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    Paratroopers Brigade
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    35th Paratroopers Brigade
    Paratroopers Brigade Insignia
    Active
    1955 – present
    Country
    Israel
    Branch
    Ground Forces
    Type
    Paratrooper
    Role
    Airborne infantry
    Special reconnaissance
    Size
    4 Battalions
    Part of
    98th Paratroopers Division
    (Reserve)
    ,
    Infantry Corps
    Motto(s)
    "Initiate, Lead, Make an Example and Win";
    "After me, to the paratroopers!"
    Colors
    Maroon beret
    , Red & White Flag
    March
    "Kol Hazman Tzanchan" (Always a paratrooper)
    Mascot(s)
    Winged Snake (Shfifon)
    Engagements
    Suez War
    (
    Mitla Pass
    )
    Six-Day War
    War of Attrition
    Operation Rhodes
    Operation Entebbe
    Second Intifada
    Second Lebanon War
    Operation Cast Lead
    Operation Brother's Keeper
    Operation Protective Edge
    Commanders
    Current
    commander
    Colonel
    Yaki Dolef
    Notable
    commanders
    Ariel Sharon
    ,
    Rafael Eitan
    ,
    Moshe Ya'alon
    The
    35th Brigade
    (
    Hebrew
    :
    חֲטִיבַת הַצַּנְחָנִים
    ‎,
    Hativat HaTzanhanim
    ), also known as the
    Paratroopers Brigade
    , is an
    infantry
    brigade
    unit of
    paratroopers
    within the
    Israel Defense Forces
    (IDF), and forms a major part of the
    Infantry Corps
    . It has a history of carrying out
    special forces
    -style missions dating back to the 1950s.
    Paratrooper Brigade soldiers wear maroon berets with the infantry pin and
    reddish-brown
    boots. Distinct from all other soldiers of the IDF, Paratroopers wear a tunic and belt over the shirt.
    The
    IDF
    has four reservist paratrooper brigades (
    55th
    , 226th, 551st and 646th) at any given time, consisting of personnel who served their mandatory time in the brigade, and who are mostly relatively recently discharged, aside from officers.
    History
    [
    edit
    ]
    Paratrooper jump over southern Israel
    In 1949
    Chaim Laskov
    asked
    Machalnik
    Captain
    Tom Derek Bowden
    to create a paratroop school. He did so, writing a training manual with the help of his Hebrew-speaking secretary Eva Heilbronner and training soldiers with British Army surplus equipment. Bowden returned to England in 1950.
    [1]
    [2]
    [3]
    The brigade was created in the mid-1950s when the commando
    Unit 101
    was merged with the 890th Battalion (the IDF's Airborne Commando unit) in order to form an elite infantry brigade. The new unit was equipped with the
    IMI
    Uzi submachine gun
    as their primary weapon as it provided light and small automatic fire, essential properties for
    recon
    units and
    commandos
    .
    [4]
    The goals in creating the Paratroopers Brigade were:
    To have an elite leading force.
    To innovate and improve fighting skills within other units.
    To raise the next generation of military commanders and officers.
    The first commander of the Paratroopers Brigade was
    Ariel Sharon
    .
    The Paratroopers Brigade has had only one operational combat
    parachute
    drop, during the
    1956 Sinai War
    . In the
    Six-Day War
    (1967) reservists from this unit, formed into the
    55th Paratroopers Brigade
    , took part in the capture of
    Jerusalem
    , along with the
    Jerusalem Brigade
    ,
    Harel Brigade
    and armored support. The 55th Brigade paratroopers were the ones to capture the
    Western Wall
    and the
    Temple Mount
    , considered a historic moment and the highlight of the war by the Israeli public due to the sanctity of these places to the
    Jewish
    people.
    Over the years, the Paratroopers Brigade has been the source of several future
    Israeli Chiefs of Staff
    , including
    Shaul Mofaz
    ,
    Moshe Ya'alon
    ,
    Benny Gantz
    and
    Aviv Kochavi
    .
