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9th Paratroopers Assault Regiment "Col Moschin"

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9th Paratroopers Assault Regiment "Col Moschin"
9° Reggimento d'Assalto Paracadutisti "Col Moschin"
Regimental coat of arms
Active20 July 1942 — 9 Sept. 1943
1 Oct. 1975 — today
Country Italy
BranchItalian Army
TypeSpecial Forces
Part ofArmy Special Forces Command
Garrison/HQLivorno
Motto(s)"Della folgore l'impeto"
Anniversaries16 June 1918 - Battle of Col Moschin
Decorations
2x Military Order of Italy
3x Silver Medals of Military Valor
1x Gold Medal of Army Valor
1x Silver Medal of Army Valor[1][2][3][4]
Insignia
Regimental gorget patches

The 9th Paratroopers Assault Regiment "Col Moschin" (Italian: 9° Reggimento d'Assalto Paracadutisti "Col Moschin") is a Special Forces unit of the Italian Army based in Livorno in Tuscany. The regiment is part of the Italian Army's infantry arm's Paracadutisti speciality and assigned to the Army Special Forces Command for training, preparation, doctrinal and procedural development, and the materiel acquisition. Operationally the regiment falls under the Italian Armed Forces' Joint Special Forces Operations Command. The regiment is the only military unit which has participated in all out-of-area missions of the Italian Army since World War II.[5][6][7]

History

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World War I

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IX Assault Unit troops after the Battle of Col Moschin in June 1918

In November 1916, during World War I, the Royal Italian Army began to experiment with dedicated assault troops modeled after the Imperial German Army's Stormtroopers. In spring 1917, the first assault units were formed with volunteer personnel. On 27 July 1917, King Victor Emmanuel III sanctioned the formation of the Arditi corps and the corps' assault units. Each assault unit fielded 753 Arditi and had the following organization:[8]

  • Assault Unit[8]
    • Command Squad (10× Arditi)
    • 3× Assault companies (226× Arditi per company)
      • Command Squad (10× Arditi)
      • 4× Assault platoons (44× Arditi)
        • Assault Squad (12× Arditi with a dagger and 20× hand grenades)
        • Attack Squad (10× Arditi with a dagger, 4× hand grenades, and a Carcano carbine with 72 rounds)
        • 2× Attack squads (8× Arditi with a dagger, 4× hand grenades, and a Carcano carbine with 72 rounds; 2× Arditi with a Villar Perosa submachine guns with 500 rounds)
        • Ammunition Team (2× Arditi carrying 150× hand grenades)
      • Specialists Platoon (40× Arditi)
        • Machine Gunners Section (18× Arditi with 2× Fiat–Revelli Mod. 1914 machine guns with 20,000 rounds per gun)
        • Sappers Section (12× Arditi)
        • Signalers Section (10× Arditi)
    • Support Company
      • Canonniers Section (37× Canonniers with 2× 65/17 infantry support guns)
      • Machine Gunners Section (18× Arditi with 2× Fiat–Revelli Mod. 1914 machine guns with 20,000 rounds per gun)
      • Replacements Squad (10× Arditi)

On 18 and 19 August 1917, three assault units fought in the Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo and successfully cleared trenches manned by Austro-Hungarian Army troops. After the disastrous Battle of Caporetto the Royal Italian Army added a a flamethrower section to each assault company. The Arditi also received a standardized uniform, which included black gorget patches and a black Fez with a black tassel. In spring 1917, each Italian army corps received an assault unit, among them the IX Assault Unit (Italian: IX Reparto d'Assalto"), which was formed in May 1918, by the regimental depot of the 45th Infantry Regiment (Brigade "Reggio") in Sassari for the IX Army Corps.[5][7][9]

On 15 June 1918, the Austro-Hungarian Army began the Second Battle of the Piave River along the Piave river and on the Monte Grappa massif. In the latter sector the Austro-Hungarian forces managed to occupy part of the Italian first line during the first day of the battle. On 16 June, the IX Assault Unit was ordered to retake the Italian positions on the summits of Col Fenilon, Col Fagheron, and Col Moschin, which had been lost the day before on. The IX Assault Unit retook all three positions in a lightning attack and held the summits until Italian infantry could be brought up.[5][7]

