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Special Warfare Diving and Salvage

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(Redirected from SWADS) Bangladesh Navy special operations force Not to be confused with SWAT (Bangladesh).

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Special Warfare Diving and Salvage (SWADS)
স্পেশাল ওয়ারফেয়ার ডাইভিং অ্যান্ড স্যালভেজ
Active2009 - Present (official creation)
Country Bangladesh
Branch Bangladesh Navy
TypeSpecial forces
RoleSpecial Operations, Diving and Salvage
Part ofBangladesh Special Operational Commands (BSOC)
Garrison/HQChittagong
Nickname(s)SWADS
Motto(s)Valour. Vigour. Victory
Commanders
Current
commander
Commodore Mohammad Humayun Kabir
Military unit

The Special Warfare Diving and Salvage (SWADS) (Bengali: স্পেশাল ওয়ারফেয়ার ডাইভিং অ্যান্ড স্যালভেজ) is an elite special operational unit of the Bangladesh Navy. Members are professional soldiers and are recruited through the Bangladesh Navy. The SWADS is organized, trained and equipped along the lines of SEAL/UDT teams of the United States Navy SEALs and the Republic of Korea Navy UDT/SEAL.

As of 2014, SWADS is believed to number a few hundred strong, and is based in the southern port city of Chittagong. Its base is formally known as "BNS Nirvik".

History

Bangladesh Navy SWADS.

Although Bangladeshi Navy personnel were trained on American soil since the 1970s, United States Navy instructors were instrumental in creating SWADS in late 2008. SWADS was formally created in 2009 with 150 commandos and 200 divers recruited. US Ambassador to Bangladesh Dan Mozena provided assistance in the creation of the unit.

The unit's lineage is traced back to the Nou Commando frogmen of Sector 10 during the country's Liberation War against Pakistan. SWADS operators have participated alongside American Navy SEALs in Joint Combined Training Exchange programs under the Tiger Shark exercises.

Selection

Bangladesh Navy SWADS demonstration

SWADS operatives are volunteers from the Navy and are trained in Bangladesh and abroad. They do the Naval Commando Basic Course (similar to BUD/S of US Navy SEALs) from the SWADS Training area at Rangamati and complete their airborne qualification course from army's School of Infantry and Tactics, Sylhet. Further specialist courses are held in various naval and army training bases in Bangladesh as well as abroad. The average drop rate of NCB is 95%, and this is only the first step of becoming a SWADS operator. SWADS operators receive training from Republic of Korea Navy UDT/SEALs, UK's SAS & SBS, US Marine Force Recon, US Navy SEALS and Turkish SAT.

Duties

SWADS personnel at a joint military exercise with the US Navy in 2011.

SWADS commandos are currently deployed in South Sudan as Bangladesh Force Marine Unit, part of UNMISS. They were the first SF unit to respond during Holey Artisan Bakery attack in Dhaka and later assisted the Army's 1 Para-Commando Battalion in Operation Thunderbolt, by securing the lake side and cutting of the possible escape route of the terrorists.

SWADS has also performed several Anti-Drug raids in the Bay of Bengal and captured some major drug shipments. They have also conducted Anti-Human Trafficking operations off the coast of Teknaf.

Weapons and equipment

Bangladesh Navy SWADS Ford F350 and Defender Class RB-S

The range of weapons and equipment used by members SWADS's is extensive. SWADS members are trained to handle all types of light & medium weapons with proficiency. Because of their close relations with US & ROK SEALs, SWADS mostly use 5.56 caliber weapons unlike other Bangladeshi SOF units.

Some of the weapons used by SWADS are:

Besides these weapons, SWADS personnel uses Level-III & Level-IIIA bulletproof vests and ballistic helmets as standard issue. SWADS divers use various European diving and hydrographic research equipment.

Bangladesh Navy SWADS soldiers

References

  1. Waters, Conrad (2014). Seaforth World Naval Review 2015. Seaforth Publishing. p. 54. ISBN 978-1-84832-330-8.
  2. "Moriarty_Balance_Buffalo_Closing_Ceremony" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 February 2013.
  3. ^ "PM inaugurates Naval Aviation, names SWADS naval command base "Nirvik"". Priyo News. Archived from the original on 4 July 2015. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  4. "Bangladesh navy adds special war unit to fight terror - ANN". Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  5. ^ "Speeches & Remarks 2009 - Embassy of the United States Dhaka, Bangladesh". Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  6. "Joint U.S.-Bangladesh Military Exercise Concludes in Chittagong" (PDF). Embassy of the United States of America (Press release). 12 November 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 May 2010.
  7. Global Defense News (December 8, 2023) "Bangladesh acquires South Korean Dsar-15 assault rifles.", Army Recognition, 2024, https://www.armyrecognition.com/news/army-news/army-news-2023/bangladesh-acquires-south-korean-dsar-15-assault-rifles?highlight=WyJkc2FyIiwxNV0=, Accessed on May 23, 2024

Further reading

  • "US donates 16 defender boats for Navy". UNB. 13 April 2010. Sixteen 25-foot (8 meter) Defender Class Boats, donated by the US, were handed over to the Bangladesh Navy today ... The United States Government provided the Defender boats at Bangladesh's request to improve its Navy's and Coast Guard's abilities to disrupt criminal organizations and transnational terrorist groups seeking to exploit Bangladesh's maritime borders ... These first sixteen boats will significantly improve the maritime interdiction and counterterrorism capabilities of Bangladesh's new Navy Special Operations Force at the Navy Special Warfare Diving and Salvage Command.
  • Khan, Sharier (10 May 2012). "Navy adds spl war unit to fight terror". The Daily Star.
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