Haven't heard of Poland's Special Forces?

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Adam

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They're real, they're serious, and they're here to save the day.

IT CAME AS A SURPRISE to many when the U.S. postwar plans for Iraq were finally revealed. Like Gaul, Iraq would be divided into three parts: an American zone, a British zone, and a Polish zone. But what role did Poland play during the war? It turns out a very important one--albeit one that was kept mostly secret.

One of the primary objectives during the early stages of Operation Iraqi Freedom was the port at Umm Qasr. Without it, delivering adequate humanitarian aid to the rest of Iraq would have been nearly impossible for the coalition. Not long after the start of the war, the port was secured--in large part thanks to GROM, Poland's elite commandos.

Who even knew Poland had special forces? For a while, not many. The Polish government waited three years before publicly disclosing GROM's existence. Standing for Grupa Reagowania Operacyjno Mobilnego (Operational Mobile Response Group), the name actually stems from a special-forces commander, Gromoslaw Czempinski, who, during the first Gulf War, led a Polish unit into Western Iraq to rescue a group of CIA operatives. One of the other men on that secret mission was Slawomir Petelicki--the father of GROM.

"GROM was my idea," General Petelicki says in his husky, accented voice. "I presented it to the new democratic government" in 1991 "and because I liked to give honor to the commander of my unit, I named it after Gromoslaw." (Grom also means thunder in Polish.) Petelicki, now retired from the military, spoke from Warsaw where he is now an independent consultant for, among others, Ernst & Young. It's quite a change of pace for a man once described in Jane's Intelligence Review as "his country's James Bond and Rambo wrapped neatly into one daunting package." (Petelicki also serves as chairman of the Special Forces Foundation. "I try to help former commandos and discourage them from going into organized crime--where there are many lucrative offers for work.")

Petelicki tried selling his idea of an elite Polish commando group much earlier, "but those Russians didn't like to have real special forces operating in Poland--they feared we could start training in guerrilla warfare against them." But the need did arise in 1990, following Operation Bridge, in which Poland helped Soviet Jews enter Israel. Intelligence reports indicated that Hezbollah and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine were planning reprisals inside the Polish border. Then-Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki recognized the threat and approved of Petelicki's plan for a new counter-terror force.

"I had a lot of candidates at first" says the general. "That first team I assembled from people I knew well. They were all in their 30s. Now the age of recruits is about 26." According to Jane's Intelligence Review, "GROM candidates were first subjected to a grueling psychological examination meant to search for confident and innovative soldiers as well as those who, though they might be lacking in physical strength, possessed the rare gift of internal iron will." The candidates then undergo back-breaking training deep in the Carpathian Mountains.

Only 1 to 5 percent of these candidates actually get into GROM. But once they are in, the real training begins: GROM operators practice "killing house" entries (with commanders often serving as hostages), storm hijacked commercial airliners complete with mannequin terrorists and bullet traps, and lead raids onto ships and offshore platforms. All of this is done with live ammunition. The commandos are trained in paramedics and demolitions and many are SCUBA experts. They mostly work in four to six-man assault teams except for the snipers who are separate because, as Petelicki explains, "that is a job for special people and they are very hard to replace."

Radek Sikorski, Poland's former deputy minister of defense and now executive director of the New Atlantic Initiative, recently told me he witnessed the snipers at their best during a training exercise in 1999. "The GROM operators were working alongside the Delta Force and were tasked with rescuing the chairman of the National Bank of Poland. He was being held hostage by terrorists in possession of a nuclear device." Sikorski says the snipers waited for days in complete disguise. "They just followed the terrorists' routines and then started to pick them off one by one."

GROM operators are said to be martial arts experts and capable of "cold killing." "We created our own style of martial arts," says Petelicki. "I have an old friend who is a master of karate and jujitsu and is a sixth degree black belt. He created the style with other specialists--it is most similar to what the Israelis do."

And what about "cold killing"? Asked if the ominous term refers to garrotes or piano wire, Petelicki replies "Yes." Pausing to choose his words carefully, he explains, "Many things. For instance, we can create a weapon from . . . well . . . many things." The weapon used most by GROM is the MP5 submachine gun. They also get to choose their own sidearm--most choose either the Glock Model 19 or the SIG-Sauer P228.

PETELICKI says that GROM is a mixture of the Delta Force, SAS, and the Navy SEALs. "We took what we found best from each group." (GROM trainers have been to Fort Bragg as well as Hereford--home of the SAS.)

For the past twelve years, GROM operators have engaged in numerous operations, including peacekeeping in the Balkans and Haiti. In 1997, they successfully captured Slavko Dokmanovic, aka, "the Butcher of Vukovar" who was held responsible for the murder of 260 Croats. Despite being well-protected by Serb commandos, Dokmanovic was successfully captured alive (his bodyguards didn't fare so well).

