Finnish Coastal Jaegers

Finnish Coastal Jaegers
Rannikkojääkärit (Finnish)
Kustjägarna (Swedish)

Green beret with Sea Eagle's Head pin
Country  Finland
Branch Finnish Navy
Type Marine Commando
Role Amphibious Warfare
Reconnaissance
Unconventional Warfare
Part of Uusimaa Brigade
Garrison/HQ Dragsvik, Raseborg, Finland
Nickname(s) Rannarit
Motto(s) "Militärt kunnande, sammanhållning, framåtanda"
"Military knowledge, cohesion, forward spirit"
Commanders
Current
commander
Commodore Kjell Törner
Jaegers during training.

The Finnish Coastal Jaegers (Swedish: Kustjägarna, and Finnish: Rannikkojääkärit) are the amphibious arm of the Finnish Navy. The unit consists of both regulars and conscripts, predominantly Swedish-speaking, and is located at Nyland Brigade (Uusimaa Brigade) in Dragsvik, near Ekenäs.

Mission

The Finnish Coastal Jaegers role is to conduct counter attacks against enemy landings in the Finnish archipelago, an environment known for small islands and skerries. Jaegers can act on independently or with the support of artillery units, including light or heavy mortars. A small subsection of the Jaeger unit is trained for unconventional warfare and reconnaissance behind enemy lines.

Selection

Conscripts are selected for training at 1. & 2. KustJK (the Coastal Jaeger companies, Swedish; 1. & 2. Kustjägarkompaniet) in Dragsvik on the basis of the physical review taken by all conscripts before they enter military service. After 8 weeks of basic training, privates are assigned to further training. The number of jaegers trained varies, but usually about 30-50% of the conscripts at KJKs go through marine training of which approximately 40% are NCOs or officer candidates. Other conscripts are trained for support roles such as cooks, medics, drivers, boatsmen, easier combat tasks or even transferred to other units.

Conscripts are selected for NCO (Stage 1) education during basic training. Candidates for officer training are selected during the 7-week-long Stage 1 of NCO training. About 10-20% of Stage 1 NCO candidates are sent to the Reserve Officer's School for the 14-week-long course and become officer candidates upon return to Dragsvik.

Training

The main elements of Jaeger training are combat training, weapon handling, endurance and mobility. For privates the training is 6 months and encompasses the fundamental elements of marine warfare. NCO and officer training lasts for 12 months, incorporating urban combat training. A Jaeger candidate is more likely to spend time marching with a heavy rucksack than doing push-ups. Marches are usually carried out with "full field equipment" (meaning 40-50 kg) and can be as long as 80-90km. Instructors put tremendous mental pressure on the soldiers. This is sometimes combined with sleep deprivation. NCO and officer trainees can go with as little as 2–4 hours of sleep during a 4-day exercise.

The difference in length, quality, and intensity of private compared to NCO and Officer training is reflected in the units sent for international duty. These usually consist almost exclusively of NCOs and Officers.

The Green Beret

Coastal Jaegers obtain the right to wear the unit's green beret (jaeger green beret with a golden sea eagle) by reaching the required standards in shooting, running, swimming, strength, completing all major exercises and completing the beret march. The beret march is approximately 80 km in length, over which the Jaeger candidates must navigate by foot, carrying 40–45 kg of equipment. Every 5–10 km the candidates stop to complete tasks, such as medical evacuation of "wounded" soldiers, shooting, weapons handling and map reading. At one point, candidates are put on a boat and driven to an unknown location. They must locate themselves on a map and find their way back to the route. The thoughest beret march known so far was the one held in summer 1996 where the jaegers performed all tasks mentioned above with a total travel distance of approx. 140km (excluding the helicopter travel) during a though time pressure of 24 hrs.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 12, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.