10 Paratrooper Brigade (Malaysia)

10th Paratrooper Brigade
10 Briged Para

10th Parachute Brigade Insignia
Active November 1988–present; 28 years
Country  Malaysia
Branch  Malaysian Army
Type Elite Airborne Forces, Rapid Deployment Force
Role Air Assault
Coastal Operations
Heli Operations
Spearhead Operations
Raids
Vertical Envelopment Forced Entry
Part of Malaysian Joint Forces Command
Malaysian Rapid Deployment Force
Malaysian Special Operations Force
Garrison/HQ Terendak Camp, Malacca
Nickname(s) Storm Trooper
Pasukan Sayap Berdarah (English: The Bleeding Wing Forces)
Briged Halilintar (English: Thunderbolt Brigade)
Motto(s) Tindak Pantas
(English: Act Fast)
Beret   Maroon
March Tiada Misi Terlalu Sukar, Tiada Pengorbanan Terlalu Besar, Tugas Diutamakan
(English: No Mission Is Too Difficult, No Sacrifice Is Too Great, Duty Becomes Priority)
Anniversaries 10 October 1994
Engagements Operation Astute
MALTIM INTERFET, Timor Timur
MASMEDTIM, Indonesia
MASMEDTIM, Pakistan
Ops Pasir
Genting Sempah Incident
MALCON - UNIFIL 2007
MALCON - ISAF
Ops Daulat
Commanders
Current
commander
Brigadier General Datuk Tengku Muhammad Fauzi Tengku Ibrahim
Insignia
Basic Parachute Wing

The 10 Paratrooper Brigade (Malay: 10 Briged Para, Jawi: ١٠ بريڬيد ڤارا) - commonly known as 10 PARA - is an elite airborne brigade-sized unit within the Malaysian Army tasked with being rapidly deployed inside or outside the boundaries of Malaysia. 10th Para is the key element of the Malaysian Rapid Deployment Force (Malay: Pasukan Aturgerak Cepat; PAC).

Origin

10 PARA's primary role is to be the nation's main offensive force in time of war or emergencies. The creation of the Parachute Brigade was proposed by Malaysia's defence planners in the late 1970s as a part of the modernisation plan for the military. The plan originally did not receive much support from the government due to concerns that the formation of such a brigade would be looked with suspicion by its neighbour, Singapore.

In November 1988, Malaysia was unable to respond to a request for assistance by Maldives when that country was invaded by Tamil mercenaries. This inability to render timely help prompted Malaysian leaders to move to form paratrooper units within the Malaysian Army.

Timeline

Roles

10 Paratrooper Brigade is highly skilled in accordance with its status as a Rapid Deployment Force. Paratroopers are vigorously trained for specialised combat operations and rapid deployment in alignment with the brigade's motto -Tindak Pantas (English: Act Fast).

Identities

Paratroopers board the USS Tortuga during the CARAT Malaysia 2006 with U.S forces.
An operators of 10 Paratrooper Brigade demonstrated specialised combat operations during the National Day Parade of 2013 at National Square, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Two soldiers has a slung HK MP5SD2 while sniper personnel has a slung Colt M4A1 Carbine.
An operator of 10 Paratrooper Brigade with Colt M4A1 with M203 grenade launcher and Aimpoint Micro-T red dot sight standby for demonstrated specialised combat operations during the National Day Parade of 2013 at National Square, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Soldier from 10 Paratrooper Brigade of Malaysian Army holding his M4A1 Carbine during the 59th Merdeka Day in Kuala Lumpur.
Maroon beret
The maroon beret worn by the 10 Paratrooper Brigade is known as 'Pegasus'. The conditions for wearing the maroon beret are to pass the basic parachute course and to APAC course. This is an imitation of the British Parachute Regiment, as is the way the beret is worn and the cap badge. Much of their training is based on the British paras due to their reputation of being the best airborne force in the world.
Parachute wings
For 10 Para members, the parachute wings are titled 'Sayap Berdarah' meaning The Bleeding Wings. During graduation ceremony, VIPs or instructors will hit hard the metal parachute wing into graduates' chest. The sharp pins from the wing will make graduates bleed with their wings.

