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Special air service
*** Shopping-Tip: Special air service
{{mergefrom|SAS Troops}}
{{Infobox Military Unit
|unit_name=Special Air Service
|image=
Image:Sas_badge.gif 100px
|caption=Cap badge of the Special Air Service
|dates=
1 July 1941-
|country=
United Kingdom
|branch=Army
|type=Special Forces
|role=Counter Revolutionary Warfare/Counter Terrorism (one regiment); Close Target Reconnaissance (two regiments)
|size= Three regiments
|current_commander=
|garrison=
Hereford (22nd Regiment)
London (21st Regiment)
Wolverhampton (23rd Regiment)
|ceremonial_chief=
|ceremonial_chief_label=Colonel in Chief
|colonel_of_the_regiment= General The Rt Hon Charles Ronald Llewellyn (Guthrie), Baron Guthrie, GCB, LVO, OBE, ADC
|nickname=''The Regiment''
|motto=''Who Dares Wins''
|colors=
|march=Quick: ''Marche du Regiment Parachutiste Belge''
Slow: ''Lili Marlene''
|mascot=
|battles=
|notable_commanders=
|anniversaries=
}}
:''For other Special Air Services, see
Australian Special Air Service Regiment and
Special Air Service of New Zealand.''
The '''Special Air Service''' ('''SAS''') is the principal
special forces organisation of the
British Army. Formed in
1941 to conduct raids behind German lines in North Africa, with the
Long Range Desert Group, it today serves as a model for similar units fielded by many other countries. The SAS is a small and secretive organisation, but attracts a disproportionate amount of media coverage. It forms the main part of the
United Kingdom Special Forces, alongside the
Special Boat Service (SBS) and the
Special Reconnaissance Regiment (SRR).
The SAS is widely regarded as one of the finest and best trained special forces units in the world.
Organisation
There are three separate
regiments of the SAS - '''22 SAS Regiment''' is the regular army element, with two
Territorial Army (TA) regiments, '''
Artists' Rifles 21 SAS Regiment''' and '''
23 SAS Regiment''', known as the SAS(R). They are supported by a
flight (military unit) flight of the
Army Air Corps (AAC) and two
squadrons of the
Royal Corps of Signals, which consist of SAS-trained personnel. But they are not SAS, they are called support personnel.
All SAS members have to pass a rigorous selection procedure, but due to the part-time nature of the TA, the selection process for members of 21 SAS and 23 SAS is stretched over a period of over a year. Their selection can not be compared to the rigours of 22 SAS selection.
{| class="wikitable"
! 22nd SAS Regiment
! 21st SAS Regiment (Artists)
! 23rd SAS Regiment
|-
| HQ
| HQ (
Regent's Park,
London)
| HQ (
Kingstanding)
|-
| A Squadron
| A Squadron (Regent's Park)
| A Squadron (
Invergowrie/
Glasgow)
|-
| B Squadron
| C Squadron (
Basingstoke/
Cambridge/
Southampton)
| B Squadron (
Leeds)
|-
| D Squadron
| E Squadron (
Newport)
| C Squadron (
Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle/
Manchester)
|-
| G Squadron
|
|
|}
In addition, L Detachment (formerly R Squadron) is part of the TA, but is assigned to 22 SAS for the provision of casualty replacements. All of its members are ex-regular SAS. R Troop does a similar task for the signals unit.
The three regiments have different roles: the TA regiments specialise in Close Target Reconnaissance (CTR), while 22 SAS performs a wider range of tasks also including Counter Revolutionary Warfare (CRW), Counter Terrorism (CT) and acting as a Quick Reaction Force (QRF). The relationship between the regiments somewhat distant at times, but members of 22 SAS are sometimes attached to the SAS(R). During the 1980s, the Director of the SAS, Brigadier
Peter de la Billière, established a rule that an
commissioned officer officer or senior
non-commissioned officer NCO in 22 SAS who wished to gain rank had to serve time with the SAS(R). In support, not just of the SAS, but also of the other
UKSF units is the newly formed 18 Signal Regiment. A further unit is 8 Flight,
Army Air Corps, which is assigned to support 22 SAS.
22 SAS also has a Headquarters, Planning and Intelligence Section, Operational (Ops) Research Section, CRW Wing, and Training Wing.