On 20 October 1918, in preparation of the Battle of Vittorio Veneto, the IX Assault Unit attacked and conquered the summit of Col della Beretta in the Monte Grappa sector, but suffered heavy casualties in the attack. For its conduct on 15 June and 20 October 1918 the IX Assault Unit was awarded Italy's second-highest military honor the Silver Medal of Military Valor. By the end of the war 39 assault units had been formed: twelve assigned to the army's two assault divisions, 14 assigned to the Italian field armies, two deployed to the Western Front, one deployed to the Macedonian Front, one deployed to the Albanian Front, and nine as replacement units. After the war all Arditi units were disbanded.[1][7][9]

World War II

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10th Arditi Regiment

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On 15 May 1942 the I Arditi Battalion was formed in Bracciano by the regimental depot of the 82nd Infantry Regiment "Torino". The battalion consisted of the 101st Paratroopers Company, 102nd Watercraft Company (later renamed: 102nd Landing Company), and 103rd Trucks Company (later renamed: 103rd Terrestrial Company). Each company consisted of ten patrols of two officers and ten men each. Advanced training for the paratroopers occurred at the Royal Italian Air Force Paratroopers School Tarquinia, while advanced training for the watercraft personnel occurred at the Royal Italian Navy Divers School in Livorno and at the naval base at Pula. The personnel of the trucks company was trained to take fixed positions or heavily guarded locations. All members of the battalion were also trained in the use of explosives at the Sappers School in Civitavecchia.[7]

On 20 July 1942 the Royal Italian Army General Staff ordered to form an Arditi Regiment, which would consist of a command, regimental services, and at least two Arditi battalions. The regiment was based in Santa Severa and on 1 August the I Arditi Battalion entered the regiment. The regiment was under direct control of the General Staff's Operations Office.[7]

On 20 August the II Arditi Battalion was formed, which consisted of the 111th Paratroopers Company, 112th Watercraft Company (later renamed: 112th Landing Company), and 113th Terrestrial Company. On 15 September the Arditi Regiment was renamed 10th Arditi Regiment. In January 1943 the I Arditi Battalion with the 101st Paratroopers Company and 102nd Landing Company was transferred to Cagliari in Sardinia from where the battalion conducted operations behind allied lines in Algeria and Tunisia. Before the two companies departed for Sardinia each detached two patrols, which were sent to Rhodes and intended to operate against British forces in Cyprus. Meanwhile the 103rd Terrestrial Company was transferred to Tunisia for the Tunisian Campaign, where it arrived on 23 February 1943. The company operated in the desert deep behind enemy lines on reconnaissance and intelligence gathering missions.[7]

On 1 March 1943 the formation of the III Arditi Battalion concluded. The battalion consisted of the 121st Paratroopers Company, 122nd Landing Company, and 123rd Terrestrial Company. In April 1943 the two patrols of the 101st Paratroopers Company returned from Rhodes without having undertaken any missions. On 4 May the 113th Terrestrial Company was transferred to Scordia in Sicily, from where it was intended to operate against allied targets in Tunisia. On 13 May 1943 Axis forces in Tunisia surrendered, including the 103rd Terrestrial Company. One week later, on 20 May 1943, the II Arditi Battalion and the 112th Landing Company were transferred to Sicily, while on 29 May the 123rd Terrestrial Company was transferred to Sardinia and assigned to the I Arditi Battalion to replace the lost 103rd Terrestrial Company.[7]

On 10 June the regiment was reorganized and three new special companies were formed, which consisted of personnel capable of operating behind enemy lines in civilian clothes. The regiment consisted now of the following units:[5][7]

  • 10th Arditi Regiment, in Santa Severa[7]
    • I Arditi Battalion, in Cagliari (Sardinia)
      • 102nd Landing Company, 123rd Terrestrial Company, 110th Special Company
    • II Arditi Battalion, in Scordia (Sicily)
      • 112th Landing Company, 113th Terrestrial Company, 120th Special Company
    • III Arditi Battalion, in Santa Severa
      • 122nd Landing Company, 133rd Terrestrial Company, 130th Special Company
    • IV Arditi Battalion, in Santa Severa
      • 101st Paratroopers Company, 111th Paratroopers Company, and 121st Paratroopers Company
    • Services Platoon

On 19 1943 June the last personnel returned from Rhodes.[7]