Brigade composition

10 Paratrooper Brigade is based at Terendak Camp, Malacca, also known as 'Home of the Paras'.

The brigade consists of:

Training

10 Paratrooper Brigade forces with ATMP (All Terrain Mobility Platform) during a parade.
Paratroopers provide covering while a US Marine reports his position during a joint amphibious landing exercise for Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT) Malaysia 2009. All the Paratrooper currently using the new standard assault rifles, Colt M4A1
Soldiers from the 10 Paratrooper Brigade, Malaysian Army, on guard at Putra World Trading Center during an exhibition of the Defence Services Asia 2014. They belongs to the earlier batches of high-visible guards by the 10 Para, and dons the maroon beret together with the new pixellated digital camouflage combat uniform known as ATM Celoreng Corak Digital woodland pattern.

Selection

Members of the brigade must pass a Kursus Asas Payung Terjun (Basic Parachute Course) and Kursus Asas Pasukan Aturgerak Cepat (APAC) (Rapid Deployment Force Orientation Course) before being qualified to wear the maroon beret and parachute wing.[2]

Many of the qualifying tests include: marches, raids, escape and evasions, abseiling, rappelling, mounted Gunung Ledang, survival skills, navigation, boating, running, and armoury dexterities.

These were designed to mentally and physically test candidates for jump qualifications.

Advanced Training

Advanced/Specialisttraining include:

  1. Tactical Air Landing Operations (TALO)
  2. Free Fall
  3. Close Quarters Combat (CQC)
  4. HALO/HAHO
  5. Sniper
  6. Demolition expert
  7. Marksmanship
  8. Sharpshooters
  9. Pandura (Pathfinder)

Light firearms

Pistols
Shotguns
Submachine guns
Assault rifles
Sniper rifles
Anti-material rifles
Machineguns
Grenade launchers
Anti-tank / Anti-aircraft / Rocket launchers

Recent Operations

The unit has been deployed in the following operations:

Operation Country Year
Malaysian Medical Team (MASMEDTIM), Chaman  Pakistan
MASMEDTIM, Kashmir  Pakistan
MASMEDTIM, Acheh  Indonesia
Operations PADANAN SIPADAN ISLAND RESORT (Ops Pasir)  Malaysia 2006
Operation Astute[3]  Timor-Leste 2006
MALCON-UNIFIL, Lebanon[4]  Lebanon 2007–present
Genting Sempah Incident[5]  Malaysia 2007
MALCON-ISAF, Afghanistan[6]  Afghanistan 2011–present
Ops Daulat  Malaysia 2013
Malaysian Medical Team, Pakistan

On 14 October 2005, The Malaysian Medical Team (MasMedTim) soldiers serving in earthquake-hit Battagram, Pakistan have been recommended for a service allowance of RM100 a day. The team, which left for Pakistan had set up a field hospital in Battagram, some 250 km from Islamabad, on 26 October. Equipped only with tents that were more suitable for the tropics and kerosene heaters, MasMedTim soldiers had to battle subzero temperatures while carrying out their duties of providing aid to survivors of 8 October South Asia earthquake. Insufficient winter clothes and the lack of hot water at the campsite was affecting soldiers for over two months now as the temperature sometimes dropped to minus-7 degrees Celsius at night.[7]

Operations "Padanan, Sipadan Island Resort"

The security surveillance, code-named Operation Padanan Sipadan Island Resort or known as Ops Pasir, which was launched on 20 September 2000 following the hostage-taking incidents in Sipadan and Pandanan islands, had restored confidence among tourists, including from the United States, to come to the resort islands. The integrated operation involves the Malaysian army, navy and air force as well as other related agencies such as the police and the coast guard.[8]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 10 Para Brigade (Malaysia).

References

  1. "Honorary". Utusan Malaysia. 12 May 2010. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
  2. Shahzada Manja, Khaleeq (30 May 2016). "Wira Beret Semerah Hati". Majalah 3, TV3 (Malaysia).
  3. Malaysia Sends 209 Soldiers To Help Quell Unrest In Timor Leste. Bernama. 26 May 2006.
  4. "Malaysia wants longer peacekeeping tenure". The Star (Malaysia). Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2009.
  5. "Villagers help in ground search". The Star (Malaysia). Archived from the original on 9 September 2007.
  6. "Malcon Isaf bukan sekadar pasukan perubatan". Utusan Malaysia. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  7. "Army Relief Team In Pakistan To Get Higher Allowance". Bernama. 14 December 2005. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2009.
  8. Marhalim (27 August 2008). "Sabah Radars, Finally…". Malaysian Defence. Retrieved 30 December 2009.
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