Each Sabre Squadron is divided into four 16-man
Troops with different responsibilities (Air Troop, Boat Troop, Mobility Troop, and Mountain Troop).
The CRW Wing is made up of one squadron, which rotates every 6–9 months. The squadron is split up into two troops:
* Red Troop (Air and Mountain Troops)
* Blue Troop (Boat and Mobility Troops)
Each of the two troops is made up of an assault group and a sniper team.
The SAS has been based at
Hereford in the west of
England for many years. Stirling Lines, named after David Stirling, was initially the home of the Regiment but in 1999 they moved to a former
Royal Air Force RAF base at
Credenhill on the outskirts of Hereford.
Function
Current SAS roles include:
*Gathering
Intelligence (information gathering) intelligence behind enemy lines.
*Destroying targets far behind enemy lines.
*Protecting senior British dignitaries.
*Executing
CRO CRW operations to assist
police units such as
SO19.
*Operating without official
Government of the United Kingdom British Government involvement.
*Training special forces of other nations.
*Performing counter-terrorism operations at home and abroad
Even though each troop has a designated role (Mobility, Boat, Mountain and Air), each man is expected and trained to know and to execute the roles of the other troops. This leads to companionship and responsibility throughout the entire regiment.
Selection and Training
Commanding Officer (CO)
Major John Woodhouse introduced SAS Selection in
1952. Before that, troopers had earned their credentials in the field.
SAS Selection and Training is the most demanding military training course in the British Army: it reportedly only has a pass rate of 0-10%. It is a test of strength, endurance, and resolve over the
Brecon Beacons and
Elan Valley in
Wales, and in the
jungle (terrain) jungle of
Brunei. The
Namib Desert is also used as a desert training ground. 'Selection' takes around 6 months to complete.
Selection is held twice a year regardless of conditions. A candidate must be male and have been a regular member of the
British Armed Forces Armed Forces for at least three years or a member of 21 SAS or 23 SAS (which can be joined directly from
civilian life) for at least 18 months. All soldiers who apply must have at least 39 months of
military service remaining. A candidate who fails any stage of the selection is 'Returned to [his parent] Unit' (RTU'd). Candidates are allowed only two attempts at selection, after which they may never reapply. Many are not even allowed that.
Like other sections of the British armed forces, the SAS accepts members from the
Commonwealth of Nations Commonwealth, with notable representation from
Fiji, the former
Rhodesia,
New Zealand and
Australia. The
Parachute Regiment is the SAS's main recruiting area.
Special Forces Briefing Course (2 days)
Over a weekend, potential candidates are shown what life in the SAS is like and are briefed on what to expect during selection. There is a map and compass test, a swimming test, a first aid test and a combat fitness test.
Fitness and navigation (4 weeks)
The first part of selection is held in the Brecon Beacons and Elan Valley. The
weather there can be unpredictable and a couple of soldiers have died during selection, mainly due to
hypothermia or
exposure. The actual selection starts with the Battle Fitness Test (BFT), a squadded 2.5 km run in 15 minutes, and then the same distance run individually in under 10.5 minutes. The first week mostly consists of runs in the neighbourhood, up and down hills with a small load in the
backpack bergen. Lessons in
navigation and map reading are included. Navigation runs in small groups in woodland areas and night
yomp tabs follow shortly. The load in the bergen gets heavier and an
SA80 rifle with no slings has to be carried. Soldiers have to keep the rifle in their hands as they climb up the slopes and jog down again. In the third week navigation is solo from
grid reference to other points on the map. At each rendezvous (RV) point, the soldiers have to indicate where they are before the next grid reference is given. The soldiers are not told how long the run is and where they will end up. In the last week, there is a race against the clock every day, with each task more punishing as the distances and load of the bergen increase. The "Long Drag" is the final test - about 40 miles over the mountains in between 20 and 24 hours depending on the weather.
Initial continuation training (4 weeks)
This consists of detailed and realistic training in weapons handling,
demolitions and small patrol
tactics.
Jungle training (6 weeks)
Soldiers are divided into
patrols of four and are watched over day and night by Directing Staff (DS). Soldiers must stand-to for one hour at
dawn and one hour at
dusk every day without fail and must also keep their knife with them at all times. After lessons in navigation through dense jungle, boat handling, camp building and jungle contact drills there is a final test, where all things that have been learned must be applied correctly. Soldiers will learn to live, fight and survive in the jungle, and will have to take care of every cut, scratch and blister, as it could easily get infected. The rain is almost constant, which further demoralises the candidates. Jungle training is usually carried out in the thick
rainforest of
Brunei.
