Intervention Brigade (Portugal)

Summary

The Intervention Brigade (Portuguese: Brigada de Intervenção) or BrigInt is an infantry brigade in service with the Portuguese Army. It was created in 2006 from the Light Intervention Brigade (Brigada de Intervenção Ligeira), which was itself the heir of the former Special Forces Brigade (Brigada de Forças Especiais).

Intervention Brigade
Brigada de Intervenção
The insignia of the Grupo de Auto-Metralhadoras
Active2006-present
CountryPortugal
BranchPortuguese Army
Nickname(s)BrigInt

International missions edit

Organization edit

The brigades operational units are listed below. Under the Portuguese system regiments are responsible for the training, maintenance and sustainment of the operational units, but are not operational units themselves. I.e. the 6th Cavalry Regiment trains, maintains and sustains the Intervention Brigade's Reconnaissance Group, but the regiment itself is not an operational unit and not part of the brigade during wartime.

  • Intervention Brigade, in Coimbra[5]
    • Command and Command Support Service Company, in Coimbra
    • Reconnaissance Group, 6th Cavalry Regiment (Regimento de Cavalaria Nº 6) in Braga, with Pandur II and Commando V150 armored vehicles
    • 1st Infantry Battalion, 13th Infantry Regiment (Regimento de Infantaria Nº 13), in Vila Real, with Pandur II armored personnel carriers
    • 2nd Infantry Battalion, 14th Infantry Regiment (Regimento de Infantaria Nº 14), in Viseu, with Pandur II armored personnel carriers
    • Field Artillery Group, 5th Artillery Regiment (Regimento de Artilharia Nº 5), in Vendas Novas with M114 155mm howitzers
    • Anti-aircraft Artillery Group, 1st Anti-Air Artillery Regiment (Regimento de Artilharia Anti-Aérea Nº 1) in Queluz with Stinger surface-to-air missiles
    • Engineer Company, 3rd Engineer Regiment (Regimento de Engenharia Nº 3), in Espinho
    • Signal Battalion, Signal Regiment (Regimento de Transmissoes), in Porto
    • Permanent Medium Service Support Nucleus (NPApSvcMed), in Entroncamento

Equipment edit

 
Portuguese soldier from the Anti-aircraft Artillery Regiment No. 1 of the Intervention Brigade.

Infantry equipment:

Armored Vehicles
Name Origin Number Image Notes
Pandur II   Austria

  Portugal

188   Several versions made under license in Portugal by Fabrequipa.[6][7] Some units will receive120mm mortars.[8]
  • 105 infantry carrier vehicle (with M2 Browning)
  • 7 infantry carrier vehicle (with RWS)
  • 30 infantry fighting vehicle (with 30mm autocannon)
  • 5 anti-tank guided missile vehicle (with TOW 2)
  • 16 command post vehicle
  • 7 recovery and maintenance vehicle
  • 8 medical evacuation vehicle
  • 6 radio access point station vehicle
  • 4 reconnaissance and surveillance vehicle (with BOR-A 550 radar)
Commando V-150   United States 15   Acquired 15 units with a 90mm cannon and M60E/D machine guns in 1989. All units are in service with the Group of Recognition, based on Cavalry Regiment nº6.[9]
Anti-aircraft artillery
M48A2E1 Chaparral   United States 34   34 self-propelled surface-to-air missile systems received (23 in the A3 version and 11 in the A2 version) with 224 missiles.[10] Will be replaced until 2026.[11]
Field artillery
M114A1   United States 40   40 in service since 1983 in the BrigInt. 24 reactivated to equip the BrigInt Field Artillery Battalion.[12][13]
Firefinder radar
AN/TPQ-36 Firefinder radar   United States 2   Used by 5th Artillery Regiment to detect and track incoming mortar, artillery and rocket fire to determine the point of origin for counterbattery fire.[14][15]
Unmanned aerial vehicles
Griffon Aerospace MQM-170 Outlaw   United States ?   Target drone, operated by Anti-aircraft Artillery Regiment No. 1.[16]
DJI Matrice 300 RTK   China ?   Used by Intervention Brigade for surveillance.[17]
Autel EVO II Dual 640T Enterprise V2   China ?   Seen in use for the first time in 2023.[18]
Autel DragonFish   China ? Seen in use with the Intervention Brigade.[19]
MyFlyDream Nimbus Tricopter 1800   China ? Unmanned aerial vehicle with VTOL capacity, used by Anti-aircraft Artillery Regiment No. 1. Number of units purchased unknown.[20]

References edit

  1. ^ "PÁRAS & PANDUR TREINAM PARA O KOSOVO | Operacional" (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  2. ^ "Missões no Exterior". UNIDADES DO EXÉRCITO PORTUGUÊS (in European Portuguese). 2015-10-28. Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  3. ^ "OS COMBATES EM BAMBARI E O BAPTISMO DE FOGO DAS PANDUR II | Operacional" (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  4. ^ "Visão | Brigada de "até 100 militares" do Exército vai integrar missão da NATO na Roménia". Visão (in European Portuguese). 2021-06-23. Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  5. ^ "Brigada de Intervenção". Exército Português. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  6. ^ The Military Balance 2024. International Institute for Strategic Studies. 2024. p. 128. ISBN 9781032780047.
  7. ^ "Forças Médias Exército Português".
  8. ^ "Defesa: execução da Programação Militar sobe de 54% para 73%". Expresso (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2023-04-03.
  9. ^ "Forças Médias Exército Português".
  10. ^ Transfers of major weapons: Deals with deliveries or orders made for 1960 to 2020. SIPRI Arms Transfers Database.
  11. ^ "Governo abre concurso para reequipamento dos sistemas de defesa antiaéreos". portugal.gov.pt. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  12. ^ The Military Balance 2024. International Institute for Strategic Studies. 2024. p. 128. ISBN 9781032780047.
  13. ^ Defence 360° 😷, Victor Barreira / (2020-01-06). "The Portuguese Army is seeking to acquire a new 155mm field artillery system to replace its existing M114A1 155mm/23 towed howitzers as part of the country's Military Programming Law 2019-2030. The M114A1s are fielded by the Intervention Brigade.pic.twitter.com/FQB4m5EHDI". @Defence360. Retrieved 2020-05-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ "Raytheon / Hughes AN/TPQ-36 Firefinding Radar". www.militaryfactory.com. Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  15. ^ "Raytheon Systems - AN/TPQ-36". 2016-11-23. Archived from the original on 23 November 2016. Retrieved 2022-05-29.
  16. ^ "1st Air Defense Regiment, Portuguese Army Testimonial". Griffin Aerospace. Archived from the original on 19 April 2014. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  17. ^ "Exército Português on LinkedIn: #exércitoportuguês #defesanacional #2fndrou #nato #wearenato…". www.linkedin.com. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  18. ^ "Força Portuguesa na Roménia realiza exercício de validação dos meios de comunicação de Rádio e Dados". Facebook.
  19. ^ "Exército Português on LinkedIn: #exércitoportuguês #defesanacional #2fndrou #nato #wearenato…". www.linkedin.com. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  20. ^ "MFD Nimbus Tricopter 1800 with Portuguese Army".

External links edit

  • Brigade official page