Page 5 of 13 FirstFirst 12345678910111213 LastLast
Results 61 to 75 of 193

Thread: Most successful SOF operations in the 20th Century

  1. #61
    Hot Biker Dude of Death Royal's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    'round and about...
    Posts
    7,906

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gordon
    Actually British Commandos were deployed for the first time at Dieppe and there were quite a few of them there, granted the majority were Canadian but there were a number of Brits present too.
    The first operation by British Commandos in WWII was the Lofoten Islands raid in in Norway 1941.

    Quote Originally Posted by PsihoKekec
    St. Nazaire was only partialy succesfull, they achived mission goal but most of the commandoes were killed or captured (only three of those who landed managed to escape) and several boats were sunk and their navy crews lost. Altaugh retribution was bloody.
    St.Nazaire was wholely sucessfull in that the dry docks were rendered inopperative for the remainder of the war. Yes, there were significant casualties, but that was expected. They were deemed a target of such importance, that the sacrifice of men and materiel was considered acceptable from the outset as it meant that the German 'pocket battleships' could not be repaired and operate from the Atlantic coast of France, and were thus confined to Norway and the Baltic...

  2. #62
    Senior Member Gordon's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    A Brit in the US of A
    Posts
    1,352

    Default

    Thanks for the correction ... .

    Hope you're finding yourself well Royal.

  3. #63
    Hot Biker Dude of Death Royal's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    'round and about...
    Posts
    7,906

    Default

    No worries, slainthe to you too mate

  4. #64
    Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    GA
    Posts
    484

    Default my choices

    Well if i had to choose, I would say that the operation in Nam by Tom Norris and his VN LDNN counterpart to save the shot down pilot was extrodinary, and took balls the size of basketballs and extreme skill. My second choice, although it would be hard to clarify this as one mission, would be the A-Team+AF Combat Controller in Afghanistan missions. For a few months, the A Teams were responsible (with the help of external support) for over 40,000 AQ and Taliban deaths. Now, i know most of their "combat" was calling in airstrikes and painting targets or calling corodiantes, but thats awhole lot of ass kicking going on. Just my thoughts.

  5. #65
    Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    IRGC training camp, preparing resistance to Zionist Occupation Government
    Posts
    402

    Default

    Assault on Kabul by Soviets, December 1979 (early phase, before paras got there)

    Mirbat, July 1972 (55 Omanis and 9 SAS troopers defended agaisnt some 250 rebels)-not typicall SF action but impressive anyway

  6. #66
    Banned user
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    Houston,Texas
    Posts
    1,254

    Default

    Assault on Amin's Palace by spetsnaz KGB.
    The palace was on top of the hill/mountain with only one road leading up to it that was guarded by 3 tanks, several artillery pieces, multiple mortars and heavy machineguns. It garissoned 250 afgani "guard" soldiers. 2 Shilka AA guns provided cover fire for 48 KGB operatives that moved up the hill/mountain on 4 APCs. They have climed over the walls under very intensive fire, actually they didn't climb but rather run up them (I don't know if any of you have seen it, but it looks very impressive when several people support the pole and a person runs up the wall while holding on to it). Anyhow, by the time they have made it into the courtyard most of them were wounded. The fight inside the Palace itself was mostly hand to hand combat and lobbing grenades at point blank range. Simultaneously there was made an assault by spetsnaz VDV on all key installations and communication centers in and around Kabul to establish control over the capital and prevent deployment of reinforcements. To make a long story short, in the end Soviets lost 4 dead and almost everyone else out of initial 48 was wounded in one way or another. Spetsnaz KGB didn't take any prisoners and all of the Amin's defenders, including his family and servants, were killed.

  7. #67
    Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    IRGC training camp, preparing resistance to Zionist Occupation Government
    Posts
    402

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Russian Texan
    Assault on Amin's Palace by spetsnaz KGB.
    Description of assault on Kabul (not just palace)

    http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...2/MOUTGrau.htm

  8. #68
    Senior Member Kitsune's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Location
    In the Garden of my Turbulence
    Posts
    3,602

    Default

    What is "Spetnaz KGB"? Isn't Spetnaz part of the Red Army and not of KGB? Or does this "KGB" mean something different?

  9. #69

    Default

    Spetsnaz is basically russian for "special forces." Not special forces as in "US Army Special Forces," but as in "France has a number of special forces units."

