SFSG
The Special Forces Support Group (SFSG) is the UK's newest special operations unit. Formed around a core component of members of the 1st Battalion, the Parachute Regiment, with additional troops drawn from the ranks of the famed Royal Marines and the RAF Regiment, the SFSG provides infantry and specialized support for the SAS and SBS, as well as being tasked to perform their own missions.
- SFSG roles include:
- Acting as a quick reaction force for SAS/SBS operations
- Sealing off and guarding an area of operation
- Taking part in large scale offensive operations alongside SAS/SBS forces
- Carrying out secondary assaults and diversionary raids
- Acting as a 'blocking force' against counter attacks.
- Training/mentoring foreign militaries
- CBRN detection/protection
- Domestic counter-terrorism support operations
The type of operation the SFSG was specifically crated for occurred in Sierra Leone, in 2000. Codenamed Operation Barras, elements of 1 Para attacked a rebel base whilst the SAS/SBS rescued British soldiers, being held hostage, from a nearby camp. A comparable relationship exists between the US Army’s 75th Ranger Regiment and SFOD-D in the US Military. The Rangers provided perimeter security for Delta operations in Somalia in 1993.
The SFSG “stood up” at its base in St Athan, Wales in April, 2006 and has reportedly been deployed in support of UKSF operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is thought that 1 Company of SFSG is deployed to Afghanistan, in support of the SBS, under the command of a SBS officer. At least one Company was deployed to Iraq where it supported the SAS, as part of Task Force Red.
Apart from giving direct support to SAS/SBS missions, the SFSG also provides specialist training support. One of the traditional roles of the Special Air Service has been to provide foreign militaries with specialist training. Since much of this training does not necessarily require the skills of the SAS, such training tasks can now be performed by members of the SFSG, thus freeing the SAS up for direct combat missions. It has been reported that the SFSG has been training and mentoring units of the Afghan special forces and other troops.
It's also believed that the SFSG has been tasked to support UK law enforcement agencies during domestic terrorist incidents. The exact nature of the support provided is not publicly known, but it has been speculated that it may include providing additional area security around a large scale terrorist incident. Some sources indicate that elements within the SFSG have received counter-terrorist (CT) training from the SAS. Such SFSG CT elements would be able to assist the SAS/SBS in large scale CT operations. It's also believed that SFSG CBRN (Chemical, Biological, Radiation & Nuclear) specialists would assist in event of a domestic terrorist attack, such as a the use of a chemical, biological, or nuclear attack on the UK.
SFSG Components
Various press reports state that the SFSG is organized as follows:
1 Para
The bulk of the SFSG is composed of the 1st Battalion Parachute Regiment. Paras from the other two regular Battalions, 2 and 3 Para, may apply to the SFSG after 2 years service.
Royal Marines
Commandos from the Royal Marines provide the SFSG’s second largest element. The Royal Marine’s role within the SFSG is thought to focus on amphibious operations. It's been reported that the RMs provide 1 strike company (F Coy), of approximately 120 men, to the SFSG. It is believed that all of the Royal Marines component of the SFSG are drawn form the Fleet Protection Group, Royal Marine (FPGRM), who run their own SFSG selection course. 2 Troops from FPGRM were previously attached to the SBS to provide support for Maritime Counter Terrorism (MCT) operations in the North Sea. Some sources have also indicated that elements of 539 Assault Squadron are attached to the SFSG to provide amphibious transportation.
RAF Regiment
It is reported that the RAF Regiment commits at least one flight (the equivalent of a platoon, around 30 men) of RAF Gunners from II Squadron (the parachute trained field squadron) to the SFSG. Aside from infantry support provided by the one RAF Regiment flight, other RAF Regiment elements attached to the SFSG provide a number of capabilities to the SFSG.
- Forward Air Control - Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) specialists skilled in calling in close air support (both air strikes and movement of air assets e.g, calling in helicopters for extraction).
- CBRN support from specialist RAF personnel provides detection and decontamination for Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) terrorist attacks.
- Combat Search And Rescue (CSAR) - elements of the Ground Extraction Force, a mix of RAF Regiment and Merlin helicopters of E Flight, No 28 (AC) Sqn
SFSG Organisation
Headquarters (HQ) Company
4 Strike Companies
A Coy (1 Para)
B Coy (1 Para + a flight of RAF Regiment)
C Coy (1 Para)
F Coy (Royal Marines)
1 Support Company (assault engineers, mortars, Javelin anti-tank weapons
Attached/Supporting units:
RAF Regiment FACs
RAF Regiment CBRN unit
RAF Ground Extraction Force
268 (SFSG) Signals Squadron
Elements of 539 ASRM
Assorted elements from:
Royal Logistical Corps (RLC)
Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (REME)
Army Medical Services (AMS)
SFSG Operations
Details of specific SFSG operations remain vague at this time, although a handful of reports have surfaced. It is believed that the SFSG has been actively supporting UKSF in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Task Force Red / Maroon
Shortly after the units inception, a SFSG company was reportedly assigned to the US-led Task Force 145 (TF-145). TF-145, more recently renamed as TF-88, operates in Iraq and has hunted down senior Al-Qaeda members such as al-Zarqawi and associates. The British element of TF-88 consists of 1 SAS Squadron (Task Force Black), a Company of SFSG (reported by different sources as Task Force Red and Task Force Maroon) plus associated supporting units (SRR, 18 UKSF Signals, Joint Support Group, 7 & 47 Squadron RAF).
The SFSG has reportedly been operating as a quick reaction force (QRF) for SAS operations. On one such occasion, the SFSG were positioned around the area of an insurgent bomb-making factory, providing security for an SAS sniper team operation. They also supported an SAS operation to free British peace activist Norman Kember, who’d been kidnapped and held hostage, by a group of Iraqi criminals.
Operation Medusa
SBS and SFSG were reportedly involved in Operation Medusa, in September 2006. OP Medusa was a combined attack on Taliban forces in the strategically important Panjwayi district of Afghanistan that featured NATO units from the UK, US, Canada and Holland. The SBS and SFSG played key roles in the coordinated attacks acting as both attacking forces (SBS) and cut-off groups (SFSG).
UKSF Raid on Taliban Fort
Late August 2009 - SFSG troops supported a raid by the SBS on a Taliban bomb factory in Helmand Province. The SFSG reportedly carried out diversionary attacks during this operation.