United Kingdom Special Forces Selection

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United Kingdom Special Forces Selection is the selection and training process for members of the United Kingdom's three Special Forces formations: Special Air Service, Special Boat Service, and Special Reconnaissance Regiment. Members of the SAS and SBS undergo common selection up to the award of a sand-coloured beret to SAS Troopers whereupon SBS candidates undergo further selection to qualify as Swimmer Canoeists and SAS personnel undergo further specialist training. Selection for the SRR is not known at this time.

Until the late 1990s candidates for the SAS and SBS underwent selection under the auspices of the prospective unit, the merger created efficiencies and encouraged a greater degree of interoperability between the units.

Selection is reputed to be the most demanding military training course in the British Armed Forces with a reported pass rate of less than 10%. It is a test of strength, endurance, and resolve over the Brecon Beacons and Elan Valley in Wales, and in the jungle of Brunei, taking around 6 months to complete.

Selection is held twice a year regardless of conditions with all candidates being male. Personnel must have a level of prior regular or reserve military experience (unless joining UKSFR[1]) and for regulars must have at least 39 months of service remaining on completion of selection as well as not exceeding 32 years of age. Candidates are limited to a maximum of two attempts with personnel failing being Returned to Unit.

Selection is broken down into a number of phases, commencing with a Briefing Course several weeks in advance of commencement.

Contents

[edit] Special Forces Briefing Course (2 days)

Over a weekend, potential candidates are briefed in detail on Special Forces employment and on the activities during selection. Candidates undertake a map and compass test, a swimming test, a first aid test and a combat fitness test. Candidates will be notified of the likelihood of failure on selection and provided with a training programme to prepare for the process.

[edit] Fitness and navigation (4 weeks)

Based at Sennybridge Training Camp in Wales personnel are exposed to the Brecon Beacons and the Elan Valley, Wales where weather conditions are demanding, and unpredictable.

Initial tests are common to the rest of the British Armed Forces with the Basic Personal Fitness Assessment (BPFA), a 1.5 mile run in under 10 minutes 30 seconds followed by a number of basic gym tests.

The first week of selection consists of runs in the Brecon Beacons, up and down hills with a loaded bergen. These exercises, such as the "Fan Dance", are further complicated by navigation and map reading exercises. Navigation runs in small groups in woodland areas and night tabs follow shortly, steadily increasing both the physical and mental load on the prospective operator. Loads increase over the period, while the individual's personal weapon has to be carried unsupported; candidates are required to keep the rifle in their hands as they climb slopes and jog down again.

In the third week individuals navigate from a grid reference to other points on the map. Directing staff at each rendezvous ("RV") require the candidate to indicate location before instructing the next reference point.

The final stage of the "hills" phase of selection is known as "Test Week" which consists of six marches on consecutive days with ever increasing bergen weights and distances. The second to last day involves covering 35km with a handrawn sketch map rather than a printed map. Test week concludes with "Endurance", a forty mile (65km) march across the Brecon Beacons, completed in less than twenty hours loaded in excess of fifty five pounds plus water, food and rifle.

[edit] Initial continuation training (4 weeks)

This consists of detailed and realistic training in weapon handling, vehicle handling, demolitions and small unit patrol tactics.

[edit] Jungle training (6 weeks)

Jungle training is usually carried out in the thick rainforest of Brunei or Malaysia with candidates allocated to four man patrols, each patrol supervised by a member of the Directing Staff (DS). Patrols are required to stand-to for one hour at dawn and one hour at dusk and personnel must keep a knife on their person at all times. Damp and rain are persistent, potentially demoralising the candidate, and skin contusions, insect bites, cuts and blisters must be cared for due to the risk of infection.

Training includes jungle survival, patrol techniques, navigation, boat handling, camp and observation post techniques, contact drills and medicine.

The final test encompasses these skills, where all things that have been learned must be applied correctly in a tactical environment.

[edit] Combat survival and Resistance to Interrogation (4 weeks)

Personnel undertake advanced survival training, escape and evasion and resistance to interrogation training. The test stage for this training phase requires the candidates to undergo an evasion exercise, dressed in greatcoats to restrict movement and operating in small groups. A Hunter Force from the Special Forces Support Group provides a capture threat.

All personnel are required to undergo a Tactical Questioning stage; should a candidate reach the objective without capture he will still be subjected to this element.