Operations

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The first operation of the regiment occurred on 16-17 January 1943, when a patrol of the 101st Paratroopers Company landed in Algeria on an intelligence gathering mission. In the night of 16 February 1943 a patrol of the same company blew up the railway bridge at Béni Mansour on the Béni Mansour-Bejaïa line. From January to July 1943 the regiment undertook twenty air or sea assaults against railway bridges, airfields, and other objects in Algeria, Tunisia, or Libya.[7]

On 10 July 1943 allied forces landed on Sicily. Initially the II Arditi Battalion was tasked with rounding up dispersed allied paratroopers, but on 14 July the battalion was moved to the Primosole Bridge across the Simeto river to the South of Catania, where in the night of 14-15th July the battalion defeated a British attempt to take the bridge in a surprise attack during Operation Fustian. In the evening of 30 July 1943 the 4th Patrol of the 112th Landing Company embarked at Giardini Naxos on three assault boats of the Royal Italian Navy. The ten Arditi landed behind allied lines at Brucoli from where the patrol hiked inland. After hiding during the day the patrol attacked an allied fuel and ammunition depot, then returned to Italian lines on foot and then by swimming around the English positions at the mouth of the Simeto river. On 13 August the II Aridit Battalion was shipped across the Strait of Messina and returned to Santa Severa.[7]

On 8 September 1943 the Armistice of Cassibile was announced and the 10th Arditi Regiment split. The 111th Paratroopers Company and 122nd Landing Company fought in the defense of Rome against invading German forces, while the rest of the regiment remained in its barracks. The Germans disbanded the regiment and most of its companies, while the 112th Landing Company and 121st Paratroopers Company joined the fascist National Republican Army of Benito Mussolini.[7]

IX Assault Unit

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On 8 September 1943 the I Arditi Battalion in Sardinia refused German demands to surrender and the battalion resisted on 12 September a German attempt to disarm it. After the German retreat from Sardinia the battalion remained on the island until February 1944, when it was shipped to Naples, where it landed on the 19 of the month. On 20 March the battalion was renamed IX Assault Unit and assigned to the Italian Co-belligerent Army's I Motorized Grouping, which on 18 April 1944 entered the Italian Liberation Corps. The Italian Liberation Corps fought on the allied side in the Italian campaign. Until 25 July 1944 the IX Assault Unit fought at Colli a Volturno, Guardiagrele, Cingoli, and along the Musone and Esino rivers, and in the Battle of Ancona, where the unit achieved the decisive breakthrough of the German line at Casenuove. For its conduct in these battles the IX Assault Unit was awarded its second Silver Medal of Military Valor.[5][1][7]

On 24 September the IX Assault Unit entered the 68th Infantry Regiment "Legnano" as III Battalion "Col Moschin". The battalion was equipped with British weapons and materiel and consisted of approximately 400 men divided into a command company, three assault companies, and a support weapons company. The 68th Infantry Regiment "Legnano" was assigned to the Combat Group "Legnano", which entered the front on 23 March 1945 as part of the IV US Corps on the river Idice. The combat group fought in the allied Spring Offensive and took part in the Battle of Bologna. For its conduct in these battles the III Battalion "Col Moschin" was awarded the unit's third Silver Medal of Military Valor.[5][1][7]

On 1 August 1946 the III Battalion "Col Moschin" was disbanded and its personnel used to form the III Fusiliers Battalion of the 68th Infantry Regiment "Legnano".[7]

Cold War

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On 20 April 1953 a Paratroopers Saboteurs Company was formed by the Italian Army's Infantry School in Cesano. On 1 June 1954 the company was expanded to Paratroopers Saboteurs Unit. On 10 May 1957 the unit moved from Cesano to Pisa and was assigned to the army's Military Parachuting Center there. On 25 September 1961 the unit was renamed Paratroopers Saboteurs Battalion. On 1 January 1963 the Military Parachuting Center was reorganized and renamed Paratroopers Brigade, which on 10 June 1967 was renamed Paratroopers Brigade "Folgore".[5][7]

During the 1975 army reform the Italian Army disbanded the regimental level and newly independent battalions were granted for the first time their own flags. On 1 October 1975 the Paratroopers Saboteurs Battalion was renamed 9th Paratroopers Assault Battalion "Col Moschin" and assigned the flag and traditions of the 10th Arditi Regiment, and the traditions of the IX Assault Unit.[7][10] The battalion was assigned to the Paratroopers Brigade "Folgore" and consisted of the following units:[7][11]