Combat survival (4 weeks)
There is another month of training in
Survival skills survival skills, living off the land and using
escape and evasion (E & E) tactics. There are lessons and lectures in
interrogation techniques from people who have been
Prisoner of War Prisoners of War (POWs). The last few days is the E & E stage. In groups the soldiers are dressed in
overcoat greatcoats to slow them down and have to evade capture from the Hunter Force, which is usually comprised of
Parachute Regiment or
Brigade of Gurkhas Gurkha soldiers. When captured, (which normally happens to all recruits, without exception) every soldier has to withstand tactical questioning (TQ). The soldiers are blindfolded, put in stress positions, subjected to
white noise, dehydrated and given no food. Common phobias are exploited, as in one stress position they put their captive in a cage no bigger than a dog's kennel, and lay iron over the top of the cage. The captors then repeatedly beat the iron with chains, to create a claustrophobic feeling. The soldiers are only allowed to respond to questions with:
*Name
*Rank
*Number
*Date of birth
*"I'm sorry I cannot answer that question"
If they break during TQ then they are RTU'd.
Passing selection
After passing selection, soldiers lose any previous rank and become
troopers. They have to work their way up again from the lowest rank, but revert to their original rank (called Shadow rank) with appropriate increases in rank for length of service, if they ever leave the SAS. Officers, who must hold a minimum rank of
captain, do not lose their rank but may only serve a three-year tour with the SAS. Officers are allowed to do a second three-year tour provided they pass selection again.
Specialist training
Specialist training includes:
*First Aid, to a fairly high level, with stints in busy hospitals, including a week in a mortuary
*Signals
*
HALO (High Altitude, Low Opening) parachuting technique
*
HAHO (High Altitude, High Opening) parachuting technique
*Sniping - all SAS snipers are trained by the Royal Marines at the Sniper course at
CTCRM (Commando Training Centre Royal Marines)
*Languages
*Vehicle Operating Skills - off-road, for cross-country insertion and patrolling, and also on-road evasive driving as part of the close protection role
*CRW Training
*Explosive Method of Entry (EMOE)
* VIP protection (body-guarding, or close protection)
Secrecy
Upon entry into the regiment, troopers have to abide by strict rules, such as not telling anyone other than close family that they are a member of the SAS. Anonymity is also provided whilst serving in the SAS. Troopers also may not give names and information to any
police authority whilst co-operating. Troopers have the right to a 24-hour 'warm down' after any firefight and do not have to give evidence to the police during this period. If a
medal is given to a member of the SAS, such as the
Military Cross (MC), the soldier is listed in the media as being in their parent regiment and not the SAS. If an SAS trooper is killed in action (
KIA), and if it can be avoided, the information is not made public, and if it is unavoidable then the parent regiment is again listed and not the SAS. After leaving the SAS, ex-members may not give details of unofficial or
black bag job black bag operations. Ex-members of the regiment often use
pseudonyms such as
Andy McNab. The
Government of the United Kingdom British Government makes no official announcements concerning the SAS and when reports are given there is no mention of the SAS. The
Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom) Ministry of Defence (MoD) has a standing policy of not discussing the SAS or its operations.
Insignia
The SAS, like every other British regiment, has its own distinctive unit insignia.
*Sand-coloured
beret (sometimes called the ''beige beret''; the SAS do not wear the
Combination Cap peaked cap)
*
Cap badge - the badge is actually meant to depict the flaming Sword of
Damocles (the sword of retribution) or
Excalibur, not a winged
dagger as it is usually called, but the misinterpretation is now universally accepted
*SAS parachute wings (different from those used by the rest of the Army- nicknamed "Egyptian Wings" - a small parachute with 5 lines between 2 wings light blue and dark blue)
*Silver regimental collar pins (collar dogs)
*Royal blue
stable belt
*Silver belt buckle with engraved regimental badge
1941-1945
The SAS was founded by then
Lieutenant David Stirling during
World War II. It was originally created to conduct raids and
sabotage far behind enemy lines in the
desert, and operated in conjunction with the existing
Long Range Desert Group (LRDG). Stirling (formerly of No.8
British Commandos Commando) looked for recruits with rugged individualism and initiative and recruited specialists from
Layforce and other units. The name "Special ''Air'' Service" was already in use as a deception.
