brandon Webb and Dan Lake discussing where they were on September 11, 2001, and the effect it had on their military and personal lives. The show focuses on their amazing friends and heroes of U.S. Special Operations that gave all.
Life in the Kampfschwimmer Company
“Leben in der Kompanie”
Life in the Kampfschwimmer Company
After three years of training, the time has come: certification as a Kampfschwimmer.
In a simple ceremony the new naval commando receives his insignia, his certification papers, and his unique Kampfschwimmer serial number. He is officially inducted into the Kampfschwimmer community – a community which still numbers a mere 300 members 55 years after its founding. The induction is completed when the inductee formally transfers out of the Training Company and reports for duty with the operational Kampfschwimmer Company under the eyes of all active duty Kampfschwimmer. This simple ceremony seems to conclude training.
In fact, training is just beginning.
For the “New Guy”, a formative phase has begun. As in all units, he has to earn his position on the team. Basic skills acquired during formal training must constantly be demonstrated in more complex situations. The new member is expected to think and act in the context of the team, make his own contributions, and interact with his superiors. Self-sufficiency, application of forethought while carrying out orders, keeping eyes and ears open – in short, bringing all senses to bear when assessing a situation – are the prerequisite for successful operations within the team framework.
Since the “New Guy” hasn’t acquired a specialization yet he is assigned as the team’s machine gunner. This position is both physically and mentally demanding. As in other military units, the Kampfschwimmer teams employ machine guns as heavy weapons. Gunners can be assigned to picket and surveillance duty, or they can provide suppressive fire to support the team during operations. While machine guns are characteristically imprecise weapons, the Kampfschwimmer gunners are trained to use them for precision fire against selected targets.
Traditionally New Guys get stuck with all the unpleasant “housekeeping” jobs such as cleaning the building, picking up in the squad room, or packing equipment. The most senior team member supervises them and notes whether they display enthusiasm and thoroughness. These menial tasks don’t just build character, they also demonstrate it.
During this early phase the New Guys earn their nickname or “handle” which they will retain for the duration of their career. As in all special units, the handle is intended to protect the servicemember. He can be addressed during operations without revealing his identity.
As implied above, life is “interesting” for the New Guys. They are the first in every morning and the last out at night. They have to absorb knowledge and experience like a sponge and learn, learn, learn! The operations and training cycle – which can result in 200+ days away from base every year – will not be slowed down to accommodate them. If they don’t master a procedure during training hours they have to keep practicing on their own time, during breaks or after hours. The team leader will determine whether the new member will be retained in the team, and what (if any) specialization will be assigned.
If a commando is qualified he will be assigned a specialty. His preferences and skills will be taken into consideration. The rule is: if you enjoy a task, you will do it thoroughly! Depending on the chosen specialty the trainee will be assigned to national and/or international training programs. Career servicemembers usually qualify in several specialties over time. For example, communications specialists frequently move on to become forward air controllers. It is considered “normal” that Kampfschwimmer personnel not only complete the training programs they enter, but complete it at or near the top of the class!
These high standards are also reflected by the large percentage of Kampfschwimmer personnel or Kampfschwimmer candidates who are selected as the navy’s “Boatswain of the Year.” An intrinsic motivation is involved here: “merely” being assigned to the Kampfschwimmer Company does not guarantee that a seaman will be allowed to stay with the unit. Only the best among the newly qualified naval commandos will be granted career status. These facts reflect the standards which the Kampfschwimmer (and all special operations forces) apply to each and every member. The bar is deliberately set very high; in real world operations, mistakes are not an option.
The personal atmosphere in the relaxed is cordial but respectful. Unit members are on a first name basis or address one-another by their handle. Rank structure is observed, but experience ranks highly when it comes to planning and conducting operations. Performance and competence are respected, which means that qualified NCOs are tasked with planning and leading particular phases of an operation. This is especially true when a particular specialty is crucial to a phase. For example, the team medic takes the lead in planning (and if necessary, executing) medical evacuations. But at the end of the day, responsibility resides at the top. However an exercise or operation might end, the officers and team leaders carry the full responsibility.
