Yleinen kansainvälinen harjoitustoiminta

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Kun tässä ehti pitkään elää ensin Suomen 2. tasavallan (YYA-Suomi) ja sitten 3. tasavallan (Nato-optio-Suomii) aikana, niin kyllä vaan on yhtä herkkua nämä 4. tasavallan Nato-Suomen kansainväliset harjoitukset isänmaan maaperällä ja kaikki muukin Nato-meininki. En tule kyllästymään tähän ikinä.
 

Swedish Home Guard Trains with U.S. Army Green Berets​

Soldiers from the Swedish Home Guard (Hemvärnet) and U.S. Army Green Berets assigned to 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) to enhance interoperability and readiness. The Home Guard is part of the Swedish Armed Forces and comprises nearly half of the Swedish Armed Forces' body of personnel. The Home Guard units are modern combat units with a main responsibility to protect, guard and monitor Swedish territory and also provide support to society in times of crisis. (U.S Army video by Sgt. Patrik Orcutt)


10th SFG(A) Trains With Swedish Home Guard​

June 27, 2023 Guest Unconventional Warfare 0
Medical Training - SF and Swedish Home Guard 2023

By Anthony Bryant.

KALIX, Sweden – A U.S. Army Special Forces team assigned to 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) acted as both Observer Coach Trainers and opposition forces for the Swedish Armed Forces Home Guard in Swedish Lapland from May 28 – June 2, 2023, to strengthen Special Operations Forces (SOF) capabilities and enhance partner force readiness.

“My role at the beginning of the exercise was to work with, observe and offer any help I could with company-level training,” said a Special Forces medical sergeant with 1st Battalion, 10th SFG (A). “First, we established a baseline of the capabilities of our partner force …And then we’d offer ways we’d tweak things or ways to make their (tactics, techniques and procedures) a bit more compatible with ours so that we could work together.”

Midway through the exercise, U.S. and Swedish Forces shifted from shooting ranges and combat drills to the scenario where Green Berets trained a simulated guerilla force composed of soldiers from a sister battalion to take on the Home Guard.

“The aircraft we were flying in went down and we landed somewhere we didn’t plan to and made a link-up with our partner force,” said the medical sergeant. “We eventually met up with the rest of our team, minus one [teammate]. We then conducted a hasty personnel recovery mission based on some limited intelligence we got in the scenario.”

Over the next few days, the Special Forces team conducted mission planning alongside their partner force to perform actions that would degrade, disrupt or destroy Home Guard capabilities.

“The scenario gave us time to almost completely rehearse what we’d be doing in irregular warfare – conducting a link-up with a force we didn’t know too much about; working through assessments, hitting a few targets to see what their capabilities are, what we have to work with and what direction we need to go,” said the Special Forces team sergeant. “What it really did was give us the time over five days to work through a very surface-level unconventional warfare campaign.”

The Department of Defense defines unconventional warfare as activities conducted to enable a resistance movement or insurgency to coerce, disrupt, or overthrow a government or occupying power by operating through or with an underground, auxiliary, and guerrilla force in a denied area.

“There was one mission where we conducted a recon on one of the Home Guard positions,” said the medical sergeant. “We took the opportunity to discuss procedures for conducting that recon, and we walked through how we’d do it…to adapt to what the threat was.”

Unconventional warfare is a thinking man’s game, and you will be thrown into scenarios where you have to make quick decisions that have strategic outcomes, the team sergeant said. The team took full advantage of the opportunity to train.

**********​

This story by Staff Sgt. Anthony Bryant was first published by the U.S. Army on June 22, 2023. DoD content is in the public domain.

Top photo: A U.S. Army Special Forces medical sergeant assigned to 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) instructs Soldiers with the Swedish Armed Forces Home Guard on combat tourniquet application in Kalix, Sweden, May 28, 2023. Photo by Staff Sgt. Anthony Bryant.
 

US Green Berets are looking to troops from NATO's newest member as 'mentors' for harsh winter combat​

One of the biggest shifts in European security prompted by the war in Ukraine has been Sweden's and Finland's decision to abandon non-alignment and apply to NATO.

After intense diplomacy, Finland officially joined the alliance in April, becoming NATO's 31st member. Sweden's application is pending, but officials say it will join soon.

