11th Parachute Brigade (France)
11th Parachute Brigade | |
---|---|
11e Brigade Parachutiste | |
Active |
|
Country | France |
Branch | French Army |
Type | French Airborne Brigade |
Size | ~ 8,500 |
Part of | 3rd Division |
Garrison/HQ | Balma, Toulouse |
Anniversaries | Saint-Michael, September 29 |
Engagements | Algerian War Operation Tacaud
Gulf War
|
Commanders | |
Current commander | Olivier Salaün |
Notable commanders |
|
Insignia | |
Identification symbol | |
Abbreviation | 11e B.P |
The 11th Parachute Brigade (French: 11e Brigade Parachutiste, 11e BP) is a unit of the French Army, dominantly infantry, part of the French Airborne Units and specialized in air combat and air assault. The Brigade's primary vocation is to project in emergency in order to contribute a first response to a situational crisis. An elite unit of the French Army, the brigade is commanded by a général de brigade (Brigadier General) with headquarters in Balma near Toulouse. The Brigade's soldiers and airborne Marines wear the red beret (amaranth) except for the Legionnaires of the 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment who wear Green beret of the French Foreign Legion.
The 11th Parachute Brigade originally the 11th Light Intervention Division (11e DLI) was created from airborne units contingents of the 10th Parachute Division 10e D.P and 25th Parachute Division 25e D.P of France,[1] both dissolved following the Algiers putsch of 1961 during the Algerian War.
Creation and different nominations
- On May 1, 1961; the 11th Light Intervention Division (French: 11e division légère d'intervention) was created from dissolved airborne units of the 10th and 25th Parachute Division.[2]
- On December 1, 1963; the 11th Division was created by merging the 11th Light Intervention Division and the 9th Brigade 9e B.D.E.[3]
- On April 1, 1971; the 11th Division became the 11th Parachute Division (11e DP).
- On June 1999; the 11th Parachute Division became the 11th Parachute Brigade (11e BP).
Origin and history
11th Light Intervention Division – 11e DLI
the 11th Light Interventtion Division was created on May 1, 1961, from airborne elements of the 10th Parachute Division and 25th Parachute Division, both dissolved following the Algiers putsch of 1961, and from the 11th Intervention Division (11e DI), set at the time to form the 3rd Parachute Division.[4] The division commanded by General Marzloff[5] rejoins the metropole on July 1, 1961. On August 1, 1963, the 13th Parachute Dragoon Regiment leaves the Division and takes garrison in Lorraine at Dieuze and Nancy.[6]
Order of battle
Since creation the 11th Light Intervention Division is constituted of the following:
- Command and Support Structure
- 61st Headquarters Company (61e CQG)
- 61st Transmission Company (61e CT)
- French Army Light Aviation (ALAT) Platoon
- Transport Group 513 (GT 513)
- 61st Airborne Engineer Company (61e CGAP)
- 61st Repair Division Company (61e CRD)
- 61st Medical Company (61e CMA)
- 61st Provision Section (61e SRI)
- Parachure Infantry
- Parachute Artillery
- Parachute Cavalry
At the time, regiments of the French Foreign Legion did not compromise the newly enacted division. On October 1, 1963; the division integrated the BOMAP (Airborne Operational Mobile Base).
11th Division – 11e DIV
On December 1, 1963, the 11th Light Intervention Division merged with the 9th Colonial Infantry Division and became the 11th Division. Starting July 1966 and excluding elements of Division support; the unit activated and operated around three distinct Brigades, the 9th Marine Infantry Brigade at Saint-Malo, the 20th Airborne Brigade (20e BAP) at Toulouse and the 25th Airborne Brigade (25e BAP) at Pau.
A support battalion, the 61e BS was created on February 1, 1964, at Auch. The 61e BS supervised health services and provisions in the Division. In March, the 61st Airborne Signals Battalion (61e BTAP) steps in at Pau and regroups the existing transmission companies.
