Clearance Diving Team (RAN)

For other nations' commando frogmen, and information about frogmen in general, see frogman. For other nations' naval work divers, see clearance diver.
Clearance Diving Team

Clearance divers during a ship boarding exercise in 2006
Active 1951–Present
Country Australia Australia
Branch Royal Australian Navy
Type Explosive ordnance disposal
Engagements Vietnam War
Gulf War
East Timor
Iraq War
Afghanistan
Insignia
Abbreviation CDT

The Clearance Diving Teams (CDT)[1] of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) frogmen: they consist of naval personnel who are qualified in diving, demolitions, underwater repairs, and reconnaissance. They fulfil a maritime counter-terrorism role as part of the waterborne troop of the Tactical Assault Group East (TAG EAST).[2]

History

The RAN has used divers on a regular basis since the 1920s, but it was not until World War II that clearance diving operations came to the fore, with RAN divers working alongside Royal Navy divers to remove naval mines from British waters, and from the waters of captured ports on the European mainland.[3] RAN divers were also used in the commando frogman role, performing duties including reconnaissance of amphibious landing sites.[3] The skills learned in the European theatre were brought back to Australia, and utilised in the war against Japan.[3] After the war, RAN divers were used during the cleanup of Australian and Papua New Guinea waters of defensive mines.[3]

The utility of clearance and commando divers demonstrated during and after World War II prompted the Australian Commonwealth Naval Board to establish a clearance diving branch within the RAN in 1951.[4][5] Divers were initially attached to the Underwater Research and Development Unit, based at HMAS Rushcutter.[6] In 1956, they were organised into a separate Mobile Clearance Diving Team.[4][6] In March 1966, the divers underwent further reorganisation, splitting into two Clearance Diving Teams.[6] Clearance Diving Team 1 (initially CDT 1, later styled as AUSCDT 1) was the operational team assigned to mine clearance and commando operations throughout the Australia Station, while Clearance Diving Team 2 (CDT 2/AUSCDT 2) was dedicated to mine warfare in the Sydney area, but was not cleared for operations outside this area.[7]

In late 1966, Clearance Diving Team 3 was established specifically for deployment to the Vietnam War to assist the overworked United States Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal units, and to give RAN personnel in clearance diving work in an operational environment.[8] Sending CDT 1 or CDT 2, in full or in part, would have impacted on the teams' existing commitments, along with the continuity of training and postings.[9] CDT 3 was formed from available personnel; this was sufficient to keep a six-man team on station in Vietnam from early 1967 until early 1971, with six-month deployments.[10] CDT 3 was disbanded at the end of the Vietnam War, but the designation is reactivated for overseas wartime deployments, including in 1991 for the Gulf War, and again in 2003 for the Iraq War.[11]

Units

Inspecting clandestine naval mines in the Persian Gulf, 2003.

There are two standing units based in Australia;

A third unit, Clearance Diving Team Three (AUSCDT THREE) is formed when clearance divers are sent into combat. CDT 3 saw extensive service in the Vietnam War, and during the 1991 Gulf War and the 2003 Iraq War.

There are eight Reserve Diving Teams (RDT) which provide supplementary or surge capability in support of regular CDTs in addition to localised fleet underwater taskings:

Role

Clearance divers speed out to their dive site on a fast insertion boat
A member of Australian Clearance Diving Team One carries his oxygen closed circuit rebreather

The Clearance Divers' roles include:

1. Mine Counter Measures (MCM) and Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD):

2. Maritime Tactical Operations:

3. Underwater Battle Damage Repair:

4. Tactical Assault Group (East):

5. Counter Piracy:

Selection

The RAN's diver training program is centred on a 10-day clearance diver acceptance test (CDAT), colloquially known as "hell week". Recruits begin each day at 02:00, and are put through over thirty staged dives designed to test their strength and endurance.[12]

Upon passing selection recruits must successfully pass a number of specialist course to become fully qualified. The Basic Clearance Diver Course spans 37 weeks whilst the Advanced Clearance Diver Course and the Clearance Diving component of the Mine warfare and Clearance Diving Officers course spans 41 weeks. The demands placed on potential applicants to this category are not seen elsewhere in the ADF except with the Special Forces.[13]

Operations

Australian personnel unloading supplies from a US Navy helicopter at the port of Umm Qasr, 27 March 2003.

Notes

  1. Royal Australian Navy. "Navy Contribution to Australian Maritime Operations".
  2. Graham, Davis (26 September 2002). "Action Team Tag: Sailors form integral part of anti-terrorist unit". Navy: The Sailor's Paper (Canberra: Department of Defence). Archived from the original on 11 November 2012.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Grey, Up Top, p. 280
  4. 4.0 4.1 Perryman & Mitchell, in Oldham (ed.) 100 Years of the Royal Australian Navy, p. 73
  5. Grey, Up Top, pp. 280–1
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Grey, Up Top, p. 281
  7. Grey, Up Top, pp. 281–2
  8. Grey, Up Top, p. 282
  9. Grey, Up Top, pp. 282–3
  10. Grey, Up Top, pp. 282–3, 290–1, 318–9
  11. Perryman & Mitchell, in Oldham (ed.) 100 Years of the Royal Australian Navy, p. 74
  12. "Hell Week". Navy Divers. Series 1. Episode 1. 2008-10-28.
  13. https://www.navy.gov.au/about/organisation/clearance-diving-teams/one

References

External links

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