    That is, it is not a unit, but a type of unit, and the various branches/forces of the russsian security aparatus will generally each have their own spetsnaz units.

  10. #70
    Milo Drinker of Death Flagg's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    The (South)Island of Misfit Toys
    Posts
    12,955

    Default

    I think I'd go with the following two:

    1.) The SAS "Hearts and Minds" operation in Malaya.

    I think it's reasonably safe to say that the creation and implementation of the "Hearts and Minds" operations and philosophy played a huge role in the elimination of the communist insurgency in Malaya.

    The success of the campaign helped ensure the continued existence of the UK SAS and was a catalyst for the creation of the SASR and NZSAS, of which all 3 are considered to be Tier 1 SF units.

    The "Hearts and Minds" philosophy has since become an integral part of other SF unit operations......primarily US Army Special Forces ODAs.

    Although these "Hearts and Minds" operations may be perceived as less "high speed" or news worthy I would speculate that the greatest impact SF has made in the 20th century is a direct result of lessons learned from the Malayan Emergency "Hearts and Minds" operations.


    2.) I would also rank highly the use of SF liason personnel amongst the various coaltion partners during the creation/buildup/operations in Desert Shield/Desert Storm. I wouldn't have wanted to have the job of trying to hold together a coalition consisting of numerous Arab military contingents that could have unraveled quite easily durig the buildup.

    But if there's one mission that deserved to be successful I think it would have to be Son Tay....

    the idea of intentionally crashing a chopper right into the middle of the camp while hosing the guard towers with miniguns takes big brass balls...simple...brutal....effective

  11. #71
    Hot Biker Dude of Death Royal's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    'round and about...
    Posts
    7,906

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Flagg
    1.) The SAS "Hearts and Minds" operation in Malaya.

    I think it's reasonably safe to say that the creation and implementation of the "Hearts and Minds" operations and philosophy played a huge role in the elimination of the communist insurgency in Malaya.

    The success of the campaign helped ensure the continued existence of the UK SAS and was a catalyst for the creation of the SASR and NZSAS, of which all 3 are considered to be Tier 1 SF units.

    The "Hearts and Minds" philosophy has since become an integral part of other SF unit operations......primarily US Army Special Forces ODAs.
    The 'Hearts and Minds' concept was evolved earlier in the 1950's in Keyna during the 'Mau Mau Emergency' by Gen Sir Frank Kitson.

    Despite the fact that 'Bunch of Fives' is on the required reading list at both Lympstone and Sandhurst, it's a lesson we seem to be trying hard to forget.

  12. #72

  13. #73
    Milo Drinker of Death Flagg's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    The (South)Island of Misfit Toys
    Posts
    12,955

    Default

    The 'Hearts and Minds' concept was evolved earlier in the 1950's in Keyna during the 'Mau Mau Emergency' by Gen Sir Frank Kitson.
    I wasn't aware the concept was used before Malaya......I haven't been able to find much relevant material regarding the Kenyan insurgency problem in the 1950's...thanks for that.

  14. #74

    Default

    The heavy surf had soaked the ropes, making them too heavy for the rocket propelled grappels to lift. The pre-landing bombardment had stirrred up the dirt on the cliffs and the few ropes that made it up became slick with mud. The seas were so heavy that only one of the special assault ladders was raised and it had to brought back down when it threatened to capsize the DUKW it was mounted on. Without much close in fire to deter them, German defenders lobbed grenades down the cliffs and riddled the beach with machine gun and mortar fire. Fifteen Rangers became casualties on the beach.

    The 5th Ranger Battalion was tasked to help the 2nd. When the 5th was not able to brodcast the taking of their objective (they were a half hour late and sea water had destroyed their radios) the 5th went in with the 29th Infantry to try and gain that objective over land.

    It was during this battle that the modern day Rangers' motto "Rangers lead the way" was created. The Assistant Division Commander of the 29th Infantry was trying to rally his men, who were pinned down on the beaches by heavy German fire. "Don't die on the beaches," General Cota told them, "die up on the bluffs if you have to die, but get off the beaches or you're sure to die!" He then ran into a group of Rangers that were preparing to break out of the beachhead and told one of the Ranger officers present that he knew the Rangers would not let him down and that he expected the Rangers to lead the way.
    All this and the U.S. Rangers still came out on top.