On July 1966, the 11th Division reached 16,000 men and was composed of two brigades (the 20e BAP at Toulouse and the 25e BAP at Pau) forming five parachute regiments.[7]
Order of battle
- Command and Support Structure
- 61st Headquarters Company (61e CQG)
- 61st Airborne Signals Battalion (61e BTAP)
- 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment (1er RHP)
- Régiment d'infanterie-chars de marine (RICM), formerly part of the Moroccan Division
- 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment (35e RAP)
- 11th Marine Artillery Regiment (11e RAMa) part of current 9th Marine Infantry Brigade
- 17th Parachute Engineer Regiment (17e RGAP)
- 5th Helicopter Combat Regiment (5e RHC); Light Aviation Group of the 11th Division (GALDIV 11)
- Air Mobil Command Post 50/351 (PCAM)
- Airborne Operational Mobile Base (BOMAP)
- 61st Support Battalion (61e BS)
- 61e CMLAP
- 11e CLRM
- 511e CRRM
- 11e and 61e SEI
- 9th Outremer Brigade (9e BOM)
- 20th Airborne Brigade (20e BAP)
- 25th Airborne Brigade (25e BAP)
11th Parachute Division – 11e DP
The 11th division disappeared on April 1, 1971, to give formation to the 11th Parachute Division at Toulouse. The 9th Outremer Brigade (9e BOM) left the Division and the 20th Airborne Brigade (20e BAP), the 25th Airborne Brigade (25e BAP) became subsequently the 1st and 2nd Parachute Brigades and integrated each one support battalion. The three support regiments were reorganized in two interim regiments of intervention that conserved nevertheless their original nominations (1st Parachute Hussar Regiment and the 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment). The 17th Parachute Engineer Regiment disappeared.
Order of battle
On July 1, 1971, the 11th Parachute Division is composed of the following:[8]
- Command and Support Structure
- 61st Headquarter Squadron (61e EQG)
- 61st Transmission Company (61e CT)
- 5th Combat Helicopter Regiment (5e RHC); Light Aviation Group Division (GALDIV 11)
- Airborne Operational Mobile Base (BOMAP)
- Air Mobile Command Post 50/351 (PCAM)
- 1st Parachute Brigade (1re BP)
- 9th Parachute Chasseur Regiment (9e RCP)
- 3rd Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment (3e RPMIa)
- 8th Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment (8e RPMIa)
- 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment (35e RAP)
- 420th Command and Support Battalion (420e BCS)
- 2nd Parachute Brigade (2e BP)
- 1st Parachute Chasseur Regiment (1er RCP)
- 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment (2e REP)
- 6th Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment (6e RPMIa)
- 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment (1er RHP)
- 425th Command and Support Battalion (425e BCS)
On August 1, 1973; the 61st Headquarter Squadron and the 61st Transmission Company were regrouped and form the 61e BCT. The following year in 1974, the 17th Parachute Engineer Regiment was recreated and the interarm regiments find their specialities. On August 1, 1974, the 1st Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment (1e RPIMa) was reattached to the Division.
Units belonging to the 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment (2e REP) and the 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment (35e RAP) took part in Operation Tacaud starting from 1978 in Chad.[9]
Still in 1978, and within the cadre of military cooperation with Zaïre which anticipates assistance and formation, the 2nd Foreign Prachute Regiment is parachuted during the Battle of Kolwezi, and participated in alliance with Belgium Paratroopers to the Rescue of Kolwezi. During this intervention, two teams of the 13th Parachute Dragoon Regiment and one team from the 1st Marine Parachute Infantry Regiment (1e RPIMa) were deployed to forward operating terrain on observation and reconnaissance missions.
