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Army Ranger Wing

Coordinates: 53°08′50.8″N 6°49′47.4″W / 53.147444°N 6.829833°W / 53.147444; -6.829833
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Irish Army Ranger Wing
Template:Lang-ga

Shoulder flash and insignia of the Army Ranger Wing
Active16 March 1980; 44 years ago (1980-03-16) – present[1]
Country Ireland
BranchArmy
TypeSpecial forces
RoleSpecial operations
Counter-terrorism
Special reconnaissance
Hostage rescue
Close protection of VIPs
SizeClassified
~ 150 operators[2][3]
Part of Defence Forces
Garrison/HQCurragh Camp, County Kildare[4]
Nickname(s)"Fiannóglaigh/Fianóglach"[5]
"Devils of Kildare"[6]
Motto(s)Glaine ár gcroí, Neart ár ngéag, Agus beart de réir ár mbriathar[7]
("The purity of our hearts, the strength of our limbs and the commitment to our promise")[7]
ColorsBottle green (beret)[8]
EngagementsUNOSOM II
INTERFET
UNPROFOR
UNFICYP
UNIFIL
MINURSO
UNMIL
MINURCAT
Insignia
Green Beret
AbbreviationARW

The Army Ranger Wing (ARW) (Template:Lang-ga, "SFA") is the elite special operations force of the Irish Defence Forces, the military of Ireland. A branch of the Irish Army, it also recruits personnel from the Naval Service and Air Corps. It serves at the behest of the Defence Forces and Government of Ireland, operating overseas and internally, and reports directly to the Chief of Staff. The ARW was officially established in 1980. The unit is based in the Curragh Camp, County Kildare,[7] and is estimated to have a manpower of 150 operators.[2][3]

Army Ranger Wing personnel have served abroad in a number of international peacekeeping missions, including in Somalia, East Timor, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Cyprus, Lebanon, Western Sahara, Liberia, and Chad. The ARW trains with a number of similar special forces units in the western world, mainly in Europe and North America.[9] The ARW is also tasked with domestic duties, such as counter-terrorism, intelligence gathering, hostage rescue and close protection. The Army Rangers work with the Directorate of Military Intelligence, the national intelligence service, and trains with the specialist firearms and tactics service of the Garda Síochána (national police), known as the Emergency Response Unit (ERU).[4]

Roles

Irish Army Ranger Wing tactical team practice a maritime counter-terrorism (CT) operation
ARW tactical team carrying out a mock urban raid

The Irish Army Ranger Wing has a number of responsibilities, both foreign and domestic, within the Defence Forces and externally to the Irish government and her agencies. Its roles are divided between conventional military and unconventional warfare ("Green Role") and specialist Aid to the Civil Power (ATCP) duties ("Black Role");[10]

Military tasks (Green Role)

Offensive operations behind enemy lines

Defensive operations

Aid to the civil power tasks (Black Role)

History

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, a number of Irish Defence Forces personnel attended the United States Army Ranger School in Fort Benning, Georgia.[11] On their return, these personnel organised similar courses with the goal of bringing the standards of training throughout the Defence Forces into line with accepted international standards, aspiring to reach the bar set by NATO forces. The first course was conducted at the Military College in the Curragh Camp, County Kildare in 1969. Students on these courses were selected from among all ranks and units of the Army, Naval Service and Air Corps, which covered physical endurance, marksmanship, individual military skills and small unit tactics.[4][12] Among its founding officers was later-to-be Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Dermot Earley.[13]

Formalising these standards and the creation of the Army Ranger Wing resulted from the increase in international terrorism in the 1970s and early 1980s,[14] such as the 1972 Munich massacre in Germany (then West Germany) and a spate of hostage-takings by the Provisional IRA at home.[15][16] The increased skills and endurance training of "Ranger" personnel provided the basis for the creation of a new specialist unit to counter these threats, as well as to provide better operational support to deployed Irish troops globally.[14] The Army Ranger Wing (ARW) was formally established, in accordance with the Defence Act, by Government order on 16 March 1980.[1][17] The first official mission of the ARW was to be deployed in Somalia (see UNOSOM II), 1993, under the umbrella of the United Nations (UN).[3]