Adding Finland doubled NATO's border with Russia to about 1,600 miles overnight, moving alliance territory much closer to some of Russia's most sensitive military outposts.

While much smaller than its eastern neighbor, Finland has a well-equipped military of about 30,000 troops, though in wartime it can call up 250,000 reservists.

Where the Finns truly excel is in winter warfare, and even the US special-operations community is taking lessons from Finnish commandos.

The Utti Jaeger Regiment​

Finland Utti Jaeger Regiment

Utti Jaeger Regiment soldiers during training in May 2019.US Marine Corps/Lance Cpl. Scott Jenkins
Among the Finnish military's small professional force, the Utti Jaeger Regiment stands out. Its nearly 700 professional and conscript troops are divided into a headquarters unit and three components.

The Special Jaeger Battalion focuses on special reconnaissance, direct action, and unconventional-warfare missions. The battalion comprises a company of paratroopers that is largely composed of conscripts and a special Jaeger company of professional troops.

The regiment also has a helicopter battalion that supports Finland's special operators. The battalion operates 20 NH90 medium transport helicopters and seven MD500 light transport helicopters.

Finally, the regiment's support battalion provides logistical support to Finland's special operators. It also trains Finnish conscripts to perform support tasks.

The Utti Jaeger Regiment takes part in about 40 "executive assistance tasks," which likely includes training and real-world missions, each year. But where the Utti Jaeger Regiment really shines is in winter warfare.

Arctic operations​

Army Green Berets Finland Utti Jaeger Regiment

US Green Berets during training with Finnish special-operations forces in Lapland on March 8.US Army/Staff Sgt. Anthony Bryant
In March, US Army Special Forces soldiers trained with the Utti Jaeger Regiment on winter operations in Lapland, Finland's northernmost region.

Green Berets are no strangers to harsh conditions. The Special Operations Winter Mountain Operator Course, held twice a year at Fort Carson in Colorado, tests the ability of US special-operations troops to fight at high altitude and in severe weather. Green Berets also train regularly in Alaskaalongside other elite US military units.

But Finnish forces live in those conditions, and the Special Forces soldiers looked up to them because of it.

The Green Berets saw the Utti Jaeger Regiment "as mentors because they operate in this environment, they live here; they're very good at winter warfare, so we look to them on how to do things the right way," an assistant detachment commander with 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) said in a press release.

Army Green Berets Finland Utti Jaeger Regiment

US Green Berets and Utti Jaeger Regiment troops at a helicopter landing zone in Lapland on March 12.US Army/Staff Sgt. Anthony Bryant
Winter warfare is not just about patrolling skills, marksmanship, or small-unit tactics. In such an unforgiving environment, troops must work to stay alive. With a narrow margin for error — exposing skin for just a few minutes can be harmful or even deadly — small mistakes can lead to disaster.

"That one mistake you made with your socks or your glove liners on day one is now making you combat ineffective come day five," the assistant detachment commander said in the release.

The US commandos came to the exercise directly after a five-week winter-warfare course at the Swedish Subarctic Warfare Center and applied skills learned there to the training with the Finns.

US and Finnish soldiers "linked up and focused on interoperability" and synchronization of standard operating procedures, the assistant detachment commander said. "The exercise focused on deep strike operations, or neutralizing a target deep behind the front line."

The 10th Special Forces Group's area of operations is Europe, and Green Berets from the unit work closely with their European counterparts. Indeed, the 10th Special Forces Group has led much of the US's training and advising for Ukrainian special-operations forces.

Air Force CV-22B Osprey Finland NH90 helicopter Utti Jaeger Regiment

US Air Force CV-22B Ospreys and a NH90 helicopter from the Utti Jaeger Regiment Helicopter Battalion at a base in Finland on March 30.US Air Force/Tech. Sgt. Izabella Workman
Although Finland just joined NATO, its special-operations forces have worked closely with the alliance for some time, building interoperability that will allow the Utti Jaeger Regiment to get up to NATO standards in almost no time.

"Working with US forces, I'm really (impressed) with how we went straight from shaking hands to conducting missions in a very short amount of time, which tells a lot about our forces being interoperable and well-suited for combined missions together," a Finnish special-forces soldier assigned to the Special Jaeger Battalion said in the release.