During this time, France was manned with an intervention force of 20,000 strong composed of the 11th Parachute Division, the 9th Marine Infantry Division (9e DIMa), aerial forces and Naval contingents.[10]
On October 23, 1983; one company of the 1st Parachute Chasseur Regiment stationed in Lebanon within the Multinational Force in Lebanon was victim to the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing and occasions 55 paratrooper deaths within the ranks of the 1er RCP and the 3 paratroopers within the ranks of the 9th Parachute Chasseur Regiment.
In the aftermath of the Cold War, the French Army reorganised and the 11e DP which became the 11th Parachute Brigade in 1999.
11th Parachute Brigade – 11e BP
In 1999, as part of the restructuring of the French Army, the 11th Parachute Brigade was formed at Balma (Balman Toulouse Garrison), the base of the 11th Parachute Division. The brigade would later be engaged in Africa and Afghanistan.
Africa
The 11th Parachute Brigade, mainly the 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment (2e REP), took part in Opération Licorne in the Ivory Coast.
Afghanistan
From 2006 to 2007, the parachute brigade intervened in Afghanistan as part of the French Detachment of NATO's International Force.[11] In September 2007, the brigade was relieved by Chasseurs Alpins of the 27th Mountain Infantry Brigade (27e BIM).
On 18 August 2008, a unit of the 8th Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment (8e RPMIa) lost eight men during the Uzbin Ambush .
The paratroopers of the 1st Parachute Chasseur Regiment (1er RCP), of the 11th Parachute Brigade, took up its first rotation, and was in place by Sunday, 1 May 2011, in Kapisa Province. Four more rotations would follow. A total of 650 military personnel were scheduled for a mission to maintain zonal security.
On 10 May 2011, two combat parachute companies of the 1e RCP—almost 200 men commanded by général Emmanuel Maurin,[12] commander of the 11th Parachute Brigade—were projected east towards Nijrab District, on a mission lasting several months. As a result, 1000 paratroopers were engaged in Afghanistan, principally from the 1e RCP, which were supported by the 11th Parachute Brigade, the 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment, the 17th Parachute Engineer Regiment, 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment, and the 1st Train Parachute Regiment.[13]
From April to October 2001, while preparing for this mission, the 11th brigade rehearsed realistic simulations, in order to achieve operational readiness within the newly established Brigade La Fayette joint command. In Afghanistan, reinforcements served for periods from 6 months to a year in Nijrab District, in northeastern Kapisa Province, while attached to the Tactical Interam Group of Kapisa (TIGK).
As of June 20, 2011, the 11th Parachute Brigade was the brigade that endured the most losses, with 18 casualties, in Afghanistan.[14]
Mali
In January 2013, 250 French paratroopers from the 11th Parachute Brigade jumped into Northern Mali to support an offensive to capture the city of Timbuktu.[15]
Present Brigade
Mission
The 11th Parachute Brigade is a light mobile brigade capable of projecting power around the world in an emergency, as a first response to a crisis.
Superior commands
The 11th Parachute Brigade is the only parachute brigade of the French Army and is under Ground Forces Command. However, the brigade does not comprise all the parachutes regiments of France, as the 1st Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment (1er RPIMa) and the 13th Parachute Dragoon Regiment (13e RDP) are attached to the French Army Special Forces Brigade, while the 2nd Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment (2e RPIMa)—stationed permanently in outre-mer, near Réunion island—is under the command of the Armed Forces Zones of the Indian Ocean (FAZSOI).
Order of battle
The 11th Parachute Brigade is composed primarily of infantry, with elements of artillery, light cavalry, and combat-engineer regiments. The brigade also includes a Commando Parachute Group (GCP), an elite operational unit belonging to the French Special Forces.
At the beginning of 2000, the brigade was based in southwestern France, except for the 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment (2e REP) stationed in Calvi, Corsica. The brigade is 8500 men, women, and legionnaires strong and consists of a central headquarters command and 8 operational regiments with the following composition:
- Central Command
- General Headquarters in Balma.