Their first mission, parachuting behind enemy lines in support of
General Sir Claude Auchinleck's attack in November,
1941, was a disaster. Only 22 out of 62
troopers reached the rendezvous point (RVP). Stirling still managed to organise another assault against the German
airfields at
Aqedabia,
Sirte and
Agheila, this time transported by the LRDG. They destroyed 61 enemy
aircraft without a single casualty. 1st SAS earned regimental status and Lieutenant Stirling's brother Bill began to organise a second regiment, 2 SAS.
During the desert war the SAS performed many successful and daring long range insertion missions and destroyed aircraft and fuel depots. Their success contributed towards
Adolf Hitler Hitler issuing his
Kommandobefehl order to execute all captured Commandos. When the Germans stepped up security the SAS switched to
hit-and-run tactics. They used
jeeps armed with
Vickers K machine guns and used
tracer ammunition and
Lewes bombs to ignite
fuel and aircraft. They took part in
Operation Torch.
David Stirling was captured by the
Italy Italians in January
1943 and he spent the rest of the war as a
prisoner of war in
Colditz Castle. His brother
Bill Stirling and
Paddy Mayne Blair 'Paddy' Mayne took command of the SAS.
Image:Mayne.jpg thumb|180px|Famous picture of Paddy Mayne, taken in north Africa
The SAS were used in the invasion of Italy. At the toe of Italy they took the first prisoners of the campaign before heading deeper into Italy. At one point four groups were active deep behind enemy lines laying waste to airfields, attacking convoys and derailing trains. Towards the end of the campaign
Italy Italian guerrilla warfare guerrillas and escaped
Russian prisoners were enlisted into an "Allied SAS Battalion" which struck at
Albert Kesselring Kesselring's main lines of communications. In
1945 Major Farran made one of the most effective raids of the war. His force raided the German Fifth Corps headquarters burning the buildings to the ground and killing the General and some of his staff.
SAS men were inserted into
France as 4-man teams before the
Normandy Invasion to help
Maquis (WW2) maquisards of the
French Resistance. In a reversal of their by now customary tactics they often travelled during the day when Allied fighter bombers drove
enemy traffic off the roads, and then ambushed enemy troops moving in convoy under the cover of darkness. In
Operation Houndsmith 144 SAS troopers parachuted with jeeps and supplies into
Dijon, France. During and after D-Day they continued their raids against fuel depots, communications centres, and railways. They did suffer casualties—at one stage the Germans executed 24 SAS troopers and a
United States Army Air Forces pilot. SAS units equipped with heavily-armed jeeps operated around
Arnhem before
Operation Market Garden to recconnoitre possible drop zones. At the end of the war the SAS hunted down
SS and
Gestapo officers. By that time the SAS had been expanded to five regiments, of which two were French and one Belgian.
1946-1979
The
British War Office partially disbanded the SAS regiments after the war and the French and Belgians returned to their home countries. The British SAS was no longer a regular army unit but TA unit 21 SAS still existed. In April
1948, however, the
Malayan Races Liberation Army began an insurrection which transformed into the
Malayan Emergency. Two years later Brigadier
Mike Calvert practically re-created the SAS as a commando unit reminiscent of jungle troops like
Chindits. 21 SAS was redeployed from the
Korean War and sent to Malaya. Many other members were recruited from the original SAS, other units,
Rhodesia, and even army prisons. The intended unit name "Malay Scouts" was scrapped for the reborn SAS.
Training new recruits took time. They learned tracking skills from
Iban people Iban soldiers from
Borneo. They began to patrol in teams of 2 or 4 men. Less than sanitary conditions forced them to learn
first aid. They also learned local languages and respect for the local customs and culture. Patrol periods in the jungle were progressively extended to three months. Soldiers unsuitable for
jungle warfare were RTU'd. At that stage some
troopers were armed with
pump-action shotguns. They also earned the respect of some of the indigenes by helping them. By the end of
1955 there were 5 SAS squadrons in Malaya. They stayed in mopping up operations until the end of
1958.
