602 Commando Company
The 602 Commando Company is a one of three commando units of the Argentine Army.
Unit insignia
The members of the unit wear green berets with unit badges. The company is divided into three assault sections.History
Today's unit was created 21 May 1982.Falklands War
The unit had its baptism of fire in the Falklands War. The commander of the company was 39-year-old Major Aldo Rico.On the night of 29–30 May, Captain Andrés Antonio Ferrero's 3rd Assault Section attempted to seize Mount Kent but was beaten back in a Special Air Service ambush from 16 Air Troop, although wounding two SAS men in the process. Another SAS man suffered a broken hand in the confusion of battle.
On the morning of 30 May, Captain Tomas Victor Fernandez's 2nd Assault Section from 602 Commando Company suffered two killed on Bluff Cove Peak during the Mount Kent Skirmish, First Lieutenant Rubén Eduardo Márquez and Sergeant Oscar Humberto Blas, in an action with 17 Boat Troop and Major Cedric Delves' Tactical Headquarters from the British 22nd Special Air Service Regiment. The dead men were posthumously awarded the Argentine Nation for Valour in Combat Medal for showing great personal courage and leadership in the action. During this contact the SAS suffered two more casualties from grenades. The Argentine commandos literally stumbled on a camp occupied by 15 SAS troopers. That night, Captain Peter Babbington's K Company of 42 Commando, Royal Marines and 7 'Sphinx' Battery from the Royal Artillery arrived nearby via helicopters. At about the same time, the 2nd Assault Section, having hidden all day, emerged from their hides intending to withdraw from the area, but came under prompt and heavy fire from the SAS in the form of Mountain Troop, and lost one NCO captured. The SAS claim on their part, to have come under mortar bombardment while evacuating their wounded. The British artillery battery report one gunner suffering a broken arm while taking cover among the slippery rocks in the bombardment.
During the Argentine retreat from the Mount Kent area on 30 May, Sergeant Mario Antonio Cisnero from 602 Commando Company and Sergeant Luis Alberto Kovalski from 601 National Gendarmerie Special Forces Squadron, armed with machine guns, repeatedly fired at low-flying Royal Air Force fighter-bombers conducting strafing runs; the British reported the loss of one GR-3 Harrier to small-arms fire.
The 1st Assault Section fought in the Battle of Top Malo House on 31 May 1982. In an action lasting 45 minutes, the Argentine Army Special Forces patrol under Captain José Arnobio Vercesi was defeated and the survivors captured in the encounter with the British Mountain and Arctic Warfare Cadre, a Royal Marines unit, attached to the 3 Commando Brigade that reported 3 British badly wounded in the gun battle. Another British Marine suffered bone bruising when hit in the hand while attempting to fire a 66mm anti-tank rocket.
On the night of 5–6 June Captain Andres Ferrero's 3rd Assault Section dislodged Lieutenant Tony Hornby's 10 Troop, 42 Commando from Mount Wall, that had been calling down softening-up fire on the Mount Harriet defenders. According to Ferrero:
On 8 June, Private 1st Class Argentino Foremny of the 602 Commando Company Blowpipe Team that Major Rico had sent forward to Mount Harriet, using the zoom sight of his portable surface-to-air missile launcher, reported the presence of two British transport ships at Port Pleasant:
Captain Ferrero's 3rd Assault Section suffered one killed and one wounded, while Captain Eduardo Miguel Santo's supporting National Gendarmerie section suffered another death and another wounded in a fierce action near Murrell River on the night of 9/10 June, seizing much equipment and forcing the attacking Royal Marines platoon to withdraw, with Major Rico belatedly calling down fire support from Lieutenant-Colonel Martin Balza's 3rd Artillery Group in an attempt to cut off the British escape route and take prisoners.
In this action in the early hours of Thursday 10 June 1982, 50 Argentine Army and National Gendarmerie Commandos fought against a reinforced platoon of Royal Marines. One Royal Marine was reportedly killed by either friendly or defensive mortar fire in the action or in the approach to Murrell River.
According to the British military historian Bruce Quarrie, it was a hard-fought and costly action for both sides:
Captain Hugo Ranieri, armed with a.300 Weatherby Magnum bolt-action rifle, fought as a sniper in the gun-battle:
The next day, a 4th Regiment patrol under Subteniente Marcelo Llambías-Pravaz collected the British equipment abandoned in the action, and these were presented as war trophies to Argentine war correspondents in Port Stanley who filmed and photographed the equipment.
On the night of 12–13 June, Captain Andres Ferrero's 3rd Assault Section of 602 Commando Company took up ambush positions in the vicinity of Mount William, in support of the 5th Marine Infantry Battalion.
According to First Lieutenant Horacio Fernando Lauría, a judo-black-belt from Captain Ferrero's patrol:
The war ended on 14 June.