    Selection and training
    [
    edit
    ]
    Service in the Paratroopers is voluntary and requires passing an intense two-day selection process
    [5]
    that includes tests of physical fitness as well as emotional preparedness, leadership skills and the ability to cooperate in a group. Each year the brigade receives five times more applicants than it can accept. Paratrooper recruits go through a year of training, and more than a quarter drop out. The paratrooper training course includes fitness training,
    Krav Maga
    training, harsh combat skills, specializing in a wide range of weapons, field craft, long marches with heavy equipment, weeks of survival training including navigation and camouflage, helicopter training, jump training, collaboration with other units, close quarters combat, and urban warfare. The course begins with four months of basic infantry training followed by advanced training that ends with a "Beret March", where recruits march 80 kilometers in full combat gear, after which they are inducted into the IDF.
    [6]
    Battles & operations
    [
    edit
    ]
    Reprisal operations
    [
    edit
    ]
    Members of 890th Paratroop Battalion after Operation Egged (November 1955). Standing l to r: Lt.
    Meir Har-Zion
    , Maj.
    Arik Sharon
    , Lt. Gen
    Moshe Dayan
    , Capt.
    Dani Matt
    , Lt. Moshe Efron, Maj. Gen
    Asaf Simchoni
    ; On ground, l to r: Capt.
    Aharon Davidi
    , Lt. Ya'akov Ya'akov, Capt.
    Raful Eitan
    The Paratroopers Brigade played a key role in the
    Reprisal operations
    , a series of retaliatory raids into Arab territory in response to
    fedayeen
    attacks on Israel. In 1955, the 890th battalion of the Paratroopers Brigade carried out
    Operation Elkayam
    , successfully attacking Egyptian military positions in the
    Khan Yunis
    area of the Gaza Strip. This was followed up with
    Operation Volcano
    , a successful raid by paratroopers together with
    Nahal Brigade
    and
    Golani Brigade
    infantry against Egyptian military positions on the Egyptian-Israeli border that was the largest Israeli military undertaking since the
    1948 Arab-Israeli War
    , and
    Operation Egged
    later that year, a raid that destroyed an Egyptian military post in the Sinai. In December 1955, paratroopers augmented by Nahal and
    Givati Brigade
    infantry carried out
    Operation Olive Leaves
    , an attack on Syrian gun emplacements along the border which had been shelling Israel, destroying them. In 1956, a force of paratroopers carried out
    Operation Black Arrow
    , raiding an Egyptian military base in Gaza and ambushing an Egyptian military relief convoy.
    Sinai Campaign (1956)
    [
    edit
    ]
    An Israeli paratrooper in the Mitla Pass during the Suez Crisis
    The
    Suez Crisis
    began with a drop of an entire paratroop battalion over the eastern approaches to the
    Mitla Pass
    . The remaining members of the brigade force were to travel along a 300 km route (200 km deep within enemy territory) and link up with the battalion. This break-through took 28 hours, during which the column swept through the deserted
    Kuntilla
    and fought two short but fierce battles against Egyptian forces in Thamad and Nakhl. The major paratroop action during the campaign was the battle for Mitla Pass. A paratroop reconnaissance patrol entering the pass found itself trapped by an overwhelming enemy force. The Egyptians enjoyed the topographical advantage, fighting from positions and niches in superior terrain. Outnumbered reinforcements who entered the fray fought desperately to rescue their comrades. After nightfall, the Egyptians were finally routed, but at the cost of 38 paratroopers dead and over 100 more wounded. Enemy losses were estimated at 260. The paratroopers jumped once again during the Sinai Campaign—at
    At-Tur
    , on the south-eastern shore of the
    Gulf of Suez
    . The rest of the brigade proceeded by land to conquer
    Ras Sudar
    and link up with their comrades at At-Tur. They then moved southeastward to
    Sharm El Sheikh
    at the southern tip of the
    Sinai Peninsula
    —which they conquered in a classic pincers move in coordination with the 9th brigade which had been moving southwestward. After the war's end, the paratroopers concentrated on reorganization and training with emphasis on helicopter operations.
