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Portuguese Marine Corps | |
---|---|
Corpo de Fuzileiros | |
Active | 1618–1851 1924–1934 1961–present |
Country | Portugal |
Branch | Portuguese Navy |
Type | Marines, special operations capable |
Size | 950 (2023)[1] |
Garrison/HQ | Lisbon Naval Base |
Nickname(s) | Fuzos |
Patron | St. George |
Motto(s) | Braço às armas feito ("An arm to Arms addrest", from Os Lusíadas, Canto X, 155, v. 1) |
Engagements | Dutch–Portuguese War Napoleonic Wars World War I Portuguese Colonial War Bosnia and Herzegovina 1996-2004 East Timor: International Force East Timor United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor United Nations Mission of Support to East Timor East Timor 2006-Present Guinea-Bissau 2006-Present Mozambique: United Nations Operation in Mozambique 1993-1994 Mozambique 2006-Present Afghanistan 2013 Lithuania 2019-present |
Commanders | |
Current commander | Captain of sea and war Rogério Paulo Figueira Martins de Brito |
The Portuguese Marine Corps (Portuguese: Corpo de Fuzileiros, lit. 'Corps of Fusiliers') is the special operations capable amphibious force of the Portuguese Navy.
It has roles similar to the ones of the USMC Reconnaissance Battalions and of the British Royal Marine Commandos. The Corps is specialised in air assault, amphibious warfare, anti-tank warfare, coastal reconnaissance and raiding, commando style raids, counterinsurgency, desert warfare, indirect fire support raiding, irregular warfare, ISTAR, jungle warfare, maneuver warfare, maritime interdiction, mountain warfare, providing security at naval base or shore stations, reconnaissance for gathering military intelligence, support special operations, tracking targets, urban warfare, and VBSS operations. It is an Elite Marine Commando Force, operating as a rapid-reaction force. Today's Corpo de Fuzileiros is the premier raid force. The Fuzileiros remains an all-volunteer force with an intensive screening and selection process followed by combat-focused training. Fuzileiros are resourced to maintain exceptional proficiency, experience and readiness.
The Portuguese Marines (Portuguese: Fuzileiros) have their direct origin in the oldest permanent military unit of Portugal, the regiment of the Navy of the Crown of Portugal (Terço da Armada da Coroa de Portugal), created in 1618. However, since 1585, specialized troops existed to provide artillery and riflemen in the Portuguese warships. The regiment of the Navy was soon considered an elite unit. As the King of Portugal did not have a royal guard (only the ceremonial Royal Guard of the Halberdiers), this regiment was also used in the role of bodyguard of the Monarchs.
In the 18th century, a second regiment of naval infantry was created. In 1791, a regiment of naval artillery was added to the force.
In 1797, in the reign of Queen Maria I, all the regiments of the Navy were merged and integrated into the new Royal Brigade of the Navy (Brigada Real da Marinha), which included three divisions: Fusiliers (fuzileiros), Artillerymen (artilheiros) and Artificers (artifices e lastradores). In 1807, the brigade was reorganized, going to be made of three battalions, all of them of artillerymen.
In 1808, the Army of Napoleon invaded and occupied Portugal. In order not to be captured and, so, to maintain secure the Portuguese sovereignty, the Royal Family and most of the Court relocated to the Portuguese colony of Brazil, on board of the Portuguese fleet and accompanied by the majority of the Royal Brigade of the Navy. This contingent of the brigade continued to remain in Brazil, even after its independence in 1822, given origin to what is now the Brazilian Marine Corps. In 1809, a force of the brigade in Brazil participated in the Portuguese conquest of French Guiana.
With most of the original force of the brigade remaining in Brazil, in 1822 it started to be reconstituted in Portugal. In 1823, it was organized in two battalions.
During the Portuguese Civil War (1828–1834), the Royal Brigade of the Navy aligned on the side of the Miguelite forces. On the opposite side however, the Liberals created a Battalion of the Navy (Batalhão de Marinha). In 1832, the Liberal Battalion of the Navy was augmented and transformed in a Regiment (Regimento da Armada) with four battalions.
In 1836, already after the end of the Civil War, the Royal Brigade of the Navy was extinguished. It was replaced by the new Naval Battalion (Batalhão Naval) created in 1837.
In each of the ships' crews of the Portuguese Navy, only the officers and the members of the embarked detachments of the Naval Battalion (and previously of the former Royal Brigade of the Navy) were military personnel, with the sailors being civilians. The different status of the several parts of the crews always created issues.