So what was the significance in having 56 commandos from the 300-member GROM take part in Operation Iraqi Freedom? "This war saved GROM," says Petelicki. "Without it, it would have been broken up between the army and navy. But now everyone knows about GROM in Poland and they are proud of them."

Radek Sikorski observes that "It was wise for the United States to show countries who backed it in this war that they are appreciated. This will probably pave the way for more 'coalitions of the willing.' Poland took a lot of risks supporting America. It also took a beating from some of its European friends." Sikorski thinks this could be the beginning of a special relationship with the United States, akin to the one shared by Great Britain, but warns "it is still in the very early stages and much will also depend on America's staying power in the region, its willingness to remain interested in Central Europe. One thing the Americans could do is move their bases out of Germany and into Poland, which has less population density and greater space to conduct exercises."

Since GROM's creation 12 years ago, only 4 commandos have been killed in operations. I asked General Petelicki if, during those years, there is one mission that stands out. "Although 70 percent of our operations are still top secret, the one operation I liked best was this last one at Umm Qasr. That was definitely my favorite. [He sighs.] I was jealous I could not be there instead of Colonel Polko [the current commander of GROM]. Umm Qasr was a very risky operation--a lot of explosives were used--but there were no casualties for us." He adds, "I liked it because we were able to help our friends, the Americans, who helped us create GROM. It was a real masterpiece."

GROM took part in the US-led Operation Iraqi Freedom. Operating closely with US Navy SEALs, 56 members of GROM helped clear the port of Umm Qasr and nearby oil terminals and also participated in the capture and holding of the Mukarayin Dam, which could have been used to flood Baghdad.

One of the more specialized units within GROM is Poland’s special combat diver group, Grupa Specjalna Pletwonurkow (GSP), more commonly known as “Formoza,†which was recently operating in the Persian Gulf region. U.S. Navy sources revealed to Jane’s International Defence Review (IDR) in May 2003 that a small unit of Polish Special Operations forces was engaged in maritime interdiction operations. The Polish Navy has not yet admitted that it sent Formoza personnel to the Gulf, but the Polish logistic support ship, ORP Kontradmiral Xawery Czernicki had been stationed in Bahrain since July 2002. The ship preformed operations with the Royal Australian Navy frigates HMAS Anzac (F150) and HMAS Darwin (F04) and the U.S. Navy vessels USS Paul Hamilton (DDG-60) and USS Rueben James (FFG-58). However, the U.S. Navy “unofficially assured†IDR that Formoza divers preformed well during missions by the side of U.S. Navy SEALs combatants.

GROM has been operating quietly with US forces in the war against terrorism. Commandos from GROM were sent to Afghanistan to aid in the search for Taliban and terrorist soldiers.

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GROM, Poland’s elite special forces unit, is garnering praises from all quarters for its performance in the current Gulf war, further enhancing that central European country’s reputation in the United States and adding to the relationship between America and ‘New Europe’.

An acronym for Operational Maneuver Reconnaissance Group (‘thunder’ in Polish), GROM was formed in 1991 after Poland faced threats from Islamic terrorist organizations for assisting a large-scale, secret migration of Jews from the former Soviet Union to Israel. Since then, its members, which, rare for a special forces unit, also contain women, have served in Haiti, Bosnia and Afghanistan before their current deployment in the Iraqi campaign.

In the Balkans, GROM became the first military unit in Bosnia to arrest a war criminal, Slavko Dokmanovic, “The Butcher of Vukovarâ€, before acting as bodyguard for American Ambassador William Walker in Kosovo. The UN-sponsored effort in Haiti saw the Poles perform with such distinction that the United States awarded “Poland’s thunderbolt†with the Army Commendation Medal, the first foreign military unit ever honored so.

In the current Iraqi campaign GROM has only added to its reputation. Fifty-six of its commandos were first operating on Iraq’s southern coast, where they secured an oil platform and helped capture Umm Qasr, and are now believed to be with an American unit around Baghdad. A photo of GROM members handing over Iraqi prisoners to US troops that appeared in the media caused a massive wave of pride in Poland and among the ten million Polish-Americans in the United States

Poland’s presence in the current conflict is owed to the Polish government of Prime Minister Leszek Miller, which responded almost immediately to the American request for military assistance. This aid also includes an anti-chemical warfare unit and a logistics ship. However, most of Poland’s other armed forces are still outfitted with antiquated, Soviet-era equipment, limiting their deployment abroad. Nevertheless, by committing forces to the Gulf, Poland did honor its offer to support the United States after 9/11.

Reasons for Poland’s strong support for America in the Iraqi war are varied. Besides a genuine desire to help, Poland’s assistance is also part of that country’s policy of building a strong relationship with America. Although Poland is part of Europe and will soon join the European Union, it is looking across the ocean. Poles have never forgotten how France and England let their country down in 1939 and place little faith in them, while trusting Germany and Russia even less.

