Jump to content

Georgian Special Operations Command

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ebe123 (talk | contribs) at 10:47, 27 March 2011 (Added {{refimprove}} tag to article using TW). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Special Forces Brigade is the elite combat formation of the Georgian Armed Forces ground components, established for special operations in and outside the Republic of Georgia.

Georgian Special Forces are subordinated under the MOD Special Operations Main Division to a brigade-level command structure. Each formation is split into several sub-divisions which are allocated on different Georgian regions, cities and strategically important areas. Most units are composed of veterans of past conflicts including the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan, the wars in Georgia and the insurgency in Chechnya. Some soldiers served in former Soviet Army formations in Russia and the Ukraine.

History

Since 2001, Georgia has intensified the training of its elite forces in cooperation with American, French, British, Israeli and other countries' special services. Georgian commandos participated in the Iraq War from 2003 until the complete withdrawal of the Georgian contingent in 2008 due to an escalation of hostilities in South Ossetia. According to independent accounts, a number of Georgian operatives were also deployed prior in Afghanistan to aide US Special Forces in hunting down Taliban leaders. Georgian officials have stated that a group of servicemen were deployed in Afghanistan for medical purposes.

In the very first hours of the 2008 South Ossetia War, Georgian special forces backed by artillery successfully eliminated armed opposition around the city of Tskhinvali as a prerequisite for the full-scale ground assault which followed shortly after in the morning of August 8. The Georgian military then announced that more than 11 villages in South Ossetia were under control of government forces. However the Georgian military would ultimately be pushed back out of South Ossetia following Russian intervention in the conflict.

Following the reversal, the bulk of Georgian special forces assisted Interior Ministry units in the evacuation of ethnic Georgians and VIPs out of South Ossetia. Sergeant Kakhaber Tavgorashvili died in the morning of August 8 in the course of fighting, the only member of Georgia's special forces to be killed in action to date.[1] Around 55 were reported with injuries of different degrees.[2]. Special Forces followed the general withdrawal order but set up key points very close to Russian forces at towns like Igoeti and Gori.

Training

Very little is known about the disputet extensive exercise and preparation methods, while many Opposition leaders accused the military leadership to let instructors use harrasment and unhumane treatment on Special Forces personnel in inacceptable training conditions. The Special Forces Brigade and it's sub-fpormations activities during peacetime are effectively beeing shielded from the public, with a few exceptional revelations to foreign agencies and the nations incorporated to the country's defence scheme. For example, according to Russian agency report, one exposed battalion is specialised on any conventional and nonconventional internal and external activity during peace time, international crisis and times of war.

Basic daily exercises include the following:

  • (1) Endurance Exercises
    • "morning walk" with up to 40 kilogram equipement to carry on mountains (vest, helmet, rifle, pistol, backpack, anti-tank weapon, radio etc), jogging, climbing and obstacle course.
    • rope obstacle course on mountains and appartments
    • parachute drops
    • physical and psychological durability test.
  • (2) Advanced Close Combat Training
    • knife combat exercises
    • full contact training ( wrestling, judo and martial arts )
    • close range weapons training in buildings.
    • disarmament techniques
  • (3) Shooting Range
    • Professional marksmanship training to everyone in units based and fireteam and seciton sized formations. Special requirements inlcude acceptable eyesight.
    • sniper training
    • Anti-Tank weapons training
    • Critical hit training on rope, while on the move and during other situations.
  • (4) Education
    • history and military history analysis, lessons and tactics studies
    • vehicles study, engineering lessons and driving exercises.
    • Weapons study and effective handling exercises
    • Advanced insights into checmical and biological materials.

Commandos train for about 15 hours a day. There are usually two shifts, with one having it's main focus on physical and psychological stress, the other oriented on tactics and combat skills improvement. Both alternate throughout the day and at the end interact on all teams. During most outside enduracnce exercises the wearing of combat gear is a vital component to train for all kind of situations in all kind of environments on realistic terms. Other training methods are beeing kept secret from public and news agencies.[3]

References