[edit] Completion of selection

After completing selection candidates for the SAS are awarded the sand-coloured beret and petrol blue stable belt of the Regiment.

Soldiers revert to the rank of trooper, however, the original rank at entry to selection is held in records as a shadow rank and the Trooper remains a member of their original unit. The first 12 months of service in the Regiment is probationary and a candidate could still be RTUd should the need arise. Personnel normally serve at least one 36 month tour with the Regiment and may be RTUd, or choose to RTU, on completion. Personnel who serve for more than two tours with the Regiment are formally transferred to the permanent Cadre and become eligible for promotion as Senior NCOs.

Personnel who elect to RTU, or are involuntarily RTUd will regain their previous rank, plus appropriate seniority.

Officer candidates are required to hold at least the rank of Captain and do not revert, they are however required to return to the parent unit on completion of their first three year tour. Officers are permitted to return to the Regiment and may become permanent cadre after a second tour.

After completing selection SBS candidates transfer to the SBS headquarters at Royal Marines Poole to undergo further selection.

[edit] Special Boat Service Selection

SBS Candidates do not wear the sand-coloured beret, instead retaining the green beret of a Commando. Further selection activities are undertaken at Poole, including diving, small boat operations, beach and shallow water reconnaissance.

[edit] Special Reconnaissance Regiment Selection

The hill phase of selection is the same for SRR personnel except the test ends after the first two weeks of the 4 week selection process. A further two weeks SRR aptitude is conducted (NFDK). On completion of the selection aptitude there is a considerable amount of training geared towards undercover operations both within the UK and abroad.

[edit] Special Forces Communicator Selection

Personnel from any arm of the services (primarily from the Royal Corps of Signals) who volunteer for 18 (UKSF) Signal Regiment and Royal Marines communicators joining the SBS Signal Squadron are employed alongside Special Forces Operators and are required to undergo a rigorous selection process.

Signal Regiment candidates undergo a four week physical and tactical navigation stage based at Credenhill virtually identical to that of potential SAS and SBS Operators. Performance standards are lower (3 km/h rather than 4 km/h) although the final two weeks are run by DS from SAS Training Wing alongside potential SAS and SBS Operators. Personnel then undergo extensive training in the deployment, use and maintenance of the specialist communication systems used by special forces. Candidates go on to a two week infantry skills package, followed by the same Escape and Evasion and Resistance to Interrogation training undertaken by the Special Forces Operators. SFC selection candidates do not have a jungle phase as part of their course.

Finally, SFC's complete the same Military Parachuting course as the Operators, culminating in the award of the British Army parachute wings. On completion of the SFC selection course, successful candidates are then awarded the sand-colored beret of the SAS (bearing the cap badge of their respective parent units)[citation needed] and the Royal Signals stable belt bearing the famous flaming Excalibur sword (mistakenly called "winged dagger") of the SAS.

Royal Marine SFC's continue to wear the Commando green beret and do not wear the Royal Signals stable belt. They come under command of the SBS Signal Squadron, which in turn falls within the ORBAT (ORder of BATtle) of 18 (UKSF) Signal Regiment . They are still required to complete the entire SFC selection course, despite having already undergone the arduous Commando Course.

[edit] Specialist training

Following selection personnel will undertake training according to operational need and their specific area of employment:

  • First Aid, to a high level, including attachment to busy hospitals, including a week in a mortuary.
  • Signals and communications
  • Parachuting
    • HALO (High Altitude, Low Opening)
    • HAHO (High Altitude, High Opening)
  • Sniping - Special Forces snipers are trained by the Royal Marines at CTCRM (Commando Training Centre Royal Marines)
  • Languages
  • Vehicle Operating Skills - off-road, for cross-country insertion and patrolling, and also on-road evasive or pursuit driving as part of the close protection role
  • Counter Revolutionary Warfare Training
    • Explosive Method of Entry (EMOE)
  • Close protection techniques

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ MoD UKSFR WebSite. Retrieved on 2008-04-24. “SAS (R) accepts male volunteers aged 34 and below from any part of the Regular or Reserve Armed Forces (RN, RM, Army and RAF). Applicants with no previous military experience may apply, but must be aged 32 or below and may be required to attend the Combat Infantry Course (CIC) prior to attempting Selection.”