Name and motto

The unit's official name is Sciathán Fiannóglaigh an Airm,[18] which is translated from the Irish language into English as "Army Ranger Wing". Fiannóglaigh (representing "Rangers") is an amalgamation of two words. Fiann is closest to the English word "warrior", and refers to the ancient band of warriors known as Na Fianna in Irish mythology. Óglaigh literally means "young soldiers", and is often translated as '"volunteers". Use in this context refers to the name of the Defence Forces in Irish: Óglaigh na hÉireann ("Irish Volunteers").[7] Na Fianna were purportedly expert warriors, so the addition of the word Fiann before Óglaigh denotes an elite element to the unit.[19] The shoulder flash insignia of the unit uses Fianóglach, which is the singular version of the word Fiannóglaigh.

The motto of the Army Ranger Wing is taken from an old Fianna poem, in Irish it is: "Glaine ár gcroí, Neart ár ngéag, Agus beart de réir ár mbriathar", which translates as: "The purity of our hearts, the strength of our limbs and the commitment to our promise" in English.[7]

Command, control and communications

The Officer Commanding the Army Ranger Wing is responsible for the administrative, disciplinary and operational control of the unit, and is in turn directly under the command of the Chief of Staff at Defence Forces Headquarters and the Minister for Defence at the Department of Defence.[20] Estimates variously put the strength of the wing at "well over a hundred"[3] or between 150 to 200[2] members. The identity of the members in the unit is classified by law.[21] The Army Ranger Wing is headquartered at the Defence Forces Training Centre (DFTC) in the Curragh Camp, and members must live within a defined radius. The unit also has a presence at McKee Barracks, Dublin.[22] Training is carried out nationwide at a number of Department of Defence properties, including Lynch Camp in Kilworth, County Cork.[23]

The ARW is on immediate call 24/7, 365 days a year for operations throughout the state and abroad, and may be deployed anywhere on land in the Republic of Ireland within two hours[24] using Air Corps aircraft and up to 200 miles out to sea via the Naval Service vessels and/or Air Corps aircraft within a matter of hours. In the event of a major terrorist, hijacking or hostage incident, the ARW may be called to aid the Garda ERU, and in the past they have been put on standby to assist the Irish Prison Service during major prison riots. The ARW have also provided security at Ireland's maximum-security Portlaoise Prison. The wing has on occasion been tasked for search and rescue (SAR) operations, as the ARW have trained Arctic survival specialists.[25]

Besides sanctioned international military missions, the unit may be deployed overseas to protect Irish diplomatic missions and diplomats (particularly in times of war or civil unrest in host countries),[26] to provide close protection to members of the Irish government travelling overseas,[27][28] to rescue kidnapped Irish citizens[29][30] or to conduct intelligence operations. The unit also trains foreign military personnel.[20]

The ARW is equipped with SINCGAR ITT, Harris and Racal communications equipment, which have an inbuilt encryption and frequency-hopping systems. It is also equipped with satellite communications, through the ARW C3 (Command, Control & Communications) function and in cooperation with the Communications and Information Services Corps (CIS). This means ARW teams can communicate with their GHQ from anywhere in the world. The Army Ranger Wing Intelligence Section has the ability to remotely intercept electronic and telephonic communications, working with Military Intelligence and Army CIS.[20][31]

Training and recruitment

A sniper team from the Army Ranger Wing
An Army Ranger Wing CT fast-rope intervention exercise on the Irish Sea

The Irish ARW trains and operates with other military and law enforcement special operations forces worldwide, including;

In 2015, the Irish Defence Forces signed agreements with their British counterparts to deepen joint special forces peacekeeping co-operation,[38] extending from previous deployments with British special forces in a number of combat zones.[39] Exchanges of personnel between international units occur regularly.[8]