As well, Poland’s mistrust of Western European countries only increased when it witnessed their decade-long passivity towards the slaughter in the Balkans, proving once again they still regard European lives beyond ‘Old Europe’ as expendable. Eastern Europeans also noticed no action was taken in the conflict until the United States intervened. Moreover, Poland, and the other Eastern European countries who support the Iraqi war, have not forgotten what it is like to live under a dictatorship, the Soviet tyranny having ended only a dozen years ago. And again, they know it was the United States that was instrumental in destroying that obscenity and not leftist Western Europe.

And although many Polish people were against the Iraqi war, their stance was due to Pope John Paul II’s disapproval rather than to anti-Americanism. This Polish opposition isn’t surprising as Poland is the most Catholic and Christian nation in Europe, and the pope also hails from there. But there are no large, anti-war demonstrations in Eastern Europe like the recent one in Holland where 20,000 Dutch and Muslim protesters in Amsterdam shouted: “Hamas, Hamas, all Jews must die with gas.†In fact, a recent anti-war protest in Estonia, another former communist country that supports America, drew only 200 demonstrators, indicating the peoples of the former Soviet block are much closer to America in their moral values than the Dutch and other anti-war Western Europeans.

America, for its part, appreciates Poland’s support in NATO and against unsavory regimes as well as its size, 40 million population and geographic position, which serves as a bridge to the countries of Eastern Europe. This member of New Europe also helped its cause in America when it purchased 48 American F-16 fighters earlier this year, tweaking the nose of the French, who were in the running for the contract. But it was President Bush himself who, after a visit by Polish President Aleksandr Kwasniewski to the White House, summed up best Polandâ€s importance and relationship with America when he said: “ I have no better friend in Europe today.â€
 
GROM

My old unit (when I was a bit younger & lighter & in uniform) trained a bit with them. The Poles were kind enough to present our commander, COL L., with a H&K USP in 9mm (in a nice presentation box). The USP stayed with the unit after the CO moved on.

Gotta like guys who give firearms as tokens of appreciation.
 
The weapon used most by GROM is the MP5 submachine gun. They also get to choose their own sidearm--most choose either the Glock Model 19 or the SIG-Sauer P228.

Great post, by the way, and welcome aboard, Adam. I am glad that you shared this with us and grateful for the help from your countrymen.
 
They are good, but they are good thanks to you friends. American Special Forces help us with building this unit. Thank you for this. Now they can save a Polish citizen ( and not only Polish) in every place on this planet.
 
Hey Adam, thanks for the good read. Very informative. My wife is from Szczecin and still has a lot of family over there.

Question. My wife told me, after speaking to family over there, that it was polish forces that actually captured Saddam. I do not know this to be a fact, it might be a rumor and is certainly heresay, removed from the source. I heard on the news that it was coilition forces, but they were not specific.

Have you heard that? Do you know it to be true?

Just curious since you are obviously well informed. Na zdrowie' for your countymens help, and welcome to the forum.
 
I know about few facts. GROM is under command of 4th US Infantry Division in Iraq, second on Fox News there was an information about it (Polish forces that actually captured Saddam). It was showed for about 30 minutes and then disappeared. Third thing. There was unofficial information about it here, but they said that some day our government will give more facts about it. Now it's top secret. It's all I know. And one more thing. We sending more troops from our Special Forces to Iraq.
 
Adam,
This American of Polish extraction would like to thank the good people of Poland for your support in Iraq. It's good to know we can rely on skilled operators such as GROM to stand side by side with our military in a very dangerous place.

Terminus-ski 8^)
 
It's nothing special. We are allies. It's what we should do when we are together. I'm very proud of our boys, but every day I pray for all soldiers over there. You lost so many good people in Iraq. Thanks God we lost only two soldiers. Salute to all KIA!
 
The Iraq War opened a lot of eyes over here, Adam.

When it came time to stop talking and start playing, Poland was one of the few who stepped up and said, "Deal me in."

This will not be forgotten. Not by America, nor her allies.

And the fact that Poland's children were packing steel teeth and more than ready to get out on the pointy end of things is something the rest of the world took close note of.

Bless y'all. Come home safe.

LawDog
 
thanks for the entertainment. nice write up and nice pics. maybe we should move our bases from germany and lease some land in Poland.

grom.....wasn't that in Conan?..or was that Crom?
 
I wonder why it would be top secret?

Don't know why, but all actions of GROM unit are top secret. Even this one in Umm Qasr will still be in secret, but some American newspaper published a picture of GROM soldiers with US SEAL's soldiers in Iraq. Since this moment we know that GROM is in Iraq...
 
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