Many other missions followed. The SAS fought anti-
sultan rebels in
Jebel Akhdar (Oman) Jebel Akhdar,
Oman in
1958-
1959. They fought
Indonesian-supported "guerillas" during the
Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation in Borneo,
Brunei and
Sarawak in
1963-
1966. They also tried to pacify the situation in
Aden in
1964-
1967 before the withdrawal of British troops. They fought against another insurrection in
Dhofar, Oman in
1970-
1977. SAS troopers were involved, secretly, in the South Asia conflict in the early to mid 1970s.
Most of these deployments were unofficial. Membership, missions, and the whole existence of SAS became a secret. The SAS's role was expanded to bodyguard (BG) training and counter-terrorism (CT) work. They also began to work in civilian clothes on missions unless they could use uniforms of some other unit as a disguise. The British
Secretary of State for Defence still does not discuss the SAS or its operations.
1980-2001
''Also see:
Iranian Embassy Siege''
On
30 April 1980, six
Iranian terrorists took over the Iranian Embassy in Princes Gate, London. After six days of unsuccesful negotiations and one hostage's murder, Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher ordered an assault. At 19:26 on Monday
5 May, the SAS went in. More than thirty troopers entered the building, including some who went in across the now famous balcony filmed live by the
BBC. A diversionary attack was staged and other troopers went in through the ground floor. One hostage was killed by the terrorists, but within minutes the terrorist threat had been eliminated, with five of the six having been killed and one captured. Of the original 24 hostages, 22 were safe (one dead, the other had been released earlier). The operation was hailed as a great success and was to change the way the public viewed the regiment.
During the
Falklands War of
1982, SAS teams worked alongside the
Special Boat Service SBS in many operations before the main force landings at San Carlos and after the landings ahead of the Forward Edge of Battle Area (
FEBA). These included operations in
South Georgia, guiding
Hawker-Siddeley Harrier Harrier attacks on
Stanley, Falkland Islands Stanley airport to destroy
Argentina Argentine helicopters, and the destruction of eleven
FMA IA 58 Pucará Pucará attack aircraft on
Pebble Island. During the war, 22 SAS, under the command of
Lieutenant Colonel Lieutenant-Colonel Hugh_Michael_Rose Mike Rose, were the only land unit that had their own
satellite communications back to the UK.
In
1987 Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher ordered an SAS team into the high-security prison at
Peterhead,
Scotland. A rebellion by inmates had resulted in one of the prison officers being taken captive. The soldiers were armed with
Staff (stick) staves and entered the building by way of a
skylight. After violently subduing the inmates, the SAS team freed the prison officer and the operation ended. Some time after the incident, the
Scottish Prison Service Prison Service relaxed its
zero tolerance attitude to drug use in that prison.
In the
Gulf War of 1991, the SAS's role was similar to their forerunners in
World War II: they deployed deep into
Iraqi territory to gather
intelligence (information gathering) intelligence and destroy mobile
Scud missile launchers. They did the job with anything from explosives to pneumatic drills. Perhaps the most famous mission of the war, known as
Bravo Two Zero, was popularised by books written by two participants in the mission. Their accounts describe an eight-man SAS patrol cut off deep in Iraq during a scud-busting raid. Discovered by the Iraqis, they supposedly fought their way to the
Syrian border over a distance of 120 miles, killing around 250 Iraqi soldiers along the way. Four members of the patrol were captured and tortured, and three were killed in action.
Corporal Chris Ryan managed to escape across the border to Syria. The accounts written by the survivors have received some severe criticism from former members of the SAS.
Some troopers (officially former members of the Regiment) fought in the
Vietnam War and helped the
Mujahideen in
Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion. There was also official SAS training of Mujahideen in
Scotland in the
1980s, with particular emphasis on shooting down Russian helicopters. Some ex-members have also become
mercenary mercenaries or
private military contractors.
In September 2000, members of D Squadron were tasked with the hostage rescue of six members of the
Royal Irish Regiment and one Sierra Leonean corporal in
Sierra Leone. The operation was called
Operation Barras. The soldiers had been taken hostage by the
West Side Boys, led by
Foday Kallay, and were held in the dense jungle in western Sierra Leone. Alongside the SAS, A Company of 1st Battalion,
Parachute Regiment fought in the battle. Twelve British soldiers were wounded in the operation and one SAS
Lance Corporal was killed. The operation was a great success and many rebel leaders were captured; not long after, the West Side Boys had all but been defeated.