Selection and training for the Army Ranger Wing lasts 36 weeks,[40] where skills such as special reconnaissance, combat diving and parachuting are taught. Selection takes place annually, usually beginning in October, with a preliminary 3 week course.[40] Candidates must be serving members of the Permanent Defence Forces (PDF),[40] from any of the three branches (Army, Air Corps or Naval Service).[41] They are not subject to any age limit and there is no rank in the selection process.[42] Selection is open to females, although none have passed the initial training course.[3][43]

The preliminary 3 week selection course is organised into a number of distinct phases. In the first phase, instructors demonstrate the basic requirements to become a Ranger, and candidates must pass a number of initial physical tests, including; water confidence, assault courses, individual navigation tests, as well as a 10 km combat run.[42] In the second phase, candidates are taught special forces tactics such as surveillance, reconnaissance, combat intelligence gathering, search tactics, and ambush organisation, before being tested on these.[40] The course culminates in a 60 km group march which must be completed in a set time. During selection, potential recruits get an average of just 4 or 5 hours of sleep within a 24‑hour period. If a candidate fails more than 3 out of 9 basic tests they are returned to their home unit.[42] A selection course may only be attempted three times by any candidate in their career.[42]

In all, candidates must complete assessment in the following areas;[36]

  • Abseiling – Assesses a student's confidence when working at height.
  • Bridge jump – Tests confidence in water.
  • River crossing – Evaluates ability to work in a team.
  • Claustrophobia – Tests a student's ability to work with their equipment in confined spaces.
  • Gym tests – Assesses muscular endurance and strength while performing a set number of exercises.
  • Combat run – Tests cardiovascular endurance over a set distance (10 km) in a time of one hour
  • Mountain march – Tests endurance over a set uphill march, while carrying a medium load.
  • Hill circuit – Assesses stamina and strength over a set cross country course, while carrying a light load.
  • Forced march "cross country" – Assesses stamina and strength over a set cross country course and time while carrying a medium load of 20 kg, marching 25 km which must be finished within 6 ½ hours.
  • Forced march "road" – A group test to assess the student's tolerance of pressure over a set course and time, while carrying a medium load, the distance is between 35 and 45 km (march speed is 3 km/hr).
  • Route march – A group test to assess overall stamina, endurance and strength during a forced march over the mountains while carrying a medium load.

Of the candidates that start the annual Ranger Wing selection course (average is 40 to 80 soldiers), 85% do not make it past the first 4 weeks.[42] Since its inception, 11,000 soldiers have attempted selection, but only 400 have completed training (as of 2012).[44] All candidates who successfully complete the "Ranger Course" are presented with the Fianóglach shoulder flash.[42]

If a student passes selection at this stage, they are sent on a further six-month special forces skills course. This course includes survival training, long-range penetration, mountaineering, counter-terrorism, urban warfare, CBRNe defence, advanced combat shooting (handling of all weapons used by the ARW), sharpshooting, close quarters combat, unarmed combat, riot control, close protection, advanced driving, advanced navigation, advanced first aid (taught by the Defence Forces Medical School), explosives intervention (taught by the Army Ordnance Corps), boat handling, combat diving, (taught by the Naval Service Diving Section/NSDS),[45] fast-roping and skydiving (taught by Air Corps crews).[42] Approximately 85% of Ranger training is dedicated to counter-terrorism.[34] The ARW and ERU train specifically for marauding terrorist firearms/explosive attacks.[46][47] Upon passing this selection course and a further probationary period, they then earn the right to wear the highly prestigious green beret and are officially recruited into the ARW.[36] On average, a member of the ARW spends between 5 and 10 years serving with the unit. The average age of an ARW member is above 30 years old.