In 1851, the decision was taken to militarize the sailors, with the creation of the Corps of Military Seamen (Corpo de Marinheiros Militares). This Corps started to be responsible for the providing of the ships' crews. It was organized in 22 crew companies, each one subdivided in two half-companies, plus a depot company. Each of these companies and half companies was intended to constitute the crew of a ship, in rotation. All seamen of the Corps received a general training that included seamanship, artillery, infantry, bladed weapon combat, boarding and amphibious landing. In each company, a number of seamen received an advanced training in naval artillery, constituting its squad or artillerymen. This military training meant that the seamen were able to assume the responsibility to perform also the role of naval infantry when needed, what made unnecessary the existence of the Naval Battalion, which was then dissolved.
From this date, whenever there was a need to perform an amphibious operation, landing detachments were constituted with seamen taken from the ships' crews. For the colonial campaigns of the late 19th and early 20th centuries and for the World War I, larger naval infantry forces and naval battalions were organized in the Corps of Seamen itself.
In 1924, a permanent unit of naval infantry was again created, this being the new Brigade of the Naval Guard (Brigada da Guarda Naval). However, it ceased to exist in 1934, with the role of naval infantry being again entirely assumed by the regular seamen when needed.
1960 The Elite Navy Commandos only reappeared as permanent force in 1961. In 1960, four Portuguese Navy sailors, one Navy Officer and three Enlisted Sailors, were sent to England, where they successfully attended the British Commando Course and returned to Portugal, starting the formation of the Elite Navy Commando Force Fuzileiros. The Fuzileiros were created in 1961 as counter-guerrilla navy special forces, corresponding to the Portuguese Navy's need to have units specially adapted to this type of warfare, which it had to face within the scope of the Overseas War, which began in 1961. With the beginning of the Colonial War. Besides the Marines School (Escola de Fuzileiros), two types of operational marine units were created at that time, these being the detachments of special marines (DFE, destacamentos de fuzileiros especiais) and the companies of marines (CF, companhias de fuzileiros). While the DFE were designed to operate as Marine Raiders units, the CF were focused in the naval patrolling and in the defense of naval ships and facilities. During this war, and up to 1975, more than 14,000 marines fought in Portuguese Guinea, Angola and Mozambique.
Until 1975, a unified Marine Corps Command did not exist, with the diverse DFE and CF being separate units, depending from the several naval and maritime defense commands of the areas where they operated. In this year, the Marine Corps (Corpo de Fuzileiros) was created, unifying all marine units under a single command and become Elite Commando Raid Force.
Since 2015, the Portuguese Marine Corps is organized into:
Includes three permanent Marine forces:
Constitutes a special operations maritime task unit (SOMTU).
The permanent task units of the Force Projection Unit are designed to conduct Commando Raids.
The Marine Corps elements are based at the Vale do Zebro facilities (Marines School) and the Alfeite facilitiesMarines Base.
Initial training to become an enlisted Fuzileiro (marine) lasts about 42 weeks. The training is conducted at the Marines School (Escola de Fuzileiros) in Vale de Zebro. It is physically and mentally rigorous and demanding, with only 15% to 35% of the initial trainees passing and becoming Fuzileiros.
The recruits in training are constantly under stress and pressure from instructors leaving them no respite. All activities are timed and scored: marching several tens of kilometers with equipment and weapon, land and mud obstacle courses, navigation at night on the ground. The training is punctuated by firearms training and special combat techniques, rappelling and climbing, boating, basic demolitions, communications and hand-to-hand combat.
The later stages of the course are mostly field based exercises mimicking real operations within land and amphibious theaters. This last phase puts into test what was taught and practised in the initial stages like reconnaissance patrols, assault raids, ambushes, CQB/urban operations, SERE, NBC warfare etc.
The course culminates in a 60 km group march which must be completed in a set time.
After completing their training with success, the Fuzileiros receive the dark blue beret and the course badge on an official ceremony before being assigned to operational units.