2002-2006
After the
September 11, 2001 attacks, the SAS were involved in operations in
Afghanistan.
Operation Trent employed half the Regiment in a successful attack on an $85,000,000
opium storage plant in Helmand province, which doubled as an Al-Qaeda local command centre. SAS members also participated in putting down the prisoner revolt at
Qala-e-Jangi prison and in the the battle of
Tora Bora.
Roman Abramovich's luxury yacht ''Ecstasea'' (launched in 2004) is rumoured to have an ex-SAS crew.
On
30 January 2005, an
Royal Air Force RAF C-130 Hercules Hercules crashed near Baghdad, killing ten British servicemen. The plane had just dropped off fifty members of G Squadron north of Baghdad for an operation to combat the increased insurgency.
On
22 July 2005, the SAS were reported by ''
The Sunday Times (UK) The Sunday Times'' to have aided in intelligence gathering and surveillance for the
Metropolitan Police which resulted in the shooting of
Jean Charles de Menezes, although the use of SAS forces was later denied by Sir
Ian Blair,
Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police. Following on from the
July 2005 London bombings 21 July attacks in London, on
29 July 2005 the SAS assisted in an operation to capture some of the terrorists who are believed to have carried out the attempted attacks. The SAS were seen arriving in unmarked vehicles and wore
balaclavas throughout the operation to conceal their identities. The SAS helped with storming the flats in West London and are believed to have fired several shots in the process.
On
19 September 2005, two supposed SAS members were arrested in the city of
Basra in
Iraq. Iraqi police claimed the two were arrested trying to plant bombs dressed in civilian clothing and had shot at police officers. The arrests sparked clashes in which British armoured personnel carriers came under attack from
petrol bombs. Later, official Iraqi sources said that British tanks knocked down a wall storming the city's jail and rescuing the soldiers. The British Ministry of Defence initially said that the men's release was negotiated and the tanks were merely trying to collect them. They later, however, claimed that the police had illegally handed the men over to
Shi'a Islam Shi'a militia and it was from these that they had to be rescued.
On
23 March 2006 the SAS assisted in an operation to free British hostage Norman Kember from a town north of Baghdad in Iraq.
Northern Ireland
In
Northern Ireland, the SAS was involved from the early days in what became known as '
The Troubles', which started in
1969. Indeed, in the early days of The Troubles they operated openly in uniform wearing the SAS sand-coloured beret with the winged dagger cap badge. They were involved in
Operation Flavius in
Gibraltar in which three unarmed
PIRA IRA members (including a woman) were killed. The three killed had been intending to detonate a bomb during a ceremonial event. According to the soldiers involved, they moved their hands to their pockets or bags, as if to draw a weapon or activate a detonator. A later inquest found that all three had been shot while laying face down on the ground. Since the official reason for British army deployment in Northern Ireland was to provide support for the
Royal Ulster Constabulary, killings by the SAS generated some controversy. In
1977,
Captain Robert Nairac, an undercover officer, was abducted, tortured then shot dead in
Armagh by a low-level
Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA operative and his friends who had begun to suspect him after overhearing him in a bar. It has been widely rumoured that Nairac was a member of the SAS but this has been disproven by historian Anthony Kemp, by Ken Connor, and by others. Nairac was, in fact, serving with 14th Intelligence Company when he was abducted.
In the Northern Ireland Troubles the SAS were given priority in the intelligence pecking order and supplied the most credible or 'hard' intelligence. Some of which came from a £300m computer system to analyze information on vehicles, letters, telephone calls, welfare payments
The Irish Troubles, by J. Bowyer Bell, p. 587 The SAS engaged in a Counter Revolutionary Operations (CRO) campaign to lay ambushes and place Covert Observation Posts (COPs). SAS actions were claimed to be directed against the IRA, with some against the smaller
INLA. Their reported policy of being allowed to "shoot-to-kill" is highly controversial in a country that officially bans the death penalty. Many SAS men, although forbidden to follow suspects into the
Republic of Ireland, nevertheless did so. Some were caught and arrested by
Garda SÃochana Irish police. Controversially, they were rarely charged with firearms offences, but were returned to the British authorities (although a
Dublin court once fined eight SAS men £100 each). In March 1976,
Seán MacKenna, an IRA commander, was abducted from his home in the Republic by the SAS and handed over to a British Army patrol once across the border.