There are a number of platoons within the Ranger Wing, comprising five assault teams each, specialising in areas such as urban combat, explosives demolition, scuba diving and parachuting. Support platoons provide expertise in bomb disposal, medical treatment, maritime and aviation operations. Parachutists are qualified after 5 jumps (day and night, over land and sea), and must jump at least 5 times a year to retain their "wings". Team members also undergo precision firing, bus/train/ferry/oil platform and aircraft assault training (anti-hijack) as well as spying and observation techniques. The ARW has its own purpose built tactical training facilities, including shooting ranges, kill houses and various urban and rural settings. The main facility is known as "Tac Town", based in the Curragh. Other ranges are located in County Wicklow. These facilities are also made available to the ERU.[48]

ARW SOFQ course

In 2016, the Army Ranger Wing significantly revised its selection and assessment procedures for prospective unit members. The two ARW Selection & Basic Skills courses have been combined and replaced by a new single course. The course is named the ARW Special Operations Force Qualification Course (SOFQ). The SOFQ is aimed at officers, NCOs and soldiers of all ranks and branches of the Permanent Defence Forces who already possess high levels of physical fitness, personal motivation, navigation skills and an aspiration to serve in the ARW.

The revised SOFQ syllabus is 10 months (40 weeks) long. It is divided into 5 distinct modules;

  1. Assessment & Evaluation
  2. Skills & Leadership
  3. SOF Terrorist Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (TTPs)
  4. Counter-Terrorism TTPs
  5. Continuation training

Module 1 assesses a candidate's level of physical fitness, motivation and suitability to progress on towards further modules (2-5) of the SOFQ course. Candidates must pass a series of fitness assessments, map reading and individual navigation assessments, claustrophobia, water confidence, and psychometric testing. The next phase of Module 1 includes further individual navigation exercises with set weights over unknown distances and completion times, culminating in a 60 km cross-country march carrying a 30 kg (65 lb) combat load.

Officer and more senior NCO candidates are subjected to separate, rigorous scrutiny of their planning and decision-making skills to determine the suitability of achieving a command appointment in the ARW.

Modules 2 to 4 consist of assessment and training in SOF weapons and marksmanship, live-fire tactical training, SOF conventional and CT TTPs, combat water survival, Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Extraction (SERE), communications and medical training. Upon successful completion of Module 3, candidates are awarded the Fianóglach shoulder tab and are provisionally assigned the role of a SOF assault team operator in the unit. Successful completion of Module 4 results in the awarding of the distinctive ARW green beret.

Module 5 is the conclusion of the SOFQ course, and candidates are posted to an operational ARW task unit as an assault team operator. Module 5 comprises training in advanced combat medical skills, military freefall, combat diving and boat handling, close protection and handling of advanced weapons.[49] 3 Star Privates (and equivalents) who are successful in completing the ARW SOFQ course pass out at the rank of Corporal, other ranks retain their rank.

Notable missions

Personnel from the Army Ranger Wing have seen active service in a number of peacekeeping missions around the world with the United Nations, European Union (EU) and Partnership for Peace (PfP) of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (the Republic of Ireland is not a full member of NATO, due to its policy of military neutrality).

Somalia

The ARW's first official mission overseas was in Somalia in 1993,[3] as part of UNOSOM II,[50] where a number of teams joined the United States led peacekeeping coalition tasked with imposing a ceasefire in the Baidoa region.[51] Over 100 Irish troops took part in the mission, during which the ARW wore US military uniforms to blend in with American troops.[52] The ARW mission in Somalia ended without loss of life to the unit.

East Timor

Army Ranger Wing commandos on a reconnaissance mission in East Timor

In 1999, Dáil Éireann (Irish parliament) voted to send the ARW to serve with the International Force for East Timor (INTERFET).[53] Mandated under a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolution, INTERFET was a peacekeeping force deployed to restore security in the region, support and protect the UN Mission in East Timor, and to facilitate humanitarian assistance operations. The detachment of 40 ARW personnel was involved in peacekeeping duties with Canadian and New Zealand special forces near the West Timor border. There were no reported ARW casualties in East Timor, with Ireland's contribution to the mission ending in May 2004.[53][54]

Liberia

The ARW was deployed in Liberia in the aftermath of the Second Liberian Civil War as part of a peacekeeping contingent of more than 400 troops from the Irish Army, in turn part of the mixed Irish-Swedish Force Reserve Battalion of the United Nations mission in the country, UNMIL (2003).