  15. #75
    Senior Member -Max2-'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    an obscure forum
    Posts
    2,154

    Default

    One of the most succesfull SOF operations IMHO:

    Operation Dragon Rouge, by Belgian Para-Commandos (with the help of USAF ) in Stanleyville, Congo (November 1964).

    Operation DRAGON ROUGE, RED DRAGON in English, was one of the most dramatic military missions undertaken during the Cold War. It involved a flight of more than 4,000 miles by USAF C-130s carrying paratroopers of the crack Belgian 1st ParaCommando to rescue hostages who had been held for more than three months in the Congolese city of Stanleyville.

    Africa was an unstable place in the 1960s, even more so than it is today. The former Belgian Colony of Congo, now known as Zaire, was granted independence in 1960, and almost immediately became the site of chaos. When the crisis ended in early 1964, a new one broke out as Congolese rebels calling themselves "Simba" rebelled against the government. The Congolese government turned to the United States for help. In response, the US Strike Command sent JTF LEO, a task force made up of a detachment of C-130s, communications personnel and and 82nd Airborne security team, to Leopoldville.

    By early August, 1964 the Congolese, with the help of the LEO force and a group of white mercenaries led by Major Mike Hoare, was making headway against the Simbas. In retaliation, the Simbas began taking hostages of the whites in areas under their control. They took them to Stanleyville and placed them under guard in the Victoria Hotel.

    While the world watched anxiously, in Washington and Brussels the United States and Belgium were hard at work trying to come up with a rescue plan. Several ideas were considered and discarded, while attempts at negotiating with the Simbas failed - no one could be found to negotiate with!

    In mid-November the C-130Es and crews of the Tactical Air Command rotational squadron from Pope AFB, NC were called back to their temporary duty base at Evreux-Fauville AB, France from missions throughout Europe. The crews were told simply to go to their barracks and get some rest, because something big was brewing. On Tuesday evening, November 17, the crews were told to report to the operations room on the Margarite where the airplanes were deployed. The crews were told to rig seats and take-off. Just before take-off, each navigator was given a Manila envelope and instructed not to open it until their airplane had reached 2,000 feet and there were no mechanical problems to make them turn back. When the crews opened the envelopes, they learned they were going to Klinebrogel, a Belgian military airfield outside Brussels. When they got to Klinebrogel, each airplane loaded with paratroopers wearing red berets, then took off again after being handed another envelope. This time it told them to head south for Moron AB, on the Spanish Mediterranean. At Moron the navigators went into Base Operations where they were given maps and instructions for the next leg of their flight, to Ascension Island in the South Atlantic, where they arrived 18 hours after leaving France.

    By this time everyone knew they were on their way to Africa, but first there was a time of "hurry up and wait" on secluded Ascension, where the rescue force was out of sight of the prying eyes of the world. While they waited, the American airmen and Belgian paras got to know each other, and began working out procedures to drop the Belgians.

    On Sunday before Thanksgiving the force left Ascension and flew across the Atlantic and much of Africa to Kamina, an airfield in the southern Congo. There the crews and paratroopers waited again. By this time all hopes of negotiation had vanished, and that evening the American and Belgian commanders were told to launch Operation DRAGON ROUGE.

    In the early hours of November 23, 1964 five C-130s took off from Kamina, each with 64 Belgian Red Berets in full combat gear seated on the red nylon troop seats in its cargo compartment. Behind the assault force came seven more Herks, with Chalk 12 configured as a hospital ship. The C-130s flew north at high altitude, then dropped down to treetop altitudes to follow the Congo River as they neared the city of Stanleyville.

    As the sun was breaking over the horizon out of the African Veldt, a CIA A-26 INVADER flown by a Cuban mercenary pilot made a strafing pass over the Stanleyville Sabenas airport. Right behind the A-26 the first C-130 roared low over the runway. As the airplane came over the field, paratroopers led by Col Charles Laurent spilled from the doors on either side of the airplane. Within seconds, 310 paratroopers were in the air, then landing on the strip of grass alongside the runway. The five jump planes came around for another pass to drop the jumpmasters and bundles of equipment. As the airplanes came off the drop zone, they began taking fire from a .50-caliber machinegun. After dropping the troops, Chalks Two through Five left the area for Leopoldville, where they were to refuel and stand-by. Chalk One, carrying the C-130 mission commander, Colonel Burgess Gradwell, and flown by Captain Huey Long of the 777th TCS, orbited over the airfield until they were hit by several heavy shells that knocked out hydraulics. Long pointed the battle-damaged airplane toward Leopoldville.