Lesser quality intelligence was supplied to infantry COP teams, who, because of the tenuous quality of this intelligence, were less likely to get a contact with the 'Players' (British forces colloquialism for IRA), but these COP teams were trained by SAS instructors. It was common for SAS-qualified soldiers to serve with
14 Intelligence Company (known colloquially as '14 Int' or often simply as 'The Det' because its members were volunteers who were detached from other units). A specialist unit set up specifically for Northern Ireland, 14 Int was an all arms unit, which meant they recruited from all branches of the armed services. They served in the Province in an intelligence-gathering role, mainly operating in plain clothes. 14 Int liaised closely with the RUC
Special Branch and other security forces units and allegedly, Loyalist paramilitaries.
22 SAS boasts that its tough reputation is such that during the
Balcombe Street siege, the IRA surrendered, once the SAS deployment was publicised.
Battle honours
*Second World War: North-West Europe 1944-45, Benghazi Raid, Tobruk 1941, North Africa 1940-43, Landing in Sicily, Sicily 1943, Termoli, Valli di Comacchio, Italy 1943-45, Greece 1944-45, Adriatic, Middle East 1943-44
*Falkland Islands 1982; Western Iraq, Gulf 1991; Western Iraq 2003
The SAS in popular culture
The SAS has since the early 1980s built up an almost mythical reputation within the UK. The British media's obsession increased enormously following the 1980 hostage rescue at the Iranian Embassy in London, which was seen live on the
BBC. After the popularity of the SAS exploded, the film ''
Who Dares Wins (film) Who Dares Wins'' was released in 1981.
The SAS was greatly popularised among young people all over the world in the extremely popular online game
Counter-Strike. The SAS were added during the game's development as one of the CT units a player could choose to play. They are also featured in the computer game ''
Battlefield 2 Battlefield 2: Special Forces'' and one can opt to play as an SAS Trooper in the ''Delta Force'' games. In the ''
Hidden & Dangerous'' games, one plays the entire game as a SAS soldier; however, most missions are fictional, with some being based on real events, such as the attack on airfields in North Africa.
Added to all this, there is a constant stream of fictional depictions of the SAS and of former SAS soldiers. Blurring the line between fiction and fact are a number of supposedly factual accounts which, some allege, are in reality highly dramatised accounts based very loosely on actual events. Perhaps the two most well known examples are two books written under pseudonyms by two former SAS troopers who served together on the infamous Bravo Two Zero mission in Iraq during the first Gulf war of 1991:
* ''
Bravo Two Zero'' by
Sergeant Andy McNab
* ''The One That Got Away'' by
Corporal Chris Ryan
Both of these books have subsequently been criticised by authoritative sources (including the
Regimental Sergeant Major of 22 SAS at the time of the first Gulf war, Peter Ratcliffe DCM) as being highly embellished dramatisations of actual events.
In 1999, the book was made into the film ''
Bravo Two Zero (film) Bravo Two Zero'' starring
Sean Bean as Andy McNab.
Despite the alleged embellishments, these books have sold very well, and consequently started a me-too publishing bonanza by ex-SAS soldiers cashing in on the clear public appetite. The British government has since moved to prevent this in future by insisting that all who serve with the Regiment sign an agreement not to publish details of their service with the Regiment.
Anything written about the SAS should perhaps be treated with a very healthy dose of scepticism because of the secretive nature of their work. There is even the common phenomenon of individuals claiming to have served with the Regiment, when in reality they have had little or even no connection whatsoever with the SAS (and sometimes no connection with the British Army at all). This is known as
Walter Mitty walting.
The 1996 fictional movie ''
The_Rock_%28film%29 The Rock'' featured a former SAS operative, the only person to have escaped from Alcatraz prison.
In
2002 and
2003,
BBC Television further exploited the success of the SAS with a series of programmes which showcased ordinary members of the public being subjected to training routines and survival exercises supposedly normally undergone by prospective members of the organisation for selection purposes, as well as a documentary featuring former SAS members explaining general combat and survival tactics. The same year also saw a new
ITV drama series about the SAS, ''
Ultimate Force'' starring
Ross Kemp.
Not all representations are flattering however. In the
ITV comedy series ''
Whoops Apocalypse'' and the film remake, the SAS are depicted as trigger-happy idiots who destroy everything they come across.