The Green Beret training reflects the US Army's increasing focus on Arctic warfare. In 2021, the Army released a strategy document describing how it planned to defend US national security interests in the region. As a part of that, the Army has solicited help from allies and partners to increase its Arctic warfare capabilities.

Although the US special-operations community has credible Arctic warfare skills and has been honing them, the Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian, and Danish militaries have experts with valuable knowledge and experience.

The Utti Jaeger Regiment's proficiency in winter warfare and its ability to train US and NATO special operators will only increase the alliance's ability to deter and respond to threats.

Stavros Atlamazoglou is a defense journalist specializing in special operations, a Hellenic Army veteran (national service with the 575th Marine Battalion and Army HQ), and a Johns Hopkins University graduate. He is working toward a master's degree in strategy and cybersecurity at Johns Hopkins' School of Advanced International Studies.
 
No nyt NATO:n koneet pudottavat jo pommeja Suomeen!!!!! Vain Varsovan liitto ja YYA-sopimus voivat meidät enää pelastaa!

No, oikeasti ne opettelevat hajautettua tukikohtatoimintaa, kun Suomessa ei se kylmä sota koskaan päättynyt kuten muualla.


https://www.lentoposti.fi/uutiset/j...n_luvassa_tukea_my_s_maavoimien_harjoitukseen

RAF_EF_Rovaniemi_3

Ison-Britannian kuninkaallisten ilmavoimien RAF:n Typhoon -hävittäjät ja A400M Atlas -kuljetuskone saapuvat vierailulle Pirkkalaan. Suomen ilmavoimat lentää RAF:n hävittäjien kanssa yhteiskierroksia 24.–27. heinäkuuta järjestettävässä Joutsen Strike -harjoituksessa. Vierailun aikana lentotoiminnalla tuetaan myös maavoimien harjoitusta.

Joutsen Strike -harjoituksen tavoitteena on kehittää Suomen ja Ison-Britannian ilmavoimien yhteistoimintakykyä ja tukikohtatoimintoja. Lisäksi harjoituksen lentotoiminta tukee Selänpään ja Pahkajärven alueella käynnissä olevaa Maavoimien harjoitusta.

Pahkajärven alueella jo aiemmin käynnistyneessä harjoituksessa siirrytään ampumavaiheesta taisteluharjoitusvaiheeseen 24. heinäkuuta. Maavoimien harjoitus päättyy Joutsen Striken kanssa samaan aikaan 27. heinäkuuta.

Maavoimien harjoituksen pääaiheina ovat johtajan toimeenpanokyky vaihtuvissa tilanteissa, yhteistoiminnan syventäminen eri aselajien välillä taistelukentällä sekä johtajan harjaantuminen koulutushaaran mukaisen joukon puolustus-, hyökkäys- ja tukemisammunnoissa.
Pirkkalan tukikohtaan tukeutuu Ison-Britannian kuninkaallisten ilmavoimien Eurofighter Typhoon -hävittäjiä sekä A400-kuljetuskone.
Harjoituksesta aiheutuu lentomelua Pirkkalan tukikohdan ja Pahkajärven ampuma-alueen välisellä alueella. Harjoitus toteutetaan pääasiassa Puolustusvoimien palkatun henkilökunnan voimin.

Harjoitus on osa puolustusministeriön hyväksymää Puolustusvoimien vuoden 2023 kansainvälistä koulutus- ja harjoitustoimintaa. MH
 
Viimeksi muokattu:
Britannian asevoimien majuri Peter Daniell kuvailee Northern Forest -harjoitusta ”epätavalliseksi” ja ”äärimmäisen haastavaksi”.

– Se oli poikkeuksellinen koulutusmahdollisuus A-komppanialle. On harvinaista ylellisyyttä harjoitella panssaroiduilla ajoneuvoilla tällaisessa laajassa ja monimutkaisessa maastossa, joka tarjoaa edun jalkaväelle.

Majuri Daniell kertoo komppaniansa saaneen harjoituksessa merkittäviä oppeja.

– Opimme suomalaisilta, kuinka pienet ja hajautetut ryhmät toimivat ja kuinka samalla vältetään omien joukkojen tulitusta. Ruotsalaisilta opimme itsevarmuutta painaa rynnäkköpanssarivaunuillamme soisten ja kivisten metsien läpi saavuttaaksemme aggressiivisia voittoja.
 
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