Paramilitary
A
paramilitary organization is a group of
civilians trained and organised in a
military fashion.
Paramilitary, like
paramedic and
paralegal, comes from Greek
para ("beside"). Paramilitary means
auxiliary military, that is, something not quite military performing military duties. There are political connotations to "paramilitary" which often override the original meaning. Those political connotations, however, are localized and contradictory. There are paramilitary units that are an official legislated arm of the government, anti-government armed units that claim military status, and civilian paramilitary units that are neither, and other groups that are something in between.
Paramilitary groups can serve many different functions. Some are created by governments as paramilitary police (
Gendarmerie) or other internal security forces. Some are revolutionary groups using traditional or
guerrilla warfare to oppose the government. Others are private
militias intended to enforce order without the niceties of the
rule of law. Some are
commando units created by a state and intended for non-traditional combat missions, operating outside the official military. Other paramilitary groups adopt military organization and aspects of military culture and discipline, but are not intended to fight at all. In some cases a group of military background has evolved into a cultural role (see
Atholl Highlanders).
In
military terms, paramilitary security forces are typically
light infantry. Effectively led, they can stand in defense, especially in
urban or unfenced
border areas, but are less capable of offensive action or sustained
combat operations due to a lack of heavy weapons, professional military training, and effective
logistics support.
Examples of this kind of paramilitary force include the
People's Armed Police in the
People's Republic of China which was split off from the
People's Liberation Army in 1983 precisely to remove paramilitary duties from the PLA, and the
East German Kampfgruppen der Arbeiterklasse. Over a million strong, the
Indian Paramilitary Forces (PMF) is one of the largest and the most formidable paramilitary units in the world. One may also consider that
United States SWAT units, or similar units in other countries, are paramilitary.
The
Los Angeles Police Department, for example, identifies itself as a paramilitary force. Like many other American police organizations it uses military-style ranks and insignia. This is in contrast with the
Metropolitan Police tradition (adopted in numerous
Commonwealth of Nations countries) where while insignia tend to be modified but recognisable versions of military insignia, ranks such as
Inspector (Lieutenant/Captain),
Chief Inspector (Captain/Major) and
Superintendent (Major/Lieutenant Colonel) are used.British police to date are not routinely issued firearms (with some exceptions, notably the
Civil Nuclear Constabulary.)
Many of the world's military forces, particularly in developing countries, could be considered paramilitary police; they are oriented towards controlling their own country's population rather than toward the role of a professional military.
Certain countries, following the
French model, have a
Gendarmerie – a national police force with military status, responsible for law enforcement in rural areas and military installations. In the case of countries with a rule of law, such forces, however, are not referred to as paramilitary except in polemical fashion. The largest part of the Gendarmerie is made of "normal" officers who perform duties in a way similar to what a normal police officer, state trooper or deputy sheriff would do in the
United States.
Some paramiliary police forces include:
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Gendarmerie Nationale - France
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Carabinieri - Italy
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Guardia Civil - Spain
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Bundesgrenzschutz - Germany
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Guarda Nacional Republicana - Portugal
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People's Armed Police - People's Republic of China
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Royal Constabulary - Netherlands
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State's Military Police - Brazil
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Rijkswacht/
Gendarmerie - Belgium
These groups are neither a
police agency nor a military organization. These elements act outside the law and, in functional democracies, are both illegal and considered part of the problem rather than part of the solution.
This sort of paramilitary force exists ostensibly to assure the internal control of a country and to suppress
anarchy,
civil war, but more often simply to suppress change. They are typically armed with
small arms and wear military
uniforms. They may also use
tear gas and other
non-lethal weapons. Such paramilitaries may be controlled by the ruling political party or by the head of state personally rather than by the legal government.
In some situations, where the state or military apparatus is particularly weak or absent, they can act with a large degree of practical independence, having their own command structures and benefitting from private sponsors (instead of, or in addition to, any institutional ones), such as landowners, regional authorities, local interest groups, former victims of revolutionary paramilitary forces, warlords,
drug lords or foreign interests. These sponsors may then be able to further extend their influence or control over the paramilitary forces, or even organize paramilitary groups of their own.
These forces ostensibly operate to enforce the
law but may act with disregard of the rule of law or at cross-purposes to the existing civilian or military authorities, which may or may not lead to confrontation if the resulting discrepancies are significant enough.