- 11th Parachute Command Transmission Company (11e CCTP) at Balma.
- Commando Parachute Group Teams.
- Combat Parachute Regiments
- 1er Régiment de Hussards Parachutistes (1er RHP) Parachute Hussar Regiment in Tarbes with ERC 90.
- 1er Régiment de Chasseurs Parachutistes (1er RCP) Parachute Chasseur Regiment in Pamiers.
- 2e Régiment Etranger de Parachutistes (2e REP) French Foreign Legion Parachute Regiment in Calvi.
- 3e Régiment de Parachutistes d'Infanterie de Marine (3e RPIMa) Marine Parachute Regiment in Carcassonne.
- 8e Régiment de Parachutistes d'Infanterie de Marine (8e RPIMa) Marine Parachute Regiment in Castres.
- Combat Parachute Support Regiments
- 1st Train Parachute Regiment, Parachute Supply Regiment in Toulouse
- 35e Régiment d'Artillerie Parachutiste (35e RAP) Parachute Artillery Regiment in Tarbes with TRF1 howitzers, CAESAR self-propelled howitzers and RTF1 mortars.
- 17e Régiment du Génie Parachutiste (17e RGP) Parachute Engineer Regiment in Montauban.
Equipment
Vehicles
- ERC-90 Sagaie
- Véhicule Blindé Léger Panhard (VBL)
- Véhicule de l'Avant Blindé (VAB)
- Airmobil Logistical Vehicle Auverland A3F (ALV)
- Small Protected Vehicle (SPV)
- All Terrain Vehicle Peugeot P4 (ATVP P4)
- Light Recon Support Vehicle (LRSV)
- TRM 2000 Truck (TRM)
- Vehicle Transport Logistique (VTL)
- Tracto-chargeur TC 910
- Mini benne TWAITES TND3
- Caterpillar D3 air-transportable
Armament
Artillery
Support Weapons
- 81 mm Mortar
- Anti-Tank Firing Missile Milan (Milan)
- Anti-Tank Firing Missile Eryx (Eryx)
Small Arms
- Anti-Tank 84 mm Rocket (AT4)
- FN Light Machine Gun (Minimi)
- 51 mm Grenade Launcher F1 Model (GLF1)
- 12.7mm High Caliber Precision (12.7 PGM II)
- 7.62 FRF2 Precision Rifle (FRF2)
- 5.56 Famas Assault Rifle F1 (FAMAS)
Traditions
Except for the Legionnaires of the 1e REG, 2e REG, 2e REP who wear a green beret, the French army metropolitan and marine paratroopers forming the 11th Parachute Brigade wear a red Beret.
The saint's day of Archangel Saint Michael, patron of French paratroopers, is celebrated on 29 September.
The prière du Para (Prayer of the Paratrooper) was written by André Zirnheld in 1938.
Insignia
-
Circled Winged Armed Dextrochere of French Army Metropolitan Paratroopers
-
Anchored Winged Armed Dextrochere of French Army Marine Infantry Paratroopers
-
Circled Winged Armed Dextrochere of Foreign Legion 2e REP.
With the paratrooper brevet of the French Army, the insignia of French paratroopers was created in 1946. The French Army insignia of metropolitan paratroopers consists of a closed "winged armed dextrochere", ("right winged arm") with a sword pointing upwards. The insignia makes reference to the patron saint of paratroopers and represents "the right Arm of Saint Michael", the Archangel, which, according to Liturgy,[dubious – discuss] is the "armed arm of God". This insignia is the symbol of righteous combat and fidelity to superiors and to the mission. The French Army Insignia of Marine Infantry Paratroopers is over a marine anchor.
