Special Boat Service

British special-operations force
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Also known as: SBS

Special Boat Service (SBS), elite British special operations warfare unit. With the Special Air Service (SAS), the Special Reconnaissance Regiment, the Special Forces Support Group, an integral signals regiment, and an aviation wing, it is a core part of the United Kingdom Special Forces (UKSF) group. The SBS recruits principally from the Royal Marines, though also from the army and the Royal Air Force, and all its operators have to pass the grueling UKSF selection program. It is organized into four squadrons that provide the United Kingdom’s maritime counterterrorist response and a global response capability. All SBS operators are trained as parachutists, combat divers, and boat handlers and in the use of minisubmarines and fast patrol boats. Their missions include land and amphibious advance force operations and also support to British police and law-enforcement agencies during counterterrorist operations in the homeland. The SBS maintains very close training and operational links with the U.S. Navy’s SEAL Team 6.

The SBS was formed in July 1940, during World War II, as the Special Boat Section. Despite early setbacks caused by limited training and nonspecialist equipment, its role did not change from the start: daring, independent, principally amphibious raids on ports or shipping, often using minisubmarines or canoes to reach its objectives. During the war the SBS first operated in the eastern Mediterranean among the Greek Islands and then in the Adriatic. It took part in the Allied landings in North Africa in November 1942 and the Salerno landings in 1943, and elements of the SBS became part of the clandestine Special Operations Executive working behind the lines against the Japanese in Southeast Asia. The SBS’s most famous raid took place in December 1942, when six two-man teams—the famous “Cockleshell Heroes”—set out to canoe 100 km (60 miles) up the Gironde River to attack cargo ships in the French port of Bordeaux.

After its disbandment at the end of the war, the SBS’s roles were taken on by the Royal Marines. It took various names until 1987, when it became the Special Boat Service and underwent significant expansion and development as part of the UKSF. SBS divers cleared mines from ships in Palestine in 1946–47, and during the Korean War the SBS conducted amphibious raids and long-range patrols on the North Korean coast. SBS patrols also took part in combating Indonesia’s confrontation with Malaysia over Borneo (1962–66). During the 1970s the SBS developed Britain’s maritime counterterrorism capability to deal with incidents aboard ships, on oil platforms in the North Sea, or in port installations. In 1972 SBS operators and a bomb-disposal officer parachuted into the Atlantic Ocean and boarded the Queen Elizabeth II ocean liner in order to deal with a bomb threat. During the Troubles (1969–2007) in Northern Ireland, SBS personnel took part in military undercover surveillance operations against the Provisional Irish Republican Army.

The 1982 Falkland Islands War required the SBS to return to more conventional amphibious tasks. It took part in retaking South Georgia, a precursor operation before the main landings on East Falkland. SBS and SAS patrols had carried out detailed reconnaissance work for several weeks before the landings took place, and the SBS cleared Fanning Island immediately before the landings started. As the British ground offensive closed in on the islands’ capital, a combined SAS-SBS force led a diversionary attack ahead of the main force’s final operation.

In 1999 the SBS spearheaded the United Kingdom’s contribution to UN peacekeeping operations in East Timor, receiving wide international media coverage. A year later in Sierra Leone, a joint SAS-SBS task force secured British Army personnel taken hostage by a gang of violent extremists. All the hostages were released and their captors killed or captured.

The SBS played a major role in the Afghanistan War. At the beginning of the conflict, in 2001, SBS patrols called in air strikes against Taliban positions and conducted rapid and deliberate clearance operations of known al-Qaeda bases, at one point almost capturing Osama bin Laden. From 2006 the SBS took the lead for UKSF operations in Afghanistan. SBS forces worked closely with Afghan commando forces, and their highly successful combined operations concentrated on disrupting Taliban leadership, bomb makers and their factories, and the illegal drug trade that funded the insurgency. The SBS led an operation in 2007 that resulted in the death of Mullah Dadullah, the Taliban’s most senior commander in Afghanistan.

The SBS also took part in the 2003 invasion of Iraq, combining with U.S. Navy SEALs to secure invasion beaches on the Faw peninsula ahead of the main force operation. It then went on to secure oil fields around Basra, and SBS personnel later joined the largely SAS British force conducting counterterrorist operations in Baghdad.

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Alexander Alderson