(Featured Image Courtesy: Kampfschwimmer.de)
The Jaegercorps – a Danish Special Operations Force
Danish special operations forces (SOF) units:
The Jaegercorps, army (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huntsmen_Corps_(Denmark))
The Frogmancorps, navy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_Frogman_Corps)
Sirius Sledge Patrol, navy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slædepatruljen_Sirius)
History of the Jaegercorps
During the 1960s, the Cold War was at its height and the Berlin Wall was established in 1961. It was decided that Denmark should create a special forces unit in order to gather information during a so-called ‘Grey Period’ – a prewar-phase between the Warzaw Pact and NATO. Thus the Jaegercorps was established on November 1st 1961 as a long range reconnaissence patrol unit (LRRP). During the years following the Cold War (1992-95) the Jaegercorps was transformed into a SOF-unit.
The Jaegercorps has participated in special opeations on the Balkans (1993-2007), Iraq (2003-08), Afghanistan (2001-present) and Africa. As a part of Task Force K-Bar, the Jaegercorps was awarded ‘The Presidential Unit citation’ on December 7th, 2004, for its effort as part of the joint-forces special operations forces group in Afghanistan.
The number of operators is confidential (but way to low).
Selection (in total 18 months)
Basic selection test (2 days)
Written tests (autobiography, English, mathematics)
Interview with a psychologist
PT (Coopers test, ‘yo-yo’ test, coretest)
Medical examination
Pre-course
Pre-course 1 (5 days, 6 months before the actual selection course)
Introduces the candidate to the subjects covered in the actual selection course and gives the
candidate a feel for what he must get better at (orienteering, PT, shooting skills etc.).
Pre-course 2 (2 days, 4 months before the actual selction course)
More training and evaluation in the above covered subjects.
Pre-course 3 (2 days, 2 months before the actual selction course)
More training and evaluation in the above covered subjects with tougher requirements.
(PIX 3 – completing Patrol Course, selection)
Patrol Course (8 weeks)
Physical and mental skills are tested.
• Shooting
• Helicopter insertion/extraction
• Maritime insertion/extraction (RIB, rubber dinghy)
• Orienteering (technique, theory, orienteering race/march, day/night)
• March
• Cold water habituation (7-10° C (44,5 F°)/combat swimming
• PT – running, core
• Demolition
• Medic
• Survival
• Self-confidence tests
• Patrol exercises
Completing the course the candidate will be rated with either ‘satisfactory’ or ‘very satisfactory’. The candidate must have ‘very satisfactory’ in order to continue on Selection Course.
Selection Course (8 weeks, begins 1 week after end of Patrol Course)
Physical and mental skills are further tested.
• Shooting/CQB
• Helicopter insertion/extraction
• Maritime insertion/extraction (RIB, rubber dinghy)
• Orienteering
• March*
• Cold water habituation (7-10° C (44,5 F°)/combat swimming
• PT – running, core**
• Demolition/breaching
• Medic
• Survival
• Self-confidence tests
• Patrol exercises
(PIX 4 – rope/RIB)
* During Patrol- and Selection Course the candidate marches and runs in average 2000 kilometers (1250 mi) (final march test: 60 km (37,3 mi)/40 kilo equipment in maximum 12 hrs in terrain + 2 x 50 km/40 kilo equipment in maximum 48 hrs in terrain). The candidate swims in average 45 km (28 mi) in a pool and/or in seawater.
** Core Test
Mistakes and forgetfulness are ‘rewarded’ during the courses. For example the author to this article forgot the key to his quarter and was rewarded with a 1.70 meters (5.5 ft) and 20 kilo heavy ‘key’ which he had to carry everywhere at all times in a period of 5 days. (PIX 5 – KEY)
The Selection Course is completed with a self-confidence test (rope-drop from 18 meter/22 yd) whereafter the candidates are awarded the insignia of the Jaegercorps.
