Item on Sharon - a brave soldier but what a lousey politician.....he was
Special Services, like our Green Berets - impressive miitary career.

So he now offers olive branch and I hope it works.

Saba

This item on his military - other under subject matter.



Paratroopers

The IDF paratroopers have earned a hard-won reputation for strict
discipline, courage, initiative, dedication to duty and the highest
standards of performance.

They have consistently been at the forefront of the IDF and have set
behavioral and operational norms for others to emulate.

Infantry, and paratroopers in particular, provide flexibility and
maneuverability to the modern battlefield. They are capable of operating
under any field and weather conditions, day or night, combining rapid
movement and firepower.

IDF paratroopers are trained to overcome obstacles and minefields, to
fight alone, or jointly with other forces and services in integrated
combat. They can be transported by helicopter or dropped behind enemy
lines, or be landed from amphibious landing craft. They can fight
mounted on jeeps, or on APC's and can operate against armor, attack
helicopters and infantry. IDF paratroopers are a major component in
maintaining Israel's security, and have played important roles in
special and regular operations in Israel's war against terrorism.

The Paratroop Brigade (commanded by a colonel) is one of the four
regular brigades of the Infantry and Paratroop Corps (which is headed by
a brigadier general).

The Brigade is composed of infantry battalions, as well as
reconnaissance, engineering, signals and anti-tank companies. The
Infantry and Paratroop Corps is responsible for training and
coordinating infantry operations with other forces. The corps is
overseen by the Ground Corps Command which is responsible for unifying
and streamlining infantry, armor, artillery and engineering forces,
training doctrine matters, planning and R&D.

The history of this elite unit is replete with operations which have
made front-page headlines over the world. The daring reprisal raids of
the 50's, the Mitla Pass jump and battles of the 1956 Sinai Campaign,
the Conquest of Rafah and the historic unification of Jerusalem in the
1967 Six Day War, the airlifting of a Soviet radar station out of Egypt
in 1969, the 1972 rescue, the 1973 commando raid against terrorist
headquarters in the heart of Beirut, the bridgehead over the Suez and
the bloody battle of the Chinese Farm during the Yom Kippur War, the
unprecedented rescue of the passengers and crew of the hijacked Air
France Airbus in "Operation Jonathan" at Entebbe.

These are just a few of the operations which have made this unit
legendary.
Paratroop officers and enlisted men have indeed become legends in their
time. Many have acceded to the highest-level military positions and have
gone on to make distinguished contributions to Israeli political life.

Training and Spirit

Every year, this all-volunteer unit receives as many as five times as
many applicants as it can accept. Most candidates are screened out by
rigorous acceptance criteria and the arduous training regimen that
follows. Paratroop training, which is tough and unrelenting, reflects
the versatile role which this force will have to play on present and
future battlefields.

This includes massive doses of physical fitness, topography, mastery of
a wide array of weapons as well as training in mobile, airborne,
heliborne and amphibious operations, as well as integrated operations
with armor and artillery, day and night assaults against different types
of objectives, and the famous IDF Jump School. All paratroopers go
through NCO school before being trained in a military specialty. Those
destined to become platoon leaders are sent to Officers' School.
Personal qualities required of an IDF Paratrooper are courage,
professional knowledge, ability to decide, capacity to improvise
solutions when faced with difficult or unexpected situations, and
leadership ability. Officers must serve as personal examples to their
men. Ties between officers and enlisted men are direct and long-lasting,
with no artificial barrier separating them.

Women serve in the Infantry and Paratroop Corps as instructors (in such
fields as marksmanship, anti-tank missiles, etc.), educators,
administrative and technical personnel. At the Paratrooper Training
Base, women likewise serve as parachute riggers and inspectors. They
undergo a jump course to increase their identification with the
paratroopers whose lives are literally in their hands.

IDF paratroopers are a family, whose members (both living and deceased)
are bound together by a bond of shared experiences and blood shed in
battle. A union cemented by camaraderie, which transcends and blurs
formal distinctions: an aristocracy of individual merit.

Paratroopers continue to serve in their units after their discharge from
compulsory service, either in the career army or the reserves (retaining
their red berets). They remain part of the paratrooper family, even
after they pass beyond the stringently observed cut-off age for reserve
duty, and are transferred to other units.


A Brief History
Origins

The antecedent of the paratroopers group was a group of Palestinian
Jewish volunteers who parachuted into Nazi-Europe in 1943�5 years
prior to the establishment of the State of Israel. These boys and girls,
who fought in the ranks of the British army, helped organize Jewish
resistance in Europe. Of the initial 32, 12 were captured and did not
return. The most celebrated of this group were the poet Hannah Senesh,
who was captured and executed in Nazi-occupied Hungary, and Yoel Palgi,
who escaped from Nazi captivity and returned to lead resistance in
Budapest.

