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    Royal Thai Army Special Warfare Command
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    Royal Thai Army Special Forces
    Royal Thai Army Special Warfare Command
    หน่วยบัญชาการสงครามพิเศษ
    Unit insignia
    Active
    June 4th 1954–present
    Country
    Thailand
    Allegiance
    HM The King of Thailand
    Branch
    Royal Thai Army
    Type
    Special operations force
    Garrison/HQ
    Thale Chup Son,
    Mueang Lopburi
    ,
    Lopburi
    ,
    Thailand
    Nickname(s)
    พลร่มป่าหวาย(Pa Wai Airborne)
    Engagements
    Cold War
    Malayan Emergency
    Vietnam War
    Laotian Civil War
    Cambodian Civil War
    Communist insurgency in Thailand
    Communist insurgency in Malaysia
    Third Indochina War
    Cambodian–Vietnamese War
    Vietnamese border raids in Thailand
    Thai–Laotian Border War
    Persian Gulf War
    1999 East Timorese crisis
    International Force East Timor
    War on drugs
    Internal conflict in Myanmar
    Operation Border Post 9631
    2010–2012 Myanmar border clashes
    Global War on Terrorism
    Operation Enduring Freedom
    Iraq War
    OEF - Afghanistan
    OEF - Horn of Africa
    2003 Phnom Penh riots
    Operation Pochentong
    Southern Insurgency
    Cambodian–Thai border dispute
    Website
    swcom
    .rta
    .mi
    .th
    /index
    .php
    Commanders
    Notable
    commanders
    General Sunthorn Kongsompong
    General Surayud Chulanont
    General Sonthi Boonyaratglin
    General Chalermchai Sitthisart
    The
    Royal Thai Army Special Warfare Command
    (
    Thai
    :
    หน่วยบัญชาการสงครามพิเศษ
    ) also known as
    Pa Wai Airborne
    (
    Thai
    :
    พลร่มป่าหวาย
    ) is the
    special operations force
    of the
    Royal Thai Army
    . Its headquarters are King Narai Camp in
    Lopburi
    .
    [1]
    Thai Army Special Force member in Children's Day 2012 at the Chiang Mai Air Force base
    2
    1st Special Forces group
    operators of the
    US Army
    Special Forces
    instructing Thai soldiers in 1998
    History
    Main article:
    Military history of Thailand
    The
    Royal Thai Army
    recognizes the importance and necessity of warfare that can confront and reduce the threat from outside the country. It set up a special forces unit on June 4th 1954 at Ban Pa Wai Patan, Lopburi. Royal Thai Army special forces settled was first known as
    Parachute Infantry Battalion
    , with Lieutenant Colonel Tianchai Sirisumpan as the battalion commander.
    The Parachute Infantry Battalion acted according to the plans set out by the
    Royal Thai Army
    and
    Internal Security Operations Command
    during its first mission, and its performance was deemed acceptable to supervisors at all levels. As a result, the paratroopers battalion was expanded initially with the goal of protecting the country from the threats posed by communism.
    In 1953 the first US Army advisors arrived in Thailand to help the
    Royal Thai Army
    set up an airborne formation. In that year Camp Erawan was established at Lopburi for the fledgling parachute unit. The site had been previously occupied by the
    PARU
    , which had since moved down to Hua Hin. In the same year Capt. Tienchai Sirisumpan, a company commander in the
    1st Infantry Regiment
    , was sent as one of the first foreign students to
    US Army Ranger training
    at
    Fort Benning
    , Georgia. Tienchai returned to Thailand the following year and was given command in 1955 of the newly designated Airborne Ranger Unit.
    In 1956 the Rangers were used together with the BPP on operations along the southern border with
    British Malaya
    . During the following year, the Unit secured the capital as Police Gen. Phao was overthrown by
    Army commander
    Field Marshal Sarit
    . By that time, the Rangers had expanded into an Airborne Ranger Battalion numbering 580 men divided into 26 detachments. Over the next few years the paratroopers conducted field operations throughout the northern provinces, identifying loyal village leaders in the event of a Communist insurgency similar to the ones growing elsewhere in
    South-East Asia
    .