    At least 49 Egyptian POWs were executed by the Paratroopers Brigade. The officer Arye Biro ordered the executions, because "We had to move on to Ras Sudar".
    [7]
    Six-Day War (1967)
    [
    edit
    ]
    During the
    Six-Day War
    , the paratroopers, whose
    ORBAT
    had now greatly increased in number, fought on all fronts: the
    Sinai Peninsula
    ,
    Judea
    ,
    Samaria
    and the
    Golan Heights
    . Paratroopers and armor broke through the Rafah positions heavily defended by the Egyptian 7th Division from behind, with the unit suffering heavy losses. Many troops were further killed in action during the evacuation of the wounded. The following day, the unit entered
    Gaza
    . Paratroop forces under the command of Danny Matt, who later attained the rank of Major General, made a helicopter landing at the Um Katef artillery positions in the enemy's rear line. A battalion raced against the 7th IDF Armored Division for the honor of being the first to reach the Suez Canal. Veteran paratrooper Aharon Davidi arrived first at the banks of the Suez. During the Six-Day War, paratroopers reached Sharm El Sheikh and likewise participated in the attack on the Golan. During the recapture of East Jerusalem from
    Jordanian annexation
    , considerable care was taken to protect and avoid damaging the holy places of the three religions. For this, the Paratroopers paid a heavy price in dead and wounded.
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    Sayeret Tzanhanim reconnaissance paratroopers equipped with Jeeps mounting 106mm recoilless rifles waged a campaign of destruction against Egyptian armor formations.
    [8]
    During the
    Battle of Firdan Bridge
    the paratroopers destroyed dozens of
    T-55
    tanks right off the freighter in Alexandria harbor.
    [9]
    War of Attrition (1968–1973)
    [
    edit
    ]
    After the Six-Day War, paratroopers participated in pursuit and retaliation operations against Egyptian infiltrators and became embroiled in the
    War of Attrition
    on various fronts. On March 21, 1968,
    paratroopers and armor raided
    a headquarters in
    Karame
    ,
    Jordan
    , killing 250 Jordanian soldiers. On December 12, 1968, a heliborne paratroop force raided
    Beirut Airport
    and destroyed Lebanese aircraft. The raid came in response to repeated terrorist attacks against Israeli aircraft. On December 23, 1969, paratroopers participated in
    Operation Rooster 53
    , airlifting an entire Soviet radar station out of Egypt and transporting it back to Israel.
    [10]
    In January 1970, the brigade spearheaded
    Operation Rhodes
    , taking over the Egyptian island of
    Shadwan
    . Three Israeli soldiers were killed in the raid which saw the paratroopers remain on the island for 36 hours before departing with 62 Egyptian POWs and a captured
    Decca radar
    set.
    [11]
    On 12 May 1972, a hijacked Sabena airliner landed at Israel's Lod Airport (now
    Ben Gurion
    ), after which paratroopers disguised as
    El-Al
    flight technicians assaulted the aircraft and rescued the passengers.
    On the night of April 9, 1973, during
    Operation Spring of Youth
    , a select force of paratroopers headed by Chief of Staff Lt. Gen.
    Amnon Lipkin-Shahak
    landed in different sites in and around
    Beirut
    , where according to published foreign reports, they linked up with waiting cars hired by
    Mossad
    agents. According to these sources, the soldiers drove through Beirut without arousing suspicion. They simultaneously attacked the
    Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine's
    headquarters and the residences of three high-ranking PLO leaders responsible for the Fatah-Black September
    Munich massacre
    of Israeli athletes in 1972. Surprise was total, and despite fierce resistance in the headquarters, all teams succeeded in carrying out their missions and were extracted by
    Israeli Air Force
    helicopters. Two Israeli soldiers and dozens of PFLP fighters were killed during the fighting.
