Special thanks to Ingo Mathe and our friends at Spartan.at for sharing this article with us. -Jack

By Ingo Mathe, German Lieutenant (SEAL) Ret.

Effective 1 April 2014 the German naval unit designated as the Specialized Operational Forces of the Navy (Spezialisierte Einsatzkräfte Marine – SEKM) was deactivated. Since its inception over ten years ago – on 30 July 2003 – the SEKM had experienced one of the highest ops tempos of any German military unit, with squads, teams and sometimes larger formations constantly deployed. One of the integral elements of the unit were the German Naval Special Operations Forces known as the Kampfschwimmerkompanie or “Combat Swimmers” Company. But the incorporation of the Kampfschwimmer SOF into the SEKM, which also included specialized but operationally “conventional” forces, conflicted with a directive passed in 2004 which calls for strict separation between operational control of conventional forces and SOF.

The recent formation of the Naval Special Operations Command (Kommando Spezialkräfte – Marine or KSM) finally accommodates that directive and returns to the original concept of independent Special Operations Forces. So this concept is not new.

The Kampfschwimmer Company originally stood up on 1 April 1964. The Kampfschwimmer were authorized to conduct independent operations and for that reason were placed under direct operational control of the Fleet Command. Their autonomy was ensured by providing: integrated command and staff, logistics and communications elements; a diving gear and boat depot; an embedded surgeon and medical group; a jumpmaster; and control over their own training platoon. This organizational solution made the Kampfschwimmer Company responsible for its own operational control, its own support, and training its own recruits. During the 1970s new facilities were constructed in the Kampfschwimmers base at Kaserne Nord in the town of Eckernförde. These included a diving hall and administrative offices, and provided the Company with the requisite stanological training resources.

Mathesius

This independence ended on 16 December 1988. The Kampfschwimmer Company and the German Navy’s Beachmaster Company (which had actually incorporated the original Kampfschwimmer Platoon from 1959-1964) were both assigned to the newly created Maritime Battalion (Seebataillon). The Maritime Battalion was in turn dissolved on 2 October 1991 during the course of comprehensive armed forces restructuring. The Armed Diving Group (Waffentauchergruppe) was created in its stead. This unit was subordinated to the Mine Warfare Flotilla. On 3 July 2003 the Armed Diving Group was in turn dissolved and replaced by the SEKM. The SEK-M became the central repository of capabilities which are unique not only within the fleet but withing the German armed forces overall, and which are of critical importance for fleet operations and for the armed forces as a whole. It incorporated numerous fleet capabilities:; the Kampfschwimmer Company including command staff and logistics elements; the Minentaucher or Mine Clearance Company; the Boarding Company; company-strength personnel forces for specialized naval operations; the training element for naval commandos, mine clearance personnel, and frigate-based boarding personnel.

While all of these units were distinguished by a high degree of specialization, only the Kampfschwimmer were Special Operations Forces. This comingling of conventional and SOF units under one operational command created problems, e.g. difficulty maintaining operational secrecy and complicated procurement procedures. In recognition of these problems, the German armed forces in Spring of 2004 initiated a reform of their operational and strategic command structure. Both the political and the military leadership mandated a return to strict separation of operational command of conventional forces and SOF. This was the beginning of the end for the SEKM. On 1 April 2014 – concurrent with its original creation – the Kampfschwimmer company was formally placed under the aegis of the Naval Special Operations Command (the KSM), thereby becoming operationally independent once again.