Special Actions Detachment
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (February 2013) |
Special Actions Detachment | |
---|---|
Destacamento de Ações Especiais | |
Active | 1985–present |
Country | Portugal |
Allegiance | Portuguese Navy |
Type | Special forces |
Role | Special operations[a] |
Size | 60 |
Part of | Portuguese Marine Corps |
Garrison/HQ | Lisbon Naval Base |
Nickname(s) | DAE |
Motto(s) | Braço Às Armas Feito ("An arm to Arms addrest", from The Lusiads, Canto X, 155, v. 1) |
Engagements | Operation Cruzeiro do Sul, Angola 1992 Operation Forrez, Zaire 1997 Operation Crocodilo, Guinea-Bissau 1998 Operation Forrec, D.R Congo 1998 Operation Tarrafo, Guinea-Bissau 1999 INTERFET, Timor-Leste 1999–2000 EUFOR, D.R. Congo 2006, Somalia 2008 Operation Atalanta 2008–present Afghanistan 2013 Mali NATO Assurance Measures Lithuania 2019–present Operation Irini 2021–present Takuba Task Force 2021–2022 |
The Special Actions Detachment (Portuguese: Destacamento de Ações Especiais) or DAE is the tier one special force maritime unit of the Portuguese Navy. It is part of the Portuguese Marine Corps. Raised in 1985, the DAE is one of the smallest special forces units within the Portuguese Armed Forces. It is responsible for conducting air-sea rescue, amphibious reconnaissance, amphibious warfare, black operation, bomb disposal, CBRN defense, coastal raiding, counterterrorism, direct action, executive protection, hostage rescue, irregular warfare, ISTAR, long-range penetration, JTAC, manhunt high-value target, maritime sabotage, mountain rescue, naval boarding, operation behind high risk enemy lines, special operations, special reconnaissance, tracking targets, underwater demolition, unconventional warfare, other missions in support of Portuguese and NATO armed forces. DAE's mission and training are similar to American special forces and it often trains with them.[citation needed]
Organization[edit]
The unit is led by a commander, and is subdivided into a command cell and four combat teams. The command cell contains the unit commander, his deputy (a lieutenant commander) and a small staff of eight. The combat teams are composed of ten men: petty officers and seamen and a commanding petty officer.
Selection and training[edit]
DAE operatives are drawn from the ranks of marines, all having high operational experience. Due to the nature of its actions, candidate acceptance is extremely restrictive and selective. Only 5–10% of the applicants manage to join the unit.
Upon completion of the basic selection phase prospective recruits then begin the first phase of their training. Phase 1 of their training is conducted at the Navy's combat diver school. Students receive instruction in: basic combat diving techniques, EOD and underwater demolitions. Candidates who successfully complete the first phase are assigned to the DAE on a probationary status, and begin their second phase of training. Phase 2 instruction includes courses on: escape and evasion techniques, advanced driving, mountaineering, offensive operations, parachuting training and basic English. Once a trainee is permanently assigned to the DAE he will continue to receive various courses of instruction throughout his career.