    Yom Kippur War (1973)
    [
    edit
    ]
    Israeli paratroopers advance in the Sinai during the
    Yom Kippur War
    The
    Yom Kippur War
    saw the paratroopers fighting in some of the most difficult battles of the war. In the Sinai, paratroopers assigned to armored units rescued the beleaguered 'Budapest' outpost and destroyed the Egyptian forces. Paratroopers armed with LAW missiles helped contain an Egyptian armored thrust. Paratroopers of Danny Matt's brigade crossed the canal, as the spearhead of General Sharon's divisions, and established a bridgehead. Others, attempting to break open a route for them, ran up against the massive "
    Chinese Farm
    " fortifications. For three days, paratroopers and armored corps of General Sharon's and General Adan's divisions made repeated attempts until they finally succeeded in breaking through and rescuing their comrades. During the bitter fighting, IDF soldiers ran over open ground to evacuate fallen comrades, and often fell victim to enemy fire in the process. The battles for the "Chinese Farm" prevented the Egyptians from closing in on the bridgehead and eventually succeeded in opening an access point to it. On the West Bank of the Suez Canal, paratroopers fought in the city of Suez and advanced upon the city of
    Ismailia
    . On the Syrian front, paratroopers captured the peaks of Mt. Hermon in a heliborne operation. Other troops conquered
    Quneitra
    in the Golan Heights and
    Tel Shams
    and acted as armored infantry in the thrust into Syrian territory. After the Yom Kippur War the paratroopers and other infantry units were placed under the command of a chief Paratroop and Infantry Officer.
    During an operation known as Operation Nightgown Sayeret Tzanhanim paratroopers were dropped off at a grassy opening near Kasr al-Hayr on the main Baghdad-Damascus Highway.
    [12]
    They headed for a bridge where a brigade of Iraqi
    T-62
    tanks was about to cross en route to the Golan Heights battlefield.
    [13]
    The paratroopers attacked the Iraqi armor from the front causing a bottleneck. The Sayeret Tzanhanim paratroopers also attacked the trapped brigade from the rear with machine gun fire and
    RPGs
    destroying the brigade.
    [14]
    The paratroopers then placed explosive charges underneath the bridge full of destroyed Iraqi tanks destroying the bridge.
    [15]
    This prevented crucial Iraqi reinforcements from ever reaching the Golan Heights front destroying an Iraqi tank brigade in the process.
    [16]
    Operation Nightgown was one of the smallest Israeli special operations ever mounted and also one of the most important.
    [17]
    Approximately a dozen paratroopers destroyed the Iraqi tank brigade.
    [18]
    Operation Entebbe (1976)
    [
    edit
    ]
    Paratroopers' Memorial near
    Gedera
    with Bible citation from 2 Samuel 1:23
    On the morning of July 4, 1976, a
    counter-terrorist hostage-rescue mission
    headed by Brig. Gen. Dan Shomron succeeded in rescuing 102 passengers and crew of a hijacked Air France aircraft at
    Entebbe, Uganda
    . The Paratroopers force, led by Col. Matan Vilnai, was tasked with securing the civilian airport field, clearing and securing the runways, protection and fuelling of the Israeli aircraft. The commandos, transported in four
    Lockheed C-130 Hercules transport planes
    , succeeded in landing undetected at Entebbe's airport and taking the hijackers and their Ugandan collaborators by surprise. All seven hijackers and dozens of Ugandan soldiers were killed during the mission. After the raid, the assault team returned to their aircraft and began loading the hostages where they were shot at by Ugandan soldiers. Israeli forces returned fire with their
    AK-47s
    , inflicting casualties on the Ugandans. During this brief but intense firefight,
    Lt. Col. Yonatan "Yoni" Netanyahu
    , the older brother of current Israeli Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu
    , was shot in the chest and killed during the firefight. He was the only Israeli commando killed in the operation. Three hostages were killed, one was left in Uganda, and approximately 10 were wounded. The 102 rescued hostages were flown to Israel via Nairobi, Kenya, shortly after the raid.
    Operation Litani (1978)
    [
    edit
    ]
    Paratroopers participated in the
    1978 invasion of Lebanon
    , carried out after the infamous
    Coastal Road massacre
    , which temporarily purged Southern Lebanon of
    PLO
    terrorists. After the IDF withdrawal and the return of sporadic attacks, the Paratroopers participated in preventive raids against bases in Lebanon, raids designed to keep the terrorists off balance and "on the run," thereby preventing them from carrying out their operations within Israel.
