Agrupación de Buzos Tácticos | |
---|---|
Active | 1952-present |
Country | Argentina |
Branch | Argentine Navy |
Role | Special Forces |
Size | Brigade |
The Tactical Divers Group (Spanish: Agrupación de Buzos Tácticos, APBT) is the premier special operations force of the Argentine Navy. The Buzos Tácticos are based at Base Naval Mar del Plata (BNMP) on the Atlantic coast of Argentina. Its men are highly qualified combat divers, EOD/demolition technicians, and parachutists.
The APBT was the first special forces division created in South America. The unit was established in 1952 on board LST ARA Cabo San Bartolomé with instructors who were former X-MAS Italian diver commandos. In those times a reduced Tactical Divers Group was operating in the ARA San Bartolomé; years later the Navy created a second group in the Escuadra Naval del Plata. In 1966 both services merged, creating the actual Tactical Divers Group.
In the 1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands, the main landing on the Falkland Islands at Point Yorke to the east of Stanley on 2 April, was preceded by an amphibious reconnaissance party of the APBT. They had been landed by the submarine ARA Santa Fe. They successfully secured the beach and guided in the amphibious vehicles of the assault group, which had disembarked from the landing ship ARA Cabo San Antonio some distance offshore. Some sources assert that Buzos Tácticos units attacked the Moody Brook barracks and besieged Government House, however these troops were actually units of the Amphibious Commandos Group (Agrupación de Comandos Anfibios, APCA). The error was due to hearsay reported by a journalist from the Argentinian magazine Somos, which was the first to publish an account of the operation. Both the APBT and the APCA teams had returned to Argentina by nightfall, on the aircraft which had brought in the first Army reinforcements.