After this tough selection, COEMAR starts, which lasts 18 weeks and is divided into three phases:
- Technical (7 weeks)
- Combat (3 weeks)
- Tactics (8 weeks)
During and after COEMAR, DAE's military personnel receive training in areas as varied as:
- Abandonment of aircraft in immersion
- Air assault
- Air-sea rescue
- Amphibious reconnaissance
- Amphibious warfare
- Artillery observer
- Clandestine operation
- Close-quarters combat
- Cold-weather warfare
- Combat diving (closed circuit)
- Coastal patrolling
- Commando style raid tactics
- Counter ambush
- Counter maritime sabotage
- Counter sniper
- Counterterrorism
- Covert operation
- Defusing and disposal of bombs, land mines, and unexploded ordnance
- Demolitions, mines and traps
- Desert warfare
- Driving tactical vehicles
- Executive protection
- Exfil
- Fast combat shooting
- Forward air control
- Hand and Arm Signals
- Hand-to-hand combat
- Helocasting
- Hostage rescue
- HUMINT
- IED disarmament
- Inactivation of conventional explosive devices – land branch
- Infiltrate the area with a helicopter
- Intelligence collection
- Irregular warfare
- Jungle warfare
- Living off the desert, jungle, mountain, and sea
- Marksmanship
- Medical evacuation
- Military parachuting with automatic & manual opening (taken at the Parachute Regiment – Tancos)
- Military intelligence
- Mountain rescue
- Mountain warfare
- Naval boarding
- NBCR on operations in contaminated environments
- Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE)
- Small unit tactics
- Sniper (taught in Lamego at the Special Operations Troops Centre)
- Surveillance and counter-surveillance of the battlefield
- Special operations
- Special reconnaissance
- Tactical communications
- Tactical emergency medical
- Tactical use of motorbikes
- Tracking tactics
- Unconventional warfare
- Underwater demolition
- Urban warfare
- Using fast attack craft
- Using high military technology
Operations[edit]
DAE conducts regular training exercises with its NATO counterparts, including the United States Navy SEALs, Special Naval Warfare Force (FGNE), French Commandos Marine, JW GROM, Lithuanian Special Operations Force as well as the respective naval counter-terrorist units.
They were deployed to:
- Angola in 1992;
- Zaire in 1997;
- Guinea-Bissau in 1998;[1]
- East Timor in 2004;[1]
- Democratic Republic of Congo in 2006 (as part of the EUFOR);[1]
- Somalia in 2009;[2][3]
- Afghanistan in 2013;[1]
- Mali in 2019;[1]
- Lithuania from (2018–2024) (as part of the NATO Assurance Measures)[4][5]
Equipment[edit]
Infantry weapons[edit]
Pistols[edit]
- Glock 17 Gen 5 9-mm pistol
Submachine guns[edit]
Assault rifles[edit]
- Heckler & Koch G36C/K 5.56mm
- Heckler & Koch HK416 A5 5.56mm
- M4 carbine with M203 40 mm grenade launcher
Sniper rifles[edit]
- Heckler & Koch HK417 A2 7.62mm sniper variant
- AW 7.62mm sniper rifle
- AWSM .338 LM sniper rifle
- AW50 12.7mm sniper rifle
Grenade launchers[edit]
- Heckler & Koch AG36 used on H&K G36 rifles[8]
- M203 used on M4 carbine
Vehicles[edit]
Notes[edit]
- ^ Air assault, Air-sea rescue, Artillery observer, Amphibious reconnaissance, Amphibious warfare, Black operation, Bomb disposal, CBRN defense, Clandestine operation, Close-quarters combat, Cold-weather warfare, Counterinsurgency, Counterterrorism, Covert operation, Cyberwarfare, Desert warfare, Direct action, Electromagnetic warfare, Executive protection, Force protection, Forward air control, Hostage rescue, HUMINT, Intelligence assessment, Irregular warfare, ISTAR, JTAC, Jungle warfare, Long-range penetration, Manhunt, Medical evacuation, Military intelligence, Mountain rescue, Mountain warfare, Naval boarding, Patrolling, Raiding, Reconnaissance, SIGINT, Special operations, Special reconnaissance, Surveillance, Tactical communications, Tactical emergency medical services, Tracking, Underwater demolition, Unconventional warfare, Urban warfare
References[edit]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "DAE, a secreta tropa de elite portuguesa". JN (in European Portuguese). 20 July 2017. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
- ^ "DAE, a secreta tropa de elite portuguesa". JN (in Portuguese). 20 July 2017. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
- ^ "Minister of Defence visits Portuguese Military in Lithuania". Portuguese Delegation to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
- ^ "Fuzileiros participam no maior exercício de Operações Especiais do Leste da Europa". Marinha (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 13 August 2022.
- ^ ""A segurança dos nossos aliados é a nossa segurança"". www.portugal.gov.pt. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
- ^ "Portuguese Navy DAE combat diver, shot for Flashbang volume 10". Facebook.
- ^ "MP5A3 Portuguese Marines".
- ^ "Portuguese Marines in Lithuania". Facebook.