-
Insignia of 2e Régiment Etranger de Parachutistes
-
Insignia of 1e Régiment de Chasseurs Parachutistes
-
Insignia of 1er Régiment de Hussards Parachutistes
-
Insignia of 1st Parachute Train Transport Regiment
-
Insignia of 17e Régiment du Génie Parachutiste
-
Insignia of 35e Régiment d'Artillerie Parachutiste
Brigade Commanders
11th Light Intervention Division Tenure (1961–1963) –
11th Division Tenure (1963–1969) |
11th Parachute Division Tenure (1971–1999)
|
11th Parachute Brigade Tenure (1999–present)
|
See also
- Chief of the Defence Staff of the Armed Forces (French: Chef d'État-Major des Armées, CEMA)
- Chief of Staff of the French Army (French: Chef d'État-Major de l'Armée de Terre, CEMAT)
- Chief of Staff of the French Air Force (French: Chef d'État-Major de l'Armée de l'Air, CEMAA)
- Chief of Staff of the French Navy (French: Chef d'État-Major de la Marine, CEMM)
- Direction générale de la Gendarmerie Nationale (French: Direction Générale de la Gendarmerie nationale (DGGN))
- French Special Operations Command (French: Commandement des Opérations Spéciales (COS))
- Franco-German Brigade
- Honneur et Fidélité
- List of French paratrooper units
Sources
- ^ Clayton, 'France, Soldiers, and Africa', Brassey's Defence Publishers, 1988, p.190
- ^ In Revue Uniformes no 278 (sept-oct 2011), page 30
- ^ History of French Paratroopers Histoire des parachutistes français, page 556
- ^ In Revue Uniformes no 278 (sept-oct 2011), page 30
- ^ in paratroopers, the honor to serve Les paras l'honneur de servir , page 151
- ^ History of French Paratroopers Histoire des parachutistes français, page 556
- ^ History of French Paratroopers Histoire des parachutistes français, page 557 and 559
- ^ History of French Paratroopers Histoire des parachutistes français, page 556
- ^ De Lespinois, Jérôme (2005). "Emploi de la force aérienne – Tchad 1969–1987" [Use of Air Power – Chad 1969-1987] (PDF). Penser les Ailes françaises (6): 70–72. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
- ^ [1] Article on French Ministry of Defense, title "L'opération "Léopard", journal collection "mémoire et citoyenneté", number 37, year 1978, page1
- ^ "La 11e brigade parachutiste de Toulouse prend le relais en Afghanistan" [The 11th parachute brigade of Toulouse takes over in Afghanistan]. La France à l'Otan. Site de la représentation permanente française auprès de l'Otan (in French).
- ^ Villard, Claire (7 May 2011). "200 soldats mobilisés pour l'Afghanistan" [200 Soldiers Mobilize for Afghanistan]. Grand Sud. Ladépêche.fr (in French). Retrieved 24 July 2018.
[...] part en mission pour une année entière. Le général toulousain prendra en charge l'état-major en Afghanistan baptisé « Task Force Lafayette » [...]
- ^ Vocation militaire: 200 soldats mobilisés pour l'Afghanistan
- ^ [2] In memoriam of 1st Class Florian Morillo; author, Jean-Marc Tanguy 19 juin 2011,Le mamouth
- ^ "French-led operation looks north after Timbuktu". france24.com/en. FRANCE 24. 29 January 2013. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
- ^ "Décés du général Lemaire". lunion.fr. Retrieved 2016-09-17.
External links
- French Ministry of Defense, French Armed Forces, Section French Army, Official Website of the 11th Parachute Division (in French) 11e BP official page
- History of the 1st Parachute Chasseur Regiment, 9th Parachute Chasseur Regiment, 14th Parachute Chasseur Regiment and 18th Parachute Chasseur Regiment
- Brigades of France
- Airborne units and formations of France
- Airborne infantry brigades
- Military units and formations established in 1961
- Military units and formations disestablished in 1963
- Military units and formations established in 1963
- Military units and formations disestablished in 1971
- Military units and formations established in 1971
- Military units and formations disestablished in 1999
- Military units and formations established in 1999
- 1961 establishments in France