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FORT BRAGG, N.C. - The 95th Civil Affairs Brigade (Special Operations) (Airborne) officially changed command July 19 during a ceremony held at Meadows Field, Fort Bragg. The ceremony, hosted by Maj.
Working with combatant commanders The majority of the 95th Civil Affairs Brigade missions involve working directly with other U.S. Army Special Operations Command forces or reporting to a ...
19th Special Forces Group; an Army psychological operations unit; and the Marine Corps Reserve 4th Civil Affairs Group — weren’t looking for a cloak-and-dagger operation. The members of this ...
Army Combat Medics, Ranger, SOAR flight medics, Civil Affairs medics, Special Forces medics, and Navy SARC, SEAL and SWCC medics attend the Special Operations Combat Medic Course (SOCM ...
Jonathan Braga, commander of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command, who oversaw the command change. During Beaurpere’s time as commander, 839 Special Forces soldiers, 404 civil affairs ...
About 160 of the unit’s 263 soldiers have already been reassigned to the Army Special Operations Command’s civil affairs units or civil affairs staff positions in other units, Bailey said.
Army Special Operations Command was granted discretion to decide which parts of its formation will be eliminated and has chosen to reduce support forces like intelligence and logistics as well as ...
Ferguson eschews the traditional delineations between the Army special ops community’s three components — Special Forces, psychological operations and civil affairs — in favor of a ...