Grupul Special de Protecție și Intervenție

Special Group for Protection and Intervention
Active2003–2009[1][2]
2015–present[3][1][2]
CountryRomania
BranchGeneral Directorate for Internal Security (Ministry of Internal Affairs)[3]
TypePolice tactical unit
RoleAir assault
Bomb disposal
CBRN defense
Clandestine operation
Close-quarters battle
Cold-weather warfare
Counter-sniper tactics
Counterterrorism
Covert operation
Crowd control
Direct action
Executive protection
Force protection
Hostage rescue
HUMINT
Law enforcement
Manhunt
Mountain warfare
Parachuting
Patrolling
Raiding
Reconnaissance
Riot control
Special operations
Special reconnaissance
Urban warfare
Size95[3]
Garrison/HQBucharest

Grupul Special de Protecție și Intervenţie (GSPI, English: (Special Group for Protection and Intervention) is the tier one police tactical unit of the Romanian General Directorate for Internal Security (DGPI) (Romanian: Direcția Generală de Protecție Internă) part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.[3] The designated nickname of the unit is Acvila, which is Romanian for "Eagle".

Mission

The unit's missions primarily involve anti-irregular military, apprehension of armed and dangerous criminals, counterterrorism and hostage rescue crisis management, executive protection, high-risk tactical law enforcement situations, operating in difficult to access terrain, protecting high-level meeting areas, providing security in areas at risk of attack or terrorism, special reconnaissance in difficult to access and dangerous areas, support crowd control and riot control, and tactical special operations.

History

GSPI was established in January 2003 to satisfy the European Union requirements regarding counterterrorism, hostage rescue crisis management, and internal protection following the Moscow theater hostage crisis in October 2002 and reported to the Ministry of Interior and Administrative Reform.[1] Two Romanian police officers had conducted a study tour of EU countries police tactical units prior to the formation and significant assistance was provided from Germany's GSG 9 with the creation and development of GSPI.[1]

In 2007, GSPI joined the European Union ATLAS Network with other EU countries national police tactical units.[3] In March 2009, GSPI was disbanded after a corruption scandal.[2]

In 2015, GSPI was re-established as part of the Directorate of Intelligence and Internal Security, later renamed to General Directorate for Internal Security.[3][2]

Structure

GSPI structure is similar to GSG9 with a Combat group, Sniper team and Protection team.[4]

Selection

Pre-selection lasts 10-14 days, and selection usually lasts between 30 and 45 days. At the end of these two first trials, only 15% of applicants are validated. [5] After that, a final exam follows, and if the candidate passes, he is now a member of the team.[5] Three to five more years will then be dedicated for him to fully qualify in all the skills needed to become an operational member, during which he is trained in abseiling, aggressive car driving, climbing and descending, combat diving, commando tactics, CQB/CQC, defusing and disposal of bombs and land mines, electronics proficiency, explosives, hostage rescue, infiltrate the area with a helicopter, instinctive shooting, international counterterrorism, marksmanship, NBCR on operations in contaminated environments, parachuting, reconnaissance, SERE, tactical first aid, VIP protection, and other disciplines.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "History". GSPI. Archived from the original on 16 June 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d Duţulescu, Adriana (24 February 2016). "Halucinant: Unitatea specială Acvila a fost înfiinţată pentru Gabriel Oprea, după ce SRI l-a avertizat că viaţa sa e în pericol". BN24.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Miron, Denisa (12 January 2017). "Fiecare cu spp-ul lui. Ce servicii de PROTECȚIE preferă demnitarii PSD și de ce". stiripesurse.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  4. ^ a b "Organisation and Activity". GSPI. Archived from the original on 16 June 2008.
  5. ^ a b "Preselection and selection". GSPI. Archived from the original on 16 June 2008.