Defence Ministers from Croatia, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia signed a Letter of Intent to establish a Regional Special Operations Component Command in the margins of the meetings of NATO Defence Ministers in Brussels.

It is also understood that NATO Partner nation Austria is taking part.

The Alliance say that under the leadership of Hungary, the four European Allies and partner nation Austria will work together to form a deployable R-SOCC for Small Joint Operations.

“This command will dramatically increase the ability of these five nations to effectively employ their Special Forces. The non-permanent structure of the R-SOCC enables each participant to use its own contributions separately, while benefiting from the integrated R-SOCC structure once activated for a deployment.”

NATO Deputy Secretary General Rose Gottemoeller praised this initiative, stating that it presents “a significant step forward in strengthening Special Operation Forces capacities in the region, and towards a fully integrated multinational regional command element”.

The new multinational command will be developed in line with NATO standards, leveraging the expertise of NATO’s Special Operations Headquarters in Mons, Belgium.

While primarily intended for NATO and EU operations, the command could participate in other multilateral missions, exercises or trainings.

George Allison
George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison

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