    The deteriorating situation in Laos soon commanded the attention of the Rangers. In July 1959 interpreters from the Rangers were sent to Vientiane to begin assisting the Laotian army. These forces were temporarily assigned to Headquarters 333, Thailand's command unit for missions in Laos. Meanwhile, the Laotian 2e Bataillon Parachutiste was sent in November to Lopburi for refresher training. The Laotian 1st Bataillon Parachutiste arrived at Lopburi in mid-1960, but was rushed back after the 2 BP rebelled and took over the capital. In 1961 radio operators and otherspecialists were sent from the Ranger Battalion·to assist the Lao army. In 1963 the Airborne Ranger Battalion was expanded and renamed the Special Forces Group (Airborne). Composed of six companies, the new Group was tasked with unconventional warfare behind enemy lines, psychological warfare operations, counter-insurgency missions, and the raising of village defence units.
    The Royal Thai Special Forces (RTSF)' resumed the training of Lao military units in 1965 when parachute and infantry battalions arrived for refresher training at Camp Erawan, Lopburi. In the same year the first two RTSF training teams were sent to northern Laos to train local forces. One Thai sergeant was captured from these teams in May, and was not to be released until 1974. RTSF recon teams also started operating along the
    Ho Chi Minh Trail
    .
    RTSF 1966 to 1975
    In 1966,
    United States Army Special Forces
    units arrived in Lopburi and began working extensively with the RTSF. By that time an RTSF Special Warfare Center had been established at Camp Narai, Lopburi, with 1 and 2 SF Groups (Airborne). The Special Warfare Commander was Col. Tienchai; SF Groups were commanded by colonels. In addition, 1 Airborne Battalion, commanded by a lieutenant-colonel, and the Quartermaster Aerial Resupply Company came under SWC command at Camp Erawan. The Airborne Battalion's mission was to provide airborne infantry reinforcements for the Army's conventional units.
    The RTSF's Laotian missions continued through the late 1960s, with liaison and mobile training teams assigned across Laos. One team was with the
    Nam Bac
    garrison when it fell in January 1968. all personnel were rescued after evading enemy patrols for a week. The RTSF also assigned men to 1 Long Range Reconnaissance Troop of the
    Royal Thai Army Expeditionary Division
    , Vietnam, from 1969- 1971. By 1971 the widening war in South-East Asia provided the RTSF with more training missions. The RTSF already ran the Special Warfare School at Lopburi, which included airborne training facilities and a ranger course modelled after the
    US Army Ranger School
    . By this time the RTSF training facilities were considered among the best in A ia. The RTSF stayed involved in Laos, training Lao personnel at Lopburi until 1973 and occasionally scnding teams on reconnaissance operations inside Laos. Othcr RTSF personnel manned the Special Battalion at Phitsanulok, which trained foreign students and conducted cross-border operations. The RTSF also provided men for thc Palace Guard in Bangkok. In addition, RTSF Mobile Training Teams spanned Thailand, conducting civic-action projects and training local anti-Communist militia.
    In 1972 the SWC had expanded further with the creation of 3 SF Group (Airborne). Also in the SWC were 1 and 2 SF Groups, the Special Warfare School, 1 Airborne Battalion, the Quartermaster Aerial Resupply Company, the Psychological Operations Battalion, and thc Long Range Reconnaissance Company. The Special Warfare Commander was Maj.Gen. Tienchai. In the final years of the
    Vietnam War
    , Thailand was confronted with hostile Communist movements in both
    Laos
    and the
    Khmer Republic
    . RTSF teams were used on recon operations in Khmer Rouge-held territory along the northern half of the Khmer border. No RTSF personnel were lost on these missions.
    RTSF post-Vietnam War
    By 1977 4 SF Group (Airborne) had becn raised to strength at Phitsanulok after the Special Battalion was fully absorbed by the RTSF. In the same year 1 Airborne Battalion was taken from the SWC and put under the command of
    31st Infantry Regiment
    ,
    1st Division (King's Guard)
    . In the late 1970s the RTSF was involved with training local village militia units during the height of the
    Communist Party of Thailand
    (CPT)
    insurgency
    . RTSF teams also conducted cross-border operations into Cambodia to gain intelligence on CPT training camps set up by thc sympathetic
    Khmer Rouge
    regime.
    The RTSF stayed active as a training unit in the early 1980s. Besides helping raise
    Thai paramilitary militia
    , the RTSF also provided llssistance to the anti-Communist Cambodian resistance as early as 1979, with expanded programmes for the
    Khmer People's National Liberation Front
    and the ational Sihanoukist Army since 1982. Among other recent missions of the RTSF have been operations along the
    Cambodian border
    (prior to October 1987 co-ordinated through Army Operations Center 315), missions along the
    Laotian border
    (previously under AOC 309), and strikes against
    Burmese opium
    warlords. In the mid- 1980s the RTSF trained members of Task Force 838, an-elite unit that oversees the activities of the Cambodian resistance along the Thai Cambodian border.