During and after the Fuzileiros Course, Fuzileiros military personnel receive training in areas as varied as:
Weapon | Origin | Type | Caliber | Image | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pistols | |||||
Glock 17 | Austria | Semi-automatic pistol | 9mm | 250 Glock Gen 5 additional units received in 2023[3] | |
Submachine gus | |||||
Brügger & Thomet MP9 | Switzerland | Submachine gun | 9mm | Used by Special Actions Detachment[4] | |
Heckler & Koch MP5A3/A5 | Germany | Submachine Gun | 9mm | Some modernized with Spuhr kit and Aimpoint CompM4 red dot sight's[5][6] | |
Assault rifles | |||||
Heckler & Koch G36 | Germany | Assault rifle | 5.56x45mm | Used by Special Actions Detachment and Sappers Divers Group.[7] Versions C and K are used. | |
Heckler & Koch HK416A5 | Germany | Assault rifle | 5.56×45mm | More than 250 rifles used by Special Actions Detachment, Force Projection Unit, Combat Support Detachment and Sappers Divers Group[8][9] | |
Heckler & Koch HK417A2 | Germany | Battle rifle | 7.62x51mm | Used by Special Actions Detachment and Sappers Divers Group[10] | |
Heckler & Koch G3A3/A4 | Germany | Battle rifle | 7.62x51mm | Modernized with Spuhr kit and Aimpoint CompM4 red dot sight's.[11] | |
M16A2 | United States | Assault rifle | 5.56x45mm | Equipped with M203 40 mm grenade launcher. used by Special Actions Detachment[12] | |
Sniper rifles | |||||
Heckler & Koch HK41A2 | Germany | Sniper support rifle | 7.62x51mm | Equipped with the Trijicon VCOG 1-6x24 scope, used by Special Actions Detachment.[13] | |
Heckler & Koch MSG-90 | Germany | Sniper support rifle | 7.62x51mm | Used essentially by PELBOARD. | |
Mauser 86SR | United States | Sniper rifle | 7.62x51mm | Used by Reconnaissance Units.[14] | |
AI Arctic Warfare | United Kingdom | Sniper rifle | 7.62x51mm | Used by Special Actions Detachment[15] | |
Accuracy International AWM | United Kingdom | Sniper rifle | .338 Lapua Magnum | Used by Special Actions Detachment[16] | |
Accuracy International AW50 | United Kingdom | Sniper rifle | 12.7mm | Used by Special Actions Detachment[15] | |
Machine guns | |||||
FN Minimi Mk3 | Belgium | Light machine gun | 5.56x45mm | At least 36 units purchased in 2023[17] | |
Rheinmetall MG3 | Germany | General-purpose machine gun | 7.62x51mm | Also mounted on vehicles[18] | |
Browning M2HB | United States | Heavy machine gun | .50 BMG | Used on tripods and mounted on vehicles[19] | |
Shotguns | |||||
Remington 870 | United States | Pump-action shotgun | 12-gauge | [20] | |
Mossberg 590 | United States | Pump-action shotgun | 12-gauge | ||
Grenade launchers | |||||
Heckler & Koch GMG | Germany | Grenade launcher | 40 mm grenade | Used on tripods and mounted on vehicles[21] | |
Heckler & Koch AG36 | Germany | Grenade launcher | 40 mm grenade | Used on HK G36 rifles[22] | |
M203 | United States | Grenade launcher | 40 mm grenade | Used on M16A2 rifles by Special Actions Detachment[12] | |
Mortars | |||||
Tampella B | Finland | Mortar | 120mm | 12 units used by the Mortar Platoon (PELMORT)[23][24] | |
ECIA L | Spain | Mortar | 81mm | 8 units used by the Mortar Platoon (PELMORT)[25] | |
FBP Morteirete | Portugal | Mortar | 60mm | Fast mortar | |
Anti-tank weapons | |||||
MILAN | France | Anti-tank guided missile | 115mm | Some mounted on vehicles[19] | |
Carl Gustav M3 | Sweden | Shoulder launched recoilless rifle | 84mm | [26] |
NATO code | OF-10 | OF-9 | OF-8 | OF-7 | OF-6 | OF-5 | OF-4 | OF-3 | OF-2 | OF-1 | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portuguese Navy[37] |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Almirante da Armada | Almirante | Vice-almirante | Contra-almirante | Comodoro | Capitão de mar e guerra | Capitão de fragata | Capitão-tenente | Primeiro-tenente | Segundo-tenente | Guarda-marinha/ Subtenente |
NATO code | OR-9 | OR-8 | OR-7 | OR-6 | OR-5 | OR-4 | OR-3 | OR-2 | OR-1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portuguese Navy[37] |
No insignia | No insignia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sargento-mor | Sargento-chefe | Sargento-ajudante | Primeiro-sargento | Segundo-sargento | Subsargento | Cabo-mor | Cabo | Primeiro-marinheiro | Segundo-marinheiro | Primeiro-grumete | Segundo-grumete |