(PIX 6 – team, night HALO from c130 making TLZ)
Basic parachuting – static line (2 weeks)
Combat Swimming Course (3 weeks)
Conducted by The Danish Frogman Corps.
The maroon beret
After completing the Combat Swimming Course the candidates will receive the maroon beret.
(PIX 7 – beret)
(PIX 8 – arctic warfare training northern Sweden)
Basic SOF-training (52 weeks)
• Mobility (US, Australia, Spain)
• Arctic warfare (Sweden)
• Jungle warfare (Belize)
• Mountaineering (Switzerland)
• HAHO/HALO (Eloy, Arizona/US, Denmark)
• CQB shooting
• Weapons specialist training
• Specialist training (demolition/breaching, medic, comms, intel, sniper)
(PIX 9 – basic training)
(PIX 10 – mountain, Schwitzerland)
(PIX 11 – sniper)
(PIX 12 – mobility training, Supercat)
Jaeger Status (operative status)
The Jaeger badge is handed over. The author of this article was among the 8 candidates who out of 97 completed the course.
(PIX 13 – JAEGER)
Jagdkommando
Jagdkommando
The Jagdkommando is the Special Operations Unit of the Austrian Armed Forces stationed in the town of Wiener Neustadt. The unit’s main missions include:
- SR-Special Reconnaissance
- DA-Direct Action
- MA-Military Assistance
History
The name “Jagdkommando” has its origins in the time of WW1, when small assault squads of the Austrian K.u.K. Army were called what translates to “manhunt command.” The history of the Austrian Special Operations Forces began after WW2 when two Austrian officers participated in the US Army’s Ranger School as part of their training in order to set up a similar course for the eventual establishment of Jagdkommando in 1961. Since then, the officers and soldiers of Jagdkommando continued to devolve by taking part in similar courses in the United States and all over Europe and by combining the lessons learned with “homegrown” tactics and knowledge.
Missions took Jagdkommando operators to the Balkans (KFOR, etc.), Afghanistan (ISAF, until 2005) and Chad / Central African Republic(EUFOR, since 2007) and most recently to Mali.
Selection and training
Selection is usually held once a year and has a duration of 6 months. The program normally begins in January with 3 weeks of pre-selection. During this time the candidate will take the physical tests required, receive additional training and a undergo a 72 hour Field Exercise, which is the core event of the selection process.
Most candidates will fail during the 72 hour exercise which includes long road marches in squad size elements, psychological test batteries, and total sleep deprivation. The pre-selection course is conducted by active operators as well as by enablers of the unit.
Normally 20-25% of all candidates will pass the pre selection course and continue with the so called Jagdkommandogrundkurs, the basic course of selection. The first few weeks are held in the remote area of Allentsteig, a giant military training area in close proximity to the Czech border. The first seven weeks of small unit tactics are overshadowed with plenty of snow, freezing weather, very small amounts of sleep and permanent pysical performance. Candidates will get used to the heavy Lowe Rucksack and spend most of their day with it on their backs while conducting patrols, ambushes and raids in the forrests around Allentsteig.
After the small unit tactics phase, which will elemintae the last few unfitting candidates, the basic course will continue with block course of two or three weeks each:
Basic Demolition Course
Airborne Course
Amphibious Insertion/Extraction Course
Field Survival Course
Basic CQB course
Comabtives Course
Field training exercises
SERE: The final and most infamous course is the SERE training.
Over the last few years the SERE training took part in the Alps of Salzburg. The “run phase”will last up to ten days, while the candidate must check in at a given checkpoints every 24 hours. The checkpoints are set 20-30 km apart, considering the mountains in between the points and the tactical need to stay off roads and trails, the candidates will be very busy meeting their time limits and rarely find sleep. Finally after days on the run and being hunted down by infantry units, helicopters and K9 units, the candidates will be ambushed and captured at on of their checkpoints. This marks the beginning of the “captivity phase”. Being the last phase of the selection course this phase will last 72 hours.