Five years later, in the midst of Israel's War of Independence, Prime
Minister David Ben-Gurion summoned Palgi to form the first Paratroop
unit. At his disposal were an unsuitable commando aircraft and 4,000
second-hand chutes purchased as scrap material for the production of
silk shirts. Palgi's unit consisted of a heterogeneous assortment of
native Israeli veterans of the British army and Palmach (shock troops),
graduates of the jump group in Czechoslovakia, resistance veterans,
ghetto survivors and a number of adventurers. The unit improvised
equipment. Training was inadequate.

Jumps were made without reserve chutes and often ended in tragedy.
Though a number of operational plans called for paratroop drops, the war
ended without the unit seeing action. In the summer of 1949, Yehuda
Harari took command of the Paratroop Unit. He set to work reorganizing
it and infusing new blood. He weeded out the unfit, moved the
paratroopers to a more suitable base, acquired proper equipment, and
organized the first jumpmasters course.

The 101st

The 50's were marked by infiltration of Arab terrorists across Israel's
borders.


The infiltrators would carry out acts of murder, pillage, and sabotage.
In the year 1952 alone there were 3,000 infiltrations. In order to curb
these attacks it was decided to form a small unit of superlative
fighting men who would carry out reprisal operations. This unit called
itself the "101st."

The 101St. took on many difficult assignments behind enemy lines. The
101St. gained quick recognition for being able to accomplish the
"impossible," for dedication to the mission, and for exemplary courage
and daring. Among the outstanding members of the unit were the legendary
Meir Har-Zion, known for his initiative, knowledge of the countryside
and courage, and Ariel "Arik" Sharon.
Merger with the Paratroopers
Moshe Dayan, Chief of Operations and later Chief of Staff, envisaged the
need for a large-scale Paratroop force. The merger of the 101St. with
the paratroopers became inevitable. The 101St. breathed new life into
the paratroopers. Performance standards rose.

In the mean time, Fedayoun (Arab terror units) were established as
adjuncts to the Egyptian army in April 1955, and soon similar units were
organized in Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. Reprisal operations took the
form of actions against regular enemy forces. In one such assault
against a 200-man Egyptian brigade headquarters and security complex in
Khan-Yunis, Mordechai "Motta" Gur was badly wounded. In operation
Kinneret, (11 December 1955), undertaken after continued Syrian shelling
of Israeli fishing vessels, a brigade-strength force of Paratroopers
augmented by other elements, crossed the Sea of Galilee and destroyed
Syrian positions. Casualties in the operation included Rafael Eitan
(wounded in his stomach) and Yitzhak Ben Menachem (surnamed "Gulliver"
because of his height), an Independence War hero who had replaced Motta
Gur as Company Commander.

The paratroopers were expanded to brigade strength and placed under the
command of "Arik" Sharon. "Raful" Eitan commanded a veteran battalion.

Retaliation operations against enemy fortifications succeeded one
another: Rahwa, Jarandal, Husan, Kalkilya. During 1955-56 there were 10
major reprisal operations which brought temporary remissions in
terrorist activity and gave valuable combat experience to the young
brigade. Lessons drawn from each operation were promptly incorporated
into the unit's doctrine.

The Sinai Campaign

The operational advantage of a large-scale paratroop force was
demonstrated in the Sinai Campaign. The war began with a drop of an
entire paratroop battalion (under Raful's command) 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. 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 topographical advantage, fighting from
positions and niches in superior terrain.

Outnumbered reinforcements who entered the fray fought desperately with
great personal sacrifice to rescue their comrades. After nightfall, the
Egyptians were finally routed but at a tremendous cost: 38 paratroopers
dead and over 100 wounded. Enemy losses were 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-Sheik 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). (Commanders succeeded
one another: Menachem Aviran, Eliyahu Zeira, Yithak Hufi, Rafael Eitan).
When Fatah terrorist activities began in 1965, the Paratroopers became
the chief retaliatory force, reinstituting the policy of reprisal raids
most notably in the Samua operation against the Jordan legion and Fatah.
(When, during this operation, the senior commander of one of the
paratroop forces was killed or wounded, junior officers took over and
successfully completed the mission).