  • 9th Paratroopers Assault Battalion "Col Moschin"
    • Command
    • Command and Services Company
      • Command and Services Platoon
      • Amphibious Platoon
      • Transport Platoon
    • Assault Company (Recruits Training)
      • Command and Services Platoon
      • 2× Recruits platoons
    • 2× Assault companies
      • 6× Operational detachments per company

At the time the battalion fielded 340 men (36 officers, 196 non-commissioned officers, and 108 soldiers).[11] From September 1982 to November 1983 personnel of the battalion was deployed with the Multinational Force in Lebanon. From May to October 1991 two companies of the battalion and two companies of the 5th Paratroopers Battalion "El Alamein" formed a tactical group, which was deployed to northern Iraq for the American-led Operation Provide Comfort.[5][7]

Recent times

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From 22 December 1992 to 7 September 1993 personnel of the battalion was deployed to Somalia for the American-led Unified Task Force. After the regiment's return to Italy it was awarded a Gold Medal of Army Valor for the personnel's conduct in Somalia.[5][1][7][2]

On 24 June 1995 the 9th Paratroopers Assault Battalion "Col Moschin" was elevated to regiment and renamed battalion entered the 9th Paratroopers Assault Regiment "Col Moschin". The regiment consisted of a command, a command and services company, the 1st Raiders Battalion, the 101st Paratroopers Assault Company, and the Raiders Training Base.[5][7]

From 3 July 1996 to 24 March 1997 personnel of the regiment was deployed to Bosnia and Herzegovina for the NATO-led Implementation Force and then Stabilisation Force in Bosnia and Herzegovina. After the regiment's return to Italy it was awarded a Silver Medal of Army Valor for the personnel's conduct in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[5][1][3]

On 19 September 2014 the regiment left the Paratroopers Brigade "Folgore" and was assigned to the Army Special Forces Command. In 2022 the regiment moved from Pisa to its new base at Camp Darby near Livorno.[5]

Organization

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As of January 2024 the 9th Paratroopers Assault Regiment "Col Moschin" is organized as follows:[12]

  • 9th Paratroopers Assault Regiment "Col Moschin", at Camp Darby[12]
    • 1st Raiders Battalion
      • 110th Raiders Company
      • 120th Raiders Company
      • 130th Raiders Company
      • 140th Raiders Company
    • Operational Support Battalion
    • Raiders Training Unit
      • Raiders Training Base
      • 101st Recruits Company (Basic Training)
      • 102nd Recruits Company (Advanced Training)
    • Staff and Personnel Office
    • Operations, Training and Information Office
    • Logistic and Administrative Office

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f "9° Reggimento d'Assalto Paracadutisti "Col Moschin" - Il Medagliere". Italian Army. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
  2. ^ a b "9° Battaglione d'Assalto Paracadutisti "Col Moschin"". President of Italy. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
  3. ^ a b "9° Reggimento d'Assalto Paracadutisti "Col Moschin"". President of Italy. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
  4. ^ "9° Reggimento d'Assalto Paracadutisti "Col Moschin"". President of Italy. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "9° Reggimento d'Assalto Paracadutisti "Col Moschin" – La Storia". Italian Army. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
  6. ^ "9° Reggimento d'Assalto Paracadutisti "Col Moschin"". Italian Army. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 – Vol. Primo – Tomo I. Rome: SME – Ufficio Storico. p. 564.
  8. ^ a b Ravara, Raoul. "Evoluzione e continuità storica dei "reparti speciali" delle forze armate italiane". Università degli Studi di Milano. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
  9. ^ a b "Gli Arditi". Italian Army. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
  10. ^ "Decreto del Presidente della Repubblica 12 novembre 1976, n. 846". Quirinale - Presidenza della Repubblica. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
  11. ^ a b Stefani, Filippo (1989). La storia della dottrina e degli ordinamenti dell'Esercito Italiano – Vol. III – Tomo 2°. Rome: Ufficio Storico – Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. p. 1230.
  12. ^ a b Scarpitta, Alberto. "Il potenziamento del Comando Forze Speciali dell'Esercito". Analisi Difesa. Retrieved 5 November 2024.