After completing the SERE course the remaining soldiers (normally 10-15% of all applicants who started the pre selection course) are accepted into the Jagdkomamndo brotherhood and awarded the “mudd-green” beret with the Unit Crest on it. Most of the graduates will be given a slot as active operators in one of the two Task Groups of the unit, while some go back to their regular Army unit.
Jagdkommando soldiers take extreme pride in their long and unique selection course and the prestige that comes along with earning the green beret inside the armed forces.
If a soldier is chosen to become an operator after selection he will attend the Einsatzausbildung 1, a course where he will refine his operator skills. The training will last up to one year.
Normally it starts off with a five week drivers course, followed by shooting classes. This will be the first time for operators to use the advanced weapon systems Steyr AUG A2 Kdo and the FN P90. After weeks at the shooting range the next courses will be very mountain orientated, like the mountain airborne course, winter warfare and mountaineering courses as well as ski training.
After the mountain courses the individual job training will begin. Depending on the assignment the operator will attand the Weapon Sergeant Course, Medic Course, Communications Sergeant Course or Engineer Course.
The SOF CQB course that follows teaches the latest techniques in HRO, CC, and DDO. Jagdkomamdno operators train together with several NATO SOF units worldwide and so the used SOPs and tactics are very similar to other SOF units.
Differnt other courses will complete the Einsatzausbildung 1, such as the Urban SR course, advanced comatives training and Air Assault techniques.
After more than 18 months of training the operator will be assigned a team in the 1st SOTG (Special Operations Task Group) or the 2nd SOTG. The 3rd SOTG belongs to the Army Reserve Component. A typical Jagdkommando team consists of six operators: the Team Leader, Team Sergeant, a Weapons Sergeant/Sniper, Engineer Sergeant , Medic Sergeant and Communication Sergeant. Each team is assigned to one insertion speciality, such as freefall, amphibious, mountain and mobility.
Operations
The Jagdkommando took part in all major missions of the Austrian Armed forces. Operators served on the Balkans, Afghanistan and several African countries. The operations in Chad and the Central African Republic were very beneficial for the unit as new equipment was issued and important experience on the long range SR sector was gained.
A small number of operators was part of “Operation Egypt” in 2012 during the uprising in Egypt. The mission was to assist Austrian and European citizens to get out of Egypt safely.
Equipment
The primary weapon system of an AUTSOF operator is the Steyr AUG A2 Kdo, which was introduced before the first Chad Deployment in 2007. The 5.56mm NATO rifle feeds from 30 or 42 round magazines and shows some major improvements to the Steyr AUG A1/A2 rifles, like the NATO muzzelbreak for suppressor use and the bolt release button for quicker magazine changes.
Glock pistols make up the sidearm arsenal of the Jagdkommando. Model 17 in 9mm is issued with a Glock Tactical Light, while Model 21 in 45. ACP comes with a suppressor.
Every operator also receives a FN P90 machine pistol in 5.7x28mm. The weapon comes with 50 round magazines, an EOTech or Aimpoint Optic and a suppressor.
Modern Body armor vests and camoflage uniforms are available, but a lot of operators stick to personally bought gear when it comes to plate carriers, boots and uniforms.
The heavy weapons of the unit include the MG 74 in 7.62mm NATO, the Carl Gustav 8.4cm, and the Barret .50cal sniper rifle.
Norway’s Forsvarets Spesialkommando
FSK (Forsvarets Spesialkommando) is a special forces unit of the Norwegian Ministry of Defence. The unit was established in 1982 due to the increased risk of terrorist activity against Norwegian interests, including the oil platforms in the North Sea.
In peacetime, they are a support element to the Norwegian Police force and law enforcement agencies in allied nations, acting when requested in serious incidents like hostage situations and aircraft hijacking.
During counter-terrorist operations, the commandos are trained to kill their opponents, rather than trying to arrest them.