Major Zero and
The Boss from the 2004
videogame ''
Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater'' were both members of the SAS.
Most recently, in 2006 a video game called ''The Regiment'' was released in Europe by
Konami.
Other Special Forces based on the SAS
*
Australia -
Australian Special Air Service Regiment.
*
Canada - The
Canadian Armed Forces Canadian Military's
Joint Task Force 2 is closely modelled on the SAS. An SAS Coy was created in 1946 and disbanded in 1948.
*
Denmark - Frømandskorpset (Naval Special Forces) and Jægerkorpset (Army Special Forces).
*
France - The ''1er Régiment Parachutiste d'Infanterie de Marine'' (1er RPIMa:SAS), is the heir of the World War II French SAS units (French Squad, 1st BIA, 3rd and 4th SAS). Its official motto is ''"qui ose gagne"'', the French translation of "Who Dares Wins". The Regiment operators are also nicknamed ''"les SAS français"'' (the French SAS). Recently, the Regiment created a Squadron (3rd Company) ''Patrouilles SAS'' or "PATSAS" (SAS Patrols), using heavily armed jeeps for raids behind enemy lines (particularly with 22nd SAS and the Australian SAS in Afghanistan).
*
Germany - The
Bundeswehr German Army special forces unit, the
KSK, is also closely patterned on the SAS.
*
Hong Kong - The
Hong Kong Special Duties Unit is a part of the
Hong Kong Police Force and was formed in 1973. SDU was modelled on the SAS and was trained by the SAS and SBS.
*
India - National Security Guards - 'Black Cats'.
*
Indonesia - Detasemen Bravo Paskhas TNI AU.
*
Israel - The
Sayeret Matkal, an elite unit of the IDF, is modelled on the SAS, and shares the same motto, "Who Dares Wins." Responsible for
Operation Entebbe.
*
Japan - The
National Police Agency's
Special Assault Team received training from British SAS operators prior to its activation on
1 April 1996.
*
New Zealand -
Special Air Service of New Zealand.
*
Netherlands - The
Korps Commandotroepen.
*
Pakistan - The
Special Services Group SSG commandos are also partly based on the SAS.
*
Philippines - The
Philippine National Police's (PNP)
Special Action Force was believed to have been based on the lines of the British SAS.
*
Poland -
GROM, partly based on SAS.
*
Rhodesia - C Squadron of 22 SAS was composed of Rhodesian troops. It formed the nucleus of the Rhodesian SAS Regiment after the end of the
Malayan Emergency in
1953, and subsequently the British SAS never raised another C Squadron. The Rhodesian SAS disbanded in December
1980 after the country became
Zimbabwe. (See ''SAS Rhodesia'' by Fourie, C., & Pittaway, J., published Dandy Agencies, Durban, South Africa, 2003.)
*
United States - The
United States Army US Army Special Forces Operational Detachment: Delta (1st SFOD-D (A)), also known as
Delta Force, was originally based on the SAS. Its founder,
Charles Beckwith "Chargin'" Charlie Beckwith, having served on exchange with the SAS in the early
1960s, caught the "SAS bug" and, recognising a void in the US Army, devoted a large part of the remainder of his career to the raising and establishment of a US unit formed on "SAS lines" with SAS capabilites.
See also
*
UKSF
*
Artists' Rifles 21 SAS
*
Military Reconnaissance Force
*
14 Intelligence
*
23 SAS
*
Special Boat Service
*
Special Reconnaissance Regiment
*
Parachute Regiment
*
British Forces Rangers
*
List of SAS operations
*
SAS Troops
*
SO19
*
Joint Task Force 2
*
Delta Force
*
Navy SEALs
*
Korps Commandotroepen
External links
-
SAS page at regiments.org
-
www.sassurvival.co.uk Example of training available to the public
-
Non-affiliated site dedicated to the SAS
-
WW2 French SAS 3rd and 4th SAS 2è and 3è R.C.P
-
Video footage of the SAS in action at the Iranian Embassy Siege
References
*''The SAS - Savage Wars of Peace - 1947 to the Present'', by Anthony Kemp (1994: Penguin Books)
*"Ambush: The War Between The SAS and The IRA", by James Adams, Robin Morgan and Anthony Bambridge (Pan, London: 1988)
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