One of their most successful missions during this deployment was the rescue of a large group of civilians captured by gunmen from renegade Liberian forces.[55] Acting on intelligence, a team of twenty heavily-armed Army Rangers were dropped via helicopters at the town of "Gbapa".[55] To avoid casualties among the hostages, the Ranger Wing implemented a policy of less-lethal intervention and, after surrounding a 40-foot container holding 35 hostages, rescued the innocent civilians and captured the rebel forces, including their commander.[55][56] The incident, which resulted in no Irish casualties, drew praise from the international community and boosted the reputation of Irish special forces worldwide.[57]

One member of the ARW, Sergeant Derec Mooney (33) of Dublin, was killed when his vehicle was involved in a motor vehicle accident during a transport convoy.[58]

Chad

File:ARW add 2.jpg
Irish ARW special reconnaissance (SR) team in Chad in 2008

An ARW force of more than 50 was deployed in 2008 to Abéché, Chad[3][59] as part of the peacekeeping European Union Force Chad/CAR mission. The ARW arrived in February 2008 and successfully completed reconnaissance missions to select a mission base for the Irish Defence Force and Dutch deployment (later named "Camp Ciara"). The ARW advance team also identified threats on the ground to EU forces, and secured areas of the Chad-Darfur border.[60]

Other overseas missions

In October 2005, members of the Army Ranger Wing and Arabic-speaking intelligence officers from Military Intelligence were deployed to Baghdad, Iraq,[30][61] following the abduction of Irish journalist Rory Carroll by al-Qaeda militants.[62] Following negotiations with Irish, British and American governments, Rory Carroll was released unharmed days later and returned safely to Ireland.[63]

From 2006 to 2014, it has been reported that operatives from the ARW Intelligence Section and Military Intelligence Directorate were on the ground in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Sudan, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Kosovo and Bosnia-Herzegovina as part of various international missions.[64]

As of 2015, members of the Army Ranger Wing were serving missions on three continents, including training foreign forces in Africa and the Balkans, protection duties in Lebanon for the United Nations mission and security and intelligence operations on the Israeli-Syrian border (Golan Heights).[3] It has been reported that the ARW could deploy 30 men in the Gulf of Aden, subject to Government, Dáil and UN approval ("triple-lock"), to protect international shipping lanes against Somali pirates as part of the EU's Operation Atalanta.[65]

Reported domestic missions

In November 1987, the Army Ranger Wing was tasked with setting up a checkpoint in Urlingford, County Kilkenny to assist Gardaí in catching suspects linked to the kidnapping of a dentist and his family by the IRA, in an ordeal during which the dentist had two of his fingers cut off by the gang and a Garda officer suffered serious gunshot wounds. Acting on information, Gardaí were expecting a green BMW car with two of the gangs suspects. As the car approached, snipers from the Army Ranger Wing opened fire more than a dozen times killing one suspect and seriously injuring another. The surviving IRA terrorist had been linked to 26 murders and was jailed for 40 years by the Special Criminal Court.[66]

In January 1997, two teams of 12 from the Ranger Wing were sent to Mountjoy Prison in central Dublin where three prisoners armed with knives had taken two prison officers hostage and barricaded themselves inside the Medical Unit where they were threatening to kill the prison officers. The ARW took up positions ready to blow down the steel door to the unit and eliminate the threat posed by the hostage-takers. The siege ended within a few hours of the ARW being called in, after the hostage takers were made aware of their presence during negotiations and surrendered.[67]

In May 2011, the unit had a major role in protecting Queen Elizabeth II on her state visit to Ireland,[68] where "viable" assassination attempts by dissident republican terrorists were prevented.[69][70] The ARW had airborne sniper teams in three AgustaWestland AW139 helicopters, counter assault teams in the motorcade and a number of ground teams, including 20 close protection officers.[68]

Also in May 2011, President of the United States Barack Obama received protection from the ARW on his visit to Ireland just days after the visit of the Queen.[68][71] The two visits were the largest civil security operations ever undertaken in the Republic of Ireland,[72][73] both ultimately successful.

