Mohammed Najib
Amman
The Snow Leopard Unit of the Chinese People's Armed Police Force has won the fifth annual Warrior Competition held at King Abdullah II Special Operations Training Center (KASOTC) in Amman from 24-28 March.
The special duty group of the Special Police Academy of the Chinese People's Armed Police Force's came second, followed by the Canadian Special Operations Regiment. The Palestinian Presidential Guard, which has been trained by Russia, the US and Jordan, came in fourth position, a significant improvement on its 10th place in 2012.
Thirty three special operations and counter-terrorism teams from 18 countries participated, with Algeria, Bahrain, France, Greece, Iraq, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, and the US also sending teams.
The competition was expanded to include 15 activities instead of the seven in 2012. Three of these took place at night and three were surprise events designed to test the teams' ability to react quickly to unexpected challenges. The tests included hostage rescue, aircraft assault, building entry, casualty evacuation, and various shooting exercises.
Brigadier General (rtd) Frank Toney, the director of KASOTC, told IHS Jane's that the Warrior Competition aimed to allow participants to share experience and tactics. "If the bad guys co-operate and co-ordinate among themselves, so the good guys should co-operate better to combat them," he said.
The commander of the Iraqi prime minister's counter-terrorism unit, Brigadier General Khadem Jawad, supported this view, telling IHS Jane's that his unit decided to participate in order to keep up with the latest developments in terrorist tactics and responses.
"The Warrior Competition has become the Olympics of special operations forces," Jon Worman, director of business development at KASOTC, said.
Samuel Katz, former editor-in-chief of Special Operations Report magazine, told IHS Jane's that "competitions for special operations and intervention units are great for boosting the morale of a team or enabling operators from different countries, cultures, and even political sides, to network and exchange tradecraft."
He added, however, that it was difficult to simulate the real-world challenges faced by elite units. "There are no guarantees in this line of work other than danger, risk, and courage, and those are intangibles that cannot be replicated in competition," he said.
Pointing out that the US Navy SEAL unit that received widespread publicity and accolades for killing Osama bin Laden would have been viewed quite differently had its mission ended in disaster, Katz said: "Elite units are often judged by their last mission."
Copyright © IHS Global Limited, 2013