The Six Day War

During the Six Day War, the paratroopers, whose ORBAT had now increased
greatly, fought on all fronts: the Sinai peninsula, Judea, Samaria, and
the Golan Heights. paratroopers and armor under Raful's command broke
through the Rafah positions (heavily defended by the crack Egyptian 7th
Division) from behind.

However, in doing so the unit suffered heavy losses. Many troops were
killed in the process of evacuating comrades. 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. Raful's battalion raced
against the 7th (Israeli) Armored Division for the honor of being the
first to reach the Suez Canal. Though Raful was wounded 25 kilometers
from the canal, his men under the command of 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. Perhaps, the Paratroopers' finest hour came on June
7, when a paratroop force under Col. Motta Gur captured the Old City of
Jerusalem and restored the Western Wall, the holiest of Judaism's
shrines, to Jewish control after almost 2,000 years. During the conquest
of Jerusalem, 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.


After the war, paratroopers participated in pursuit and retaliation
operations against terrorist infiltration and were caught up in the War
of Attrition on the Egyptian front.

On December 23, 1969, paratroopers airlifted an entire Soviet radar
station out of Egypt and transported it back to Israel.

The War Against Terrorism

On March 21, 1968, paratroopers and armor raided terrorist headquarters
in Karame, Jordan, killing 250 enemy troops.
On December 12, 1968, a heliborne paratroop force raided Beirut Airport
and destroyed Arab aircraft, taking precautions to avoid physically
harming anyone. The raid came in response to repeated terrorist attacks
on Israeli aircraft.

When, on 12 May 1972, a hijacked Sabena airliner landed at Israel's Lod
Airport, oaratroopers disguised as El-Al flight technicians broke in and
rescued the passengers.

On the night of April 10, 1973, a select force of paratroopers headed by
current 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 with
utmost precision and without arousing suspicion. They simultaneously
attacked the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine's
headquarters and the residences of three high-ranking terrorist leaders
(among them the man responsible for the Fatah-Black September foreign
terrorist operations including the 1972 massacre of the 9 Israeli
sportsmen at the Munich Olympics). Surprise was total, and despite
resistance in the headquarters, all teams succeeded in carrying out
their missions and making a clean getaway.
The Yom Kippur War

TheYom Kippur War saw the paratroopers fighting in some of the most
difficult battles. In the Sinai, paratroopers assigned to armored units
rescued the beleaguered 'Budapest' outpost and destroyed the Egyptian
commando forces. Paratroopers armed with LAW missiles helped contain an
Egyptian armored thrust. P

aratroopers 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 making the break-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 to it.

 On the West Bank of the Suez, paratroopers fought in the city of Suez
and advanced on the city of Ismailia. On the Syrian front, paratroopers
captured the peaks of Mt. Hermon in a heliborne operation. Others
conquered Kuneitra and Tel Shams and acted as armored infantry in the
thrust into Syrian territory.

After the The Yom Kippur War the paratroopers and other infantry units
were placed under the command of a chief Paratroop and Infantry Officer.
Entebbe

On the morning of the fourth of July 1976, a team of crack Israeli
troops headed by Chief Infantry and Paratroop Officer Dan Shomron
succeeded in rescuing the 87 passengers and crew of a hijacked Air
France airbus at Entebbe, Uganda. The force, transported in four
Hercules aircraft, succeeded in landing undetected at Entebbe's airport,
and in taking the 13 terrorists and their Ugandan collaborators by
surprise. In the operation, Lt. Col. "Yoni" Netanyahu was killed by a
Ugandan sniper bullet.

Fighting Terrorism: Operation Litani
Paratroopers have played an active role in Israel's protracted war
against terror, undertaken to keep Israel's northern towns and villages
safe from terrorist attacks. In this context, paratroopers participated
in the 1978 Operation Litani (executed after the infamous "Coastal Road
Massacre" in which terrorists murdered 37 civilians and wounded a
further 80) which temporarily purged Southern Lebanon of terrorists.

After the IDF withdrawal and the return of sporadic terrorist attacks,
the Paratroopers participated in preventive raids against terrorist
bases in Lebanon.

These raids are designed to keep the terrorists off balance and "on the
run," thereby preventing them from carrying out their murderous
operations within Israel.
The Lebanon War (1982)

The paratroopers were an important component of the Lebanon War. 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, and against terrorist concentrations in both 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 terrorist and Syrian commando forces.

Beyond the Lebanon War
Following the IDF withdrawal from Lebanon, the paratroopers were
integral in the ongoing security operations conducted in the
Territories, along Israel's northern border in the Lebanese Security
Zone, and have made invaluable contributions to Israel's war against
terror.
Source: Israel Defense Forces.




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