Italian special forces

The Italian Special Forces include special forces units from several branches of the Italian Armed Forces:[1] the Esercito Italiano or Army, the Marina Militare or Navy, the Aeronautica Militare or Air force and the Arma dei Carabinieri or Carabineers.

Italian Armed Forces special units are divided into Special Forces (TIER 1) and Special Operations Forces (TIER 2).

Italian Army special units

Italian Special Forces soldiers with ARX 160A2 rifles awaiting helicopter extraction

Special Forces

Special Operations Forces

The 185th RAO is the ideal "son" of the 13th GRACO (GRuppo ACquisizione Obiettivi, Target Acquisition Group) "Aquileia", joint group of airborne and artillery personnel part of the 3rd Missile Brigade "Aquileia", who were trained to parachute close to or even behind the enemy lines in order to give accurate launch coordinates.
Every BAO is composed of several DAOs Distaccamenti Acquisizione Obbiettivi (detachments of eight men each). For every BAO there is a minimum of two DAOs specialized in amphibious ops, two in forward air control and one in advanced parachute usage.

Italian Navy special units

Special Forces

The Italian Navy special forces unit is the COMSUBIN (Comando Subacquei ed Incursori "Teseo Tesei") - the Raiders & Divers Group. Specifically the 150-200 men of the Operational Raiders Group are the special forces section of the elite unit.

COMSUBIN's origins lie with the famous Italian special units "X MAS" (Italian acronym for Anti Submarine Motorboats). The name referred to an early vehicle employed by the units, an explosive-laden crewless motorboat ("barchino") which was aimed and launched against enemy submersibles (keep in mind that until well after World War II subs were essentially surface ships with the capability of temporarily diving underwater for attacks). After World War I much study and development went into underwater raid techniques but the unit's name was never altered, leading to the false impression that Italian seafaring commandoes were still relegated to anti-submarine warfare only. Instead many flotillas were armed and equipped to direct raids on enemy ships using explosive head-charges in guided torpedoes with 2-man crews (Siluri a Lenta Corsa or S.L.C.), with hand explosive charges (by frogmen) or with small, fast, self-explosive boats (S.M.A.).

COMBUSIN GOI personnel are largely drawn from the ranks of the Navy's San Marco Marine Brigade.

Special Operations Forces

Sometimes called upon to intervene for special operations the Special Company of the 1° San Marco Marine Regiment.

Also the raiders approached the target by means of submarines with special tanks installed on the external bridge containing the special vehicles (S.L.C.).

Italian Air Force special units

Special Forces

Special Operations Forces

Carabinieri Corps special units

Special Forces

The Carabinieri is a Gendarmerie (military police) with both (civil and military) law-and-order police duties and military peacekeeping and war-fighting capabilities. The Carabinieri has its own special forces in the form of the Gruppo di Intervento Speciale or the Special Intervention Group. The GIS features some one hundred or so troops specially trained in counter-terrorism operations with a special emphasis on marksmanship.

Special Operation Forces

The special unit SOF is the 1° Reggimento Carabinieri Paracadutisti "Tuscania" (1st Carabinieri Airborne Regiment Tuscania). It is a regiment of military police/anti-terrorism unit. The usual roles:

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.