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The GROM Military Unit (Polish: Jednostka Wojskowa GROM), is a Polish special forces unit and forms part of the Special Troops Command of the Polish Armed Forces. It is believed to consist of around 250 operatives plus support personnel. [1] GROM is considered to be the most elite unit in the Polish Armed Forces. [2]
The Polish Armed forces currently operate a total of 140 G-class vehicles. [15] The Land forces operate 121 GD 290s and MB290GD WDs. [14] The military police uses 13 GD 290s. [14] Tarpan Honker: 4x4: Honker Skorpion 3 special version: Used by JW komandosów: Polish made off-road vehicles, best variants are powered with Polish Andoria engines ...
Even though the unit's name did not receive its "Commando" (Komandosów) moniker until 1995, it officially became a Special Operations Forces unit of the Polish Armed Forces following the 1993 executive order; making at the time 1 Pułk Specjalny the only unit subordinated to the command of the Land Forces branch of the Polish Army while at the ...
GroM, a drummer for Norwegian black metal band Ancient (band); Józef Chyliński (1904—1985; codenamed "Grom"), Polish resistance fighter; Grom Gravalid (ringname: Gromguten), a wrestler from Høydalsmo, Tokke, Telemark, Norway
Organisation of the Polish People's Army in 1985 [2]. Land Forces Headquarters, in Warsaw. Polish Front Command, in Warsaw (would have formed the Warsaw Pact’s Northern Front with an authorized strength of 205,620 soldiers in wartime) [citation needed]
After January 1990 the name of the armed forces was changed to 'Armed Forces of the Republic of Poland,' to accord with the Polish State's new official name. In March 2003 the Polish Armed Forces took part in the 2003 invasion of Iraq, deploying 1500 personnel, special forces and a support ship (see Polish involvement in the 2003 invasion of Iraq).
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The current official name Formoza comes from a Polish Navy seamen nickname of unit's training base "Formoza" (from relation between mainland, coast and island like PRC and ROC Taiwan - Formosa) - a former WW2 German torpedo test platform, 500 m away from coast in Gdynia Naval Harbour (Formoza means Formosa in Polish).