Depending on their degree of political and financial autonomy, the relationship between the independent paramilitary forces and official institutions can vary from one of tolerance or incidental alliances (rather than of direct oversight and cooperation) to outright illegality. These groups may then act according to their own subset of tactical, economical and even political objectives, which may or may not be in opposition to those of the central government or established military command as a whole. Paramilitary forces have been responsible for some violations of the
laws of war and for several
atrocities.
Examples of this kind of paramilitary force include the
Colombian right wing paramilitary groups such as the
AUC, and loyalist paramilitaries in
Northern Ireland, such as the
Ulster Volunteer Force, or the
UDA. The
Haganah, precursor of the
Israeli Defense Force, was also a paramilitary group that defended Jewish-acquired territory in
Palestine during the
British Mandate period. (For their opponents, see next).
Some paramilitaries are formed to fight the current government of a country or region. This includes
rebellions against recognized governments and attacks on occupying forces. While some insurrections are carried out by rebellious units of a country's military, many are staged by paramilitary groups. When a group is acting locally against a military occupation, its members may be referred to as
partisans,
guerrillas, or as
resistance fighters by supporters. The military occupation forces will generally refer to them as
terrorists,
insurgents, or
rebels.
Unlike state security paramilitaries, these groups are typically engaged in
asymmetric warfare against an established and stronger force. In fact, they may be fighting both against the government and against other paramilitaries that support or are controlled by the government.
Examples include the
FARC and
ELN in
Colombia;
EZLN in
Mexico;
Hamas,
Hezbollah,
Islamic Jihad, and
Fatah in the
Middle East; and the
Lord's Resistance Army of
Uganda. Two of the oldest and best known revolutionary paramilitary armies in
Europe are the
Provisional Irish Republican Army, in
Northern Ireland and the
Basque separatist group
ETA, in Spain, both of which have stated their decommissioning.
In some instances, paramilitary groups have worked to destabilize and overthrow (supposedly)
democratic governments, generally to create a
fascist regime or, alternatively, to support a
Communist revolution. As a consequence, many jurisdictions have laws prohibiting private paramilitary groups.
Examples include the
Sturmabteilung (helped install
Nazi Germany) and the
Blackshirts (helped install
Fascism in
Italy).
In some cases, paramilitary groups are formed to perform
commando functions. Unlike internal security forces and revolutionaries, commando paramilitary groups are generally small and highly trained. The paramilitary operations of the
CIA and
Mossad (as distinct from their intelligence-gathering function) are one example.
Police SWAT teams and
Black Cats are another.
Paramilitary groups may also be formed to serve as
mercenaries or private armies. Among the best-known of such groups is
Executive Outcomes, a mercenary corporation that operated in
Africa in the 1990s. Such groups are often made up of former military personnel, especially former
South African soldiers.
Private firms have recently gained a major role in the operation of Western militaries, especially that of the
United States. Such
private military contractors played key roles in the
2003 invasion of Iraq and the subsequent
occupation, doing jobs like
logistics and
security.
See the
SourceWatch article:
Private Military CorporationsBecause "paramilitary" refers to the organization, not the purpose, of a group, some groups could be called paramilitary whose purpose is not to fight. These groups adopt some aspects of military culture and military discipline, such as
military courtesy or a strict hierarchy. In wartime, groups like these may be pressed into combat because they have the necessary discipline and organization.
Many of these are youth organizations, especially cadet corps or military auxiliaries. Examples include the
Scouting movement, State Defence and Guard Units, the
Boys' Brigade, the
Hitler Youth, the
Young Marines (US),
United States Coast Guard Auxiliary, the
Civil Air Patrol (the U.S. Air Force Auxiliary), the
United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps and the American
Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps.
The
Sea Org is another example of a non-combat paramilitary organization.
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Police*
Military*
Militia*
Irregular military*
Military dictatorship*
Vlaamse Militanten Orde*
Weimar paramilitary groups*
Indian Paramilitary forces*
:Category:Paramilitary organizations*
:Category:Rebel militia groups*
Atholl Highlanders*[
1] Licensed to Kill, Hired Guns in the War on Terror by Robert Young Pelton (Crown, September 2006)
*
Human Rights Watch, Colombia and Military-Paramilitary Links*
Paramilitary News