    Forty-five minutes after he jumped, Col. Laurent reported that the airfield was secure. Five other C-130s roared in for assault landings from their orbit point near Stanleyville. Each airplane discharged troops and vehicles to join the paratroopers on the ground, then took off again and headed to Stanleyville. Meanwhile, Chalk Six, flown by Captain Mack Secord's crew, approached Stanleyville. They had lost a life raft after takeoff from Kamina and had to return for the spare airplane. Secord was told to land, and wait with Chalk Twelve, the hospital plane, until the Belgians returned to the airport with the hostages.

    After leaving the airport, the Belgian rescue team made haste to reach the Victoria Hotel before the Simbas carried out their threats to kill the hostages if a rescue was attempted. Several blocks from the hotel a paratrooper rounded a corner just in time to prevent the Simbas from firing a second volley of shots into the assembled hostages, who had evidently been walking toward the airport. Some of the hostages later said they thought the Simba officers intended to turn them over to the Belgians unharmed, but some of the Simbas, who had been drinking and smoking Hemp all night the night before, decided to take matters in their own hands. They shot their own officers, then turned their guns on the hostages. They had fired one volley, picking women and children as their targets, and were preparing to fire another when the Red Berets showed up on the scene. At the sight of the Belgians, the Simbas lost their courage and ran!

    After more than an hour on the ground at Stanleyville, Mack Secord's crew finally saw the first hostages coming toward them. As they were the most badly injured, they had been driven to the airport. Seeing the engines running and thinking the C-130 was about to take-off, the frightened whites rushed aboard the airplane through the open rear ramp. Secord's loadmasters, there were two aboard, tried to get them over to the other airplane where a doctor waited to tend their wounds. After finally getting the most seriously injured people to leave, Secord's crew closed up their airplane and began taxing for the runway. As they passed a clump of elephant grass, a pair of Simbas ran out. One ran alongside the airplane trying to get inside the door while the other sprayed the underside of the wing with a submachinegun. No one inside the airplane knew what had happened; the whole thing was witnessed by the crew of Chalk 12. Secord took off and headed for Leopoldville. When he got there, he had to be bodily lifted from the airplane and taken to the hospital where he was treated for a brain concussion he had received the night before when he bumped his head getting into the airplane.

    For the rest of the day, C-130s and other transports shuttled between Stanleyville and Leopoldville. More than 2,000 people were airlifted out of the city. That night a Belgian mechanic working on a DC-4 was killed by sniper fire. Several times during the day the field was mortared, and every airplane was hit by ground fire during their landings and takeoffs. One was hit in a wing fuel tank. The airplane crew chief whittled a plug from a broom handle and wrapped it with a rag and used it to plug the leak.

    The airlift continued the next day. Late in the day the Belgians were pulled out of the city and flown to Leopoldville. Early the next morning a smaller scale mission designated as DRAGON NOIR/BLACK DRAGON, freed hostages held at Paulis, a town 225 miles northwest of Stanleyville. The hostages at Paulis had also been harmed by the Simbas. An American missionary had been beaten to death during torture.

    After DRAGON NOIR, the rescue force retired to Kamina to await further orders. While they were waiting, an African thunderstorm prompted one C-130 crewmember, none of whom had had a bath in days, to grab soap and go out into the rain for an impromptu shower. The rest of the force followed his lead as the airmen and paratroopers ran around naked in the rain! A few days later, in response to political pressure from the Third World, President Lyndon Johnson ordered the force ouf of Africa.

    For their role in DRAGON ROUGE, the C-130 crewmembers recieved the 1964 MacKay Trophy for the most meritorious flight of the year by USAF aircraft. All of the crewmembers were decorated with the Air Medal, while Captain Mack Secord received the Distinguished Flying Cross.
    In all, more than 2.000 hostages were rescued for the loss of 2 Belgian Paras and 11 wounded. On the enemy side, several tens of rebels were killed...

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •