Mobile Brigade Corps


The Mobile Brigade Corps is a Police field force whose duties include special operations, paramilitary, and tactical units of the Indonesian National Police. It is one of the oldest existing units within Polri. Some of its main duties are counter-terrorism, riot control, high-risk law enforcement where the use of firearms are present, search and rescue, hostage rescue, and bomb disposal operations. The Mobile Brigade Corps is a large component of the Indonesian National Police trained for counter-separatist and counter-insurgency duties, often in conjunction with military operations.
The Mobile Brigade Corps consists of two branches, Gegana and Pelopor. Gegana is tasked with carrying out more specific special police operations tasks such as Bomb Disposal, CBR Handling, Anti-Terror, and Intelligence. Meanwhile, the Pelopor are tasked with carrying out broader and paramilitary operations, such as riot control, Search and Rescue, security of vital installations, and counter-guerrilla operations. Brimob is classified as a Police Tactical Unit and is operationally a Police Special Weapons and Tactics unit which supports other general police units. Each regional police in Indonesia has its own Brimob unit.

History

Formed in late 1945 as a special police corps named Pasukan Polisi Istimewa with the task of disarming remnants of the Japanese Imperial Army and protecting the chief of state and the capital city. Under the Japanese, it was called Special Police Unit. It fought in the revolution and was the first military unit to engage in the Battle of Surabaya under the command of Police Inspector Moehammad Jasin.
On 14 November 1946, Prime Minister Sutan Sjahrir reorganised all Polisi Istimewa, Barisan Polisi Istimewa and Pasukan Polisi Istimewa, merged into the Mobile Brigade. This day is celebrated as the anniversary of this Blue Beret Corps. This Corps was reconstituted to suppress military and police conflicts and even coups d'etat.
On 1 December 1947, Mobrig was militarized and later deployed in various conflicts and confrontations like the PKI rebellion in Madiun, the Darul Islam rebellion, the APRA coup d'état and proclamation of the Republic of South Maluku, the PRRI rebellion, and the Permesta.
As of 14 November 1961, the Mobrig changed its name to Korps Brigade Mobil, and its troops took part in the military confrontation with Malaysia in the early 1960s and in the conflict in East Timor in the mid-1970s. After that, Brimob was placed under the command of the Indonesian National Police.
The Mobile Brigade, which began forming in late 1946 and was used during the anti-Dutch Revolution, started sending students for US Army SF training on Okinawa in January 1959. In April 1960 a second contingent arrived for two months of Ranger training. By the mid-1960s the three-battalion Mobile Brigade, commonly known as Brimob, had been converted into an elite shock force. A Brimob airborne training centre was established in Bandung. Following the 1965 coup attempt, one Brimob battalion was used during anti-Communist operations in West Kalimantan. In December 1975 a Brimob battalion was used during the East Timor operation. During the late 1970s, Brimob assumed VIP security and urban anti-terrorist duties. In 1989, Brimob still contained airborne-qualified elements. Pelopor and airborne training takes place in Bandung and at a training camp outside Jakarta. Historically, Brimob wore the Indonesian spot camouflage pattern during the early 1960s as their uniform.
In 1981, the Mobile Brigade spawned a new unit called the "Jihandak", an explosive ordnance disposal unit.

Task

The Implementation and mobilization of the Brimob Corps is to cope with high-level interruption of society mainly: mass riots, organized crime armed with fire, search and rescue, explosives, chemicals, biological and radioactive threats along with other police operational implementing elements in order to realize legal order and peace of society throughout juridical of Indonesia and other tasks assigned to the corps.

Qualifications

The Pelopor qualifications, which are the basic capabilities of every Brimob member, are the following basic skills:
  1. Ability to navigate with map and compass
  2. Intelligence
  3. Anti-terror
  4. Riot control
  5. Guerrilla war, Close / Urban war tactics
  6. Bomb disposal
  7. Handle high intensity crimes where the use of firearms is present
  8. Search and rescue
  9. Surveillance, disguise and prosecution.
  10. Other individual and unit capabilities.

    Function

The function of the Police's Mobile Brigade Corps as the Polri's Principal Operating Unit which has specific capabilities in the framework of High-level domestic security and community-supported search and rescue personnel who are well trained and have solid leadership, equipment and supplies with modern technology.

Role

The role of Brimob is together with other police functions is to act against high-level criminals, mainly mass riots, organized crime of firearms, bombs, chemicals, biology and radio active threats in order to realize the legal order and peace of society in all juridical areas of Indonesia. Roles undertaken include:
  1. Role to help other police functions,
  2. Role to complement in territorial police operations carried out in conjunction with other police functions,
  3. Role to protect members of other police units as well civilians who are under threat,
  4. Role to strengthen other police functions in the implementation of regional operational tasks,
  5. Serve to replace and handle territorial police duties if the situation or task objective has already led to a high-grade crime.

    Organisation

In 1992 the Mobile Brigade was essentially a paramilitary organisation trained and organised along military lines. It had a strength of about 12,000. The brigade was used primarily as an elite unit for emergencies and supporting police operations as a rapid response unit.
The unit was mainly deployed for domestic security and defense operations, but now has gained and achieved many specialties in the scope of policing duties such as implementing SWAT operations, Search and Rescue operations, Riot control and CBR defense. Brimob also are usually sent to do domestic security operations with the TNI.
Since the May 1998 upheaval, PHH have received special anti-riot training. Elements of the unit are cross trained for airborne and Search and Rescue operations. In each Police HQ that represents a province in Indonesia each has an organized BRIMOB force which consists of a command headquarters, several Detachments of Pelopor police personnel organized into a regiment and usually 1 or 2 detachments of GEGANA.
The Chief of the Indonesian National Police, known as KAPOLRI, has the highest command in each police operation including BRIMOB, orders are delivered by the police chief and then executed by his Operational Assistant Agent with then further notification to the Corps Commandant and then to the concerned regional commanders.

National level units

  • Corps HQ and HQ Services
  • * Brimob Corps Training School
  • * Gegana Battalion
  • ** HHC
  • * Pelopor Brigade
  • ** Brigade HQ and HQ Company
  • ** I Pelopor Regiment
  • ** II Pelopor Regiment
  • ** III Pelopor Regiment
  • ** IV Pelopor Regiment
  • * Intelligence Unit
  • * Training Command

    Pelopor

Pelopor is the main reaction force of the Mobile Brigade Corps, it acts as a troop formation and has the roles of mainly riot control and conducting paramilitary operations assigned to the corps to cope with high-level threat of society disturbance. It also specializes in the field of Guerrilla, and Search and Rescue operations. There are today 4 national regiments of Pelopor in the Brimob corps which are:
  • I' Pelopor Regiment
  • II Pelopor Regiment
  • III Pelopor Regiment
  • IV Pelopor Regiment
In a historical view, this unit was called as "Brimob Rangers" during the Post Independence era. In 1959, during its first formation, Brimob Rangers troops conducted a test mission in the area of Cibeber, Ciawi and Cikatomas which borders Tasikmalaya-Garut in West Java. It was the baptism of fire of the Rangers, in which the newly acquired skills of guerrilla warfare and counter-insurgency operations were applied against remnants of Darul Islam in these communities. The actions against the Islamic Army of Indonesia units in the province weakened the DI even further, leading the total collapse of the local DI provincial chapter in 1962, ending a decade-long war of violence there.
The official first forward deployment of the Brimob Rangers was the Fourth Military Operations Movement in South Sumatra, West Sumatra and North Sumatra. It was the Brimob Rangers troops became part of the Bangka Belitung Infantry Battalion led by Lieutenant Colonel Dani Effendi. Rangers were tasked to capture the remains of the PRRI prison in Sumatra's forests led by Major Malik, which was then under rebel hands.
In 1961, under the express orders of then Chief of Police General Soekarno Djoyonegoro, Brimob Rangers troops were officially renamed Pelopor Troops of the Mobile Brigade. This is in accordance with the wishes of President Sukarno who wanted Indonesian names for units within both the TNI and POLRI. At this time also the Pelopor constables and NCOs received many brand new weapons for police and counter-insurgency operations, including the more famous AR-15 assault rifles. The subsequent assignment of this force was to infiltrate West Irian in Fak-Fak in May 1962 and engage in combat with the servicemen of the Royal Netherlands Army during Operation Trikora. The troops were also involved in the Confrontation of Malaysia in 1964 and at that time the Brimob Rangers troops in Indonesia faced the British Special Air Service.
Pelopor Troops play a role as a troop formation unit and is still active in the Brimob's operational system. Aside from the national regiments, each Police region has a Pelopor regiment of two to four battalions.