Tag Archives: Danish home guard

Echoes of Weserübung

On 9 April, some 86 years ago, neutral Denmark was attacked and quickly occupied by the Germans in Unternehmen Weserübung-Sud as a stepping stone to the invasion of Norway (Weserübung, proper).

The 9th of April has always held special significance for the volunteer soldiers in the Danish Home Guard (Hjemmeværnet, or HJV) and other parts of the country’s military, with “Never Again April 9th” (Aldrig mere 9. april) as a motto.

Formed just after Liberation in 1945, when the country had a robust Resistance movement, the Home Guard initially was divided into the black guard (sorte hjemmeværn) and the blue guard (blå hjemmeværn), with the terms coming from whether they wore recycled Axis (German panzer) uniforms or donated Allied (RAF blue)!

Formalized in April 1949, HJV combat patrols (kamppatruljer) began to appear across the country, organized at the local Army district level, and remained a fixture in the Cold War.

Thus:

Danish home guard (Forsvarets Hjemmeværnet) under en øvelse i 1980

Danish home guard (Forsvarets Hjemmeværnet) under en øvelse i 1980

Today, the HJV has some 45,000 members, with demographics averaging skilled workers in their 30s to 50s who have prior active military service. HJV members have volunteered to be deployed overseas in the GWOT, to Bosnia, and UN operations in Africa.

This April is also the 67th anniversary of the creation of the HJV’s Special Support and Reconnaissance Company (Særlig Støtte og Rekognosceringskompagni, or SSR), a “stay behind unit” intended to come out after Soviet/Russian occupation to perform direct action.

You know, Danish Wolverines, but with government backing.

The SSR was formed in 2007 from the amalgamation of two previous patrol companies (PTRKMP/HOK and PTRKMP/ELK) that were stood up in 1994, which in turn dated back to the old Special Intelligence Patrols (Specielle Efterretningspatruljer, or SEP) whose official birthday is considered 9 April 1959.

Selected from very skilled Home Guard members, who are typically prior active service, SSR members undergo 400 hours of training in 12 months (one classroom weeknight every week, one weekend in the field every month) before joining their patrol.

To be able to be considered for an SSR training spot, a candidate has to complete a five-day Selection process and ace these minimum physical fitness requirements:

  • A 2600-meter run wearing running clothes in a maximum of 12 minutes.
  • Two 20 km marches wearing boots, uniform, basic gear, and backpack totaling 25 kg, incl. rifle, excl. water and food. Each march must be completed in a maximum of 3 hours and 50 minutes.
  • Two land nav orientation marches (daylight and dark) using 2 cm army maps, with satisfactory results.
  • Swim test (minimum 300 meters, 15 meters of swimming underwater, deep dive 4 meters to retrieve a dummy, jump from a seesaw)

The unit consists mainly of volunteer soldiers from all over the country and is based at Tirstrup Field in the West and Skalstrup Field in the East.

The SSR is considered part of the country’s Special Operations Command and can be tapped to support the Jægerkorpset and Frømandskorpset.

As such, they wear a green beret with a distinctive and hard-earned sword-and-lightning-bolt cap badge (huemærke).

Wait just a minute (man)…

Denmark suffers from its geography– at least where natural defensive lines come into play. Most countries can fall back to their interior if they are invaded by an enemy and hold a better line behind a wide river network (Poland), mountain range (Switzerland), flooded fields from blown dams (Holland) or lines of fortifications (Belgium, 1914 and 1940).

Denmark, however, has none of these. In fact, the whole narrow peninsula is a flat littoral easily reached from the sea which means in a modern military conflict, they are behind the strategic 8-ball.

Danish Army soldiers in 1936 with a 20mm Madsen gun set up Technical-style

Danish Army soldiers in 1936 with a 20mm Madsen gun set up Technical-style

In World War II, Hitler’s forces entered the country before on April 9, 1940 and by lunch the country was occupied.

Granted, the King and government decided that the woefully neglected Danish military was better not resisting in the first place– which may have stretched this out for a day or so more– but would have thrown away lives.

That’s why after WWII when the new Danish military was revamped, a healthy Home Guard force, the Hjemmeværnet or HJV was formed to beef up things in case of war coming around a third time.

The HJV uses Canadian made C7 (M16) rifles-- now sans bolts!

The HJV uses Canadian made C7 (M16) rifles– now sans bolts!

These volunteer (unpaid) soldiers are in every Danish town and roughly equate to the U.S. National Guard only they don’t deploy overseas or get paid (did I mention that?).

There are something on the order of 56,000 HJV members (compared to the full-time 10,560-member Royal Danish Army) which, if you compare Denmark’s 5.6-million person population to the U.S. and adjust the math accordingly, would translate to a force of some 300,000 in the states which, coincidentally, is about the size of the U.S. Army National Guard.

However, the Danish government has no decided, since a M95 rifle (a Canadian-made version of the M16A4) with a HJV pedigree behind it was stolen by terrorists last month, those home-guards currently issued weapons now have to disarm.

According to Danish news the small portion of the HJV that keep home weapons (such as in the Swiss Army), now have to field strip the m and turn in their bolts for safekeeping.

Hopefully if they needed them they could pick them up by lunch…