From January to July 2013, the wing formed part of the security apparatus for the Presidency of the Council of the European Union, held by Ireland for six months, which included supplying sniper and spotter teams. Also in June 2013, they helped secure the Republic of Ireland–United Kingdom border on land and at sea as part of the security operation for the 39th G8 summit in Northern Ireland.[74]

Casualties

Three members of the Irish Army Ranger Wing are known to have died while serving in the unit since its foundation in 1980, one of them overseas.[75] Sergeant Derek Mooney, aged 33, of Blackrock, Dublin, died after the Land Rover Defender he was driving in a convoy overturned due to poor road conditions, 40 km south of Monrovia, Liberia on 27 November 2003. Another death is believed to have occurred as a result of an accident at an ARW firing range facility.[citation needed] No other losses have been publicly disclosed.[76]

Equipment

Weapons

In addition to standard weapons of the Irish Defence Forces, weapons used by the ARW include;

Personal weapons

Name Origin Type Caliber Photo Notes
Pistols
SIG Sauer P226  Germany
 Switzerland
Semi-automatic pistol 9×19mm Parabellum [77]
SIG Sauer P228  Germany
 Switzerland
Semi-automatic pistol 9×19mm Parabellum [77]
Heckler & Koch USP  Germany Semi-automatic pistol 9×19mm Parabellum Suppressed[78]
Submachine guns
Heckler & Koch MP5  Germany Submachine gun 9×19mm Parabellum Including MP5A3,[79] MP5SD6,[77] MP5F and MP5K variants[77] (Suppressed)
FN P90  Belgium Personal defense weapon FN 5.7×28mm [80][81]
Combat shotguns
Benelli M3T (Tactical)  Italy Semi-automatic shotgun 12 gauge [36]
Benelli M4 Super 90  Italy Semi-automatic shotgun 12 gauge [36]
Franchi SPAS-12  Italy Combat shotgun 12 gauge File:SPAS-12 stock folded.jpg [36]
Remington Model 870  United States Pump action 12 gauge [79]
Assault rifles/Carbines
Heckler & Koch HK416  Germany Assault rifle 5.56×45mm NATO Suppressed[82]
Heckler & Koch HK33  Germany Assault rifle 5.56×45mm NATO [83]
Heckler & Koch HK53  Germany Assault rifle 5.56×45mm NATO [83]
Steyr AUG A2  Austria Bullpup assault rifle 5.56×45mm NATO [77]
Steyr AUG A3  Austria Bullpup assault rifle 5.56×45mm NATO [77]
Sniper rifles
Heckler & Koch HK417  Germany Battle rifle 7.62×51mm NATO Suppressed[82]
Steyr SSG 69  Austria Bolt action sniper rifle 7.62×51mm NATO [83]
Accuracy International Arctic Warfare  United Kingdom Bolt action sniper rifle 7.62×51mm NATO Including L115 (.338), L96A1 .308, AW50 anti-materiel variants[84][84]
Light machine guns
FN Minimi  Belgium Light machine gun 5.56×45mm NATO [77]

Support weapons

File:ARW maritime ct 3.jpg
ARW seaborne intervention team on the Irish Sea
File:ARW airborne ops 1.jpg
Irish Army Ranger HALO parachutist

Vehicle-mounted weapons

Specialised equipment

Terrain vehicles

Watercraft

Parachuting

See also

References

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53°08′50.8″N 6°49′47.4″W / 53.147444°N 6.829833°W / 53.147444; -6.829833