    First Lebanon War (1982)
    [
    edit
    ]
    The paratroopers were an important component of the
    First Lebanon War
    .
    [19]
    The war in Lebanon proved the IDF's fighting ability and tested Paratroop combat doctrine, which had been revised as a result of the lessons of the Yom Kippur War, Operation Litani and other operations. Paratroopers fought in every sector of the war against Syrian troops and paratroops, both in built-up and mountainous areas. They operated efficiently and in full coordination with other corps, the Navy and the Air Force.
    One of the better known operations was the amphibious landing at the mouth of the Awali River, north of
    Sidon
    , from where the paratroopers advanced to the outskirts of Beirut through the mountains. In their advance, they engaged Syrian commando forces.
    [20]
    Second Intifada
    [
    edit
    ]
    The paratroopers played a key role in the
    Second Intifada
    . Paratroopers participated in
    Operation Defensive Shield
    , taking part in the
    Battle of Jenin
    and
    Battle of Nablus
    .
    Operation Cast Lead
    [
    edit
    ]
    Paratroopers took part in ground operations in
    Operation Cast Lead
    (2008–2009). The brigade was an important component during the war.
    [21]
    [22]
    Second Lebanon War (2006)
    [
    edit
    ]
    The brigade participated in the
    Second Lebanon War
    . The paratroopers took part in key engagements. Paratrooper units took part in the
    Battle of Maroun al-Ras
    , the first serious battle of the war, which ended in the IDF capturing most of the town. The paratroopers also participated in the
    Battle of Bint Jbeil
    , the
    Battle of Ayta ash-Shab
    , and
    Operation Change of Direction 11
    .
    Operation Protective Edge (2014)
    [
    edit
    ]
    Paratroopers in Gaza during Operation Protective Edge
    During the
    2014 Gaza War
    , the Paratroopers Brigade participated in ground operations, particularly in the
    Khan Yunis
    area. The brigade was credited with killing 141 enemy fighters and locating four tunnels during the war.
    [23]
    Eight paratroopers were killed in the war, including one in a grenade explosion outside of combat.
    [24]
    [25]
    [26]
    [27]
    [28]
    Structure and insignia
    [
    edit
    ]
    Brigade Structure
    The 35th (Paratrooper) Brigade consists of three regular battalions, each bearing the name of a venomous snake. The 101st, bearing the number of disbanded
    Unit 101
    , is the Brigade's first battalion. The 202nd is the Brigade's second battalion and was numbered to keep it in line with the 101st. The 890th, although the brigade's 3rd battalion, was in fact the IDF's first paratrooper battalion. The brigade operates a
    sayeret
    battalion
    combining the three specialized units of the brigade.
    Soldiers of the Paratroopers Brigade are distinguished by their red beret, paratrooper wings, reddish-brown leather boots and the paratroopers tunic (
    Yerkit
    ), which is slightly different in an appearance from the regular infantry outfits.
    Units
    [
    edit
    ]
    Flag of the Israeli Paratroopers Brigade
    (Paratrooper units are named after snakes.)
    101st Paratrooper Battalion "Cobra"
    202nd Paratrooper Battalion "Viper"
    890th Paratrooper Battalion "Echis"
    5135th Paratroopers Reconnaissance Battalion (Gadsar Tzanhanim) "Flying Serpent"
    5173rd Reconnaissance Company "Palsar"
    5174th Anti-Tank Company "Orev"
    5105th Engineer Company "Palhan"
    "Palhik" Signal Company.
    [29]
    Memorials
    [
    edit
    ]
    The main memorial is situated between
    Gedera
    and
    Rehovot
    near
    Tel Nof
    on road 40.
    [31]
    The
    "Black Arrow"-memorial
    for special operations of the paratroopers is located near kibbuz
    Mefalsim
    . Near Moshav
    Shtula
    the
    Givat Harabatim
    commemorates fallen soldiers of the
    1982 Lebanon War
    .