    In July 1982 the four Special Forces Groups underthe SWC were renamed 1, 2, 3, and 4 Special Forces Regiments of I Special Forc'es Division (Airborne). At the same time the entire
    31st Infantry Regiment
    ,
    1st Division (King's Guard)
    , which controlled I Airborne Battalion co-located at Camp Erawan, was redesignated 31st Infantry Regiment 1st Division. The regiment is currently headquartered at Lopburi, with one airborne battalion rotated through Camp Erawan.
    In 1984 the Special Warfare Command was established at Lopburi to co-ordinate all Thai Army elite units. With external threats to Thailand's security from Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Burma, the Command is given responsibility for waging war outside the borders of the country. The Special Warfare Command is also known as 5 Army Region, marking it as a lieutenant-general's command equal to the four geographical Army Regions.
    While not prone to involvement in Thai domestic politics, the RTSF dispatched I I helicopter-loads of paratroopers to Bangkok during a September 1985 coup attempt. Their intervention was largely symbolic, however, since the government was already well in control by the time they arrived. In May Ig86 the RTSF was again poised for intervention in Bangkok when Army commander-in-chief Arthit appeared ready to launch a coup. Although minor counter-terrorist missions were assumed by units of the paramilitary Rangers (not to be confused with ranger graduates of the RTSF Special Warfare School) in August 1984, the RTSF is responsible for responding to major terrorist incidents and hostage-rescue situations. In 1989 RTSF counter-terrorist missions were handled by Task Force go, based in Lopburi.
    The RTSF maintains links with SF units around the world. Several joint training exercises are conducted annually with the
    US Army Special Forces
    . Exchange training programmes are held with the
    Australian SASR
    and the
    South Korean Special Forces
    , among others. In addition to training their own personnel, the RTSF provides instructors for Royal Thai Army Ranger courses located at the SWC, the Infantry Training Center, and the Cavalry Training Center. All RTSF members must be graduates of the nine-week course. With over three decades of combat experience, the RTSF today stands as one of the most capable elite forces in Asia.
    In 1989 the RTSF fielded two full divisions. The Special Warfare Command and the SWC remain at Lopburi. I SF Division is headquartered at Camp Erawan, with one of its regiments at each of Lopburi's three military camps: 1 SF Regt. at Camp Pawai, 2 SF Regt. at Camp Narai, and 3 SF Regt. at Camp Erawan. 2 SF Division moved its permanent headquarters to Chieng Mai in early 1988, having been temporarily quarteredat Lopburi over the previous year. The division has two regiments: 4 SF Regt., formerly the Special Battalion, at Phitsanulok, and 5 SF Regt. at Chieng Mai. The Long Range Reconnaissance Company, Ajrborne Resupply Battalion and Psychological Operations Battalion, which seconded personnel in 1988 to the Displaced Persons Protection Unit along the Thai-Cambodian border, are also at Camp Erawan.
    Organization
    Royal Thai Army Special Warfare Command Headquarters
    Special Warfare Center
    Special Warfare School
    Basic Training Course
    Ranger Training Center
    Airborne Training Center
    Special Force Training Center
    Psychological Operations Training Course
    1st Special Forces Division
    1st Special Forces Regiment
    (Airborne)
    1st Special Forces Battalion (Airborne)
    2nd Special Forces Battalion (Airborne)
    2nd Special Forces Regiment
    (Airborne)
    1st Special Forces Battalion (Airborne)
    2nd Special Forces Battalion (Airborne)
    3rd Special Forces Regiment, King's Guard
    (Airborne)
    Special Operation Battalion, King's Guard
    Ranger Battalion, King's Guard
    1st Ranger Company, Ranger Battalion, King's Guard
    2nd Ranger Company, Ranger Battalion, King's Guard
    3rd Ranger Company, Ranger Battalion, King's Guard
    4th Special Forces Regiment
    (Airborne)
    1st Special Forces Battalion (Airborne)
    2nd Special Forces Battalion (Airborne)
    5th Special Forces Regiment
    (Airborne)
    1st Special Forces Battalion (Airborne)
    2nd Special Forces Battalion (Airborne)
    Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols Company
    (
    LRRP
    )
    Psychological Operations Battalion
    Quartermaster Aerial Supply Company
    35th Signal Corp Battalion
    1st Signal Corp Company
    2nd Signal Corp Company
    3rd Signal Corp Company