Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force

By Capt. Thomas Cieslak (USASOC)March 4, 2015

Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force
1 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A Green Beret from the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) observes Honduran TIGRES as they conduct an after-action review of their operation on Eglin Air Force Base February 27. The TIGRES, a counter-narcotic and counter-trafficking force, were par... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force
2 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A Green Beret from the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) helps a Honduran TIGRES understand information on a document discovered while searching a detainee role-played by a soldier from the unit February 27. Intelligence on the document led the TI... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force
3 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A Green Beret from the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) provides guidance to a group of Honduran TIGRES during Close Quarters Battle Training inside a shoot-house February 25 on Eglin Air Force Base. The TIGRES, a counter-narcotic and counter-traf... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force
4 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A Green Beret from the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) observes Honduran TIGRES as they assault a building that serves as their objective on an Eglin Air Force Base range February 27. The TIGRES, a counter-narcotic and counter-trafficking force,... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force
5 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A Green Beret from the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), right, observes the performance of Honduran TIGRES during Close Quarters Battle Training inside a shoot-house February 25 on Eglin Air Force Base. The TIGRES, a counter-narcotic and counter-... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force
6 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Green Berets assigned to the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), guide members of the Honduran TIGRES during a shooting drill requiring them to engage targets from behind an obstacle February 24 at an Eglin Air Force Base range. The TIGRES, a count... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force
7 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A Green Beret assigned to the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), left, guides a member of the Honduran TIGRES during a shooting drill requiring him to engage targets from behind an obstacle February 24 at an Eglin Air Force Base range. The TIGRES,... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Special Forces Soldiers Train Honduran Counter-Narcotic, Counter-Trafficking Force
8 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A Green Beret from the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) reviews the performance of Honduran TIGRES and provides guidance to improve their movement and marksmanship while inside the nearby shoot-house during Close Quarters Battle Training February ... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

A Honduran force skilled in combating criminal organizations and countering human and narcotic trafficking recently trained with Special Forces soldiers on Eglin Air Force Base's ranges located in Northwest Florida.

Green Berets from the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) hosted members of the Honduran TIGRES, whose name translates into "Intelligence and Special Security Response Groups Units," the final two weeks of February to mentor and coach them in tactics and methods they will use to fight narcotics and human trafficking in their country.

The curriculum authored by the detachment tasked with training the TIGRES called for a mixture of training in marksmanship and urban combat, known commonly as Close Quarters Battle. Many periods of instruction focused on instilling fundamental principles of CQB and knowing how to execute them amidst the chaos that is combat.

It is very important that we are training with the Special Forces soldiers, said a senior TIGRES officer who asked not to be identified due to his position. From this training, TIGRES are learning tactics they can use against organized crime in Honduras he said.

The most important thing the TIGRES are learning, continued the officer, are these new tactics. The knowledge these soldiers already possessed when they arrived has been greatly improved because of this training and the partnership between the TIGRES and the Special Forces.

Training often involved utilizing multi-story buildings and paintball-like ammunition, requiring participants to wear gas-masks to protect their face from serious injury. The sting of the round against skin, even through clothing, was an effective tool at demonstrating mistakes first-hand.

Training was made even more complicated by a key feature of the shoot-house used primarily by the Special Forces soldiers; moveable walls. Nearly each time a TIGRES squad assaulted the building, an entirely new layout awaited them. What was wall on a previous mission could be a new hall or doorway presenting a new danger where there was not one before. This rearrangement of the floor-plan required the TIGRES rely on the training they were receiving from the Green Berets rather than their memory.

"Estas muerto!" "You are dead!" in Spanish, was shouted many times by instructors to TIGRES who forgot a fundamental of their training or were struck by a paintball. A fellow TIGRES would then move in, load the simulated casualty onto their shoulders and continue mission through the shoot-house, all with the added discomfort of the gas-mask and the restrictions on breathing and vision it imposed.

Through the shared adversity, a bond between the instructors and students developed. Many of the TIGRES traveled to the training with preconceived notions of how a Special Forces detachment operates and acts. What they experienced, however, is the hallmark of Special Forces and what makes them unique among America's Special Operations Forces.

Foreign Internal Defense, the training of a foreign force to improve their skills and operations, is the primary mission of the Special Forces. Throughout the training, the Hondurans learned SF soldiers are primarily coaches and teachers, not just warfighters. Each of 7th SFG (A) soldiers, even those acting as the opposing force to the Hondurans and responsible for barraging them with paintballs, eagerly sought to improve the TIGRES' performance, most times mentoring them in their own language.

"It's not just what they see in movies. The TIGRES sometimes want a tactic that seems fashionable, but that's not what always applies," said a senior noncommissioned officer who requested not to be identified because of his work in Special Forces. "We're trying to teach them it's the simple things, the basics. When you're really good at the basics, only then can you be truly effective in your operations."

The training culminated in an exercise testing everything the TIGRES had been taught the previous two weeks. Minimal guidance was offered by the Green Berets as the Hondurans received a mission, planned their actions and assaulted their objective, a range on Eglin Air Force Base containing multiple buildings and derelict vehicles. Intelligence gleaned off a detainee role-played by a Green Beret led the TIGRES to a secondary objective, another series of compounds with multiple buildings to clear and enemies to engage.

"Here's what's most important; the partnership. The partnership of you with us," said. Col. Christopher Riga, commander of the 7th SFG (A) to the TIGRES during a closing ceremony for the training. "I promise you at some point in time, together, we'll be on target killing terrorists and drug traffickers together."

"There's no greater partner that's accomplished more in a little over two years than you," continued Riga. "I can never say enough words to tell you how proud I am of you, how proud I am of all of our guys, and the great partnership we will maintain and the work we will do together for a secure and stable Honduras."