Quite unusually for the
French Armed Forces, the affiliations of this unit are various, not directly related to each other, and numerous. The regiment is heir simultaneously to formations of the
French Air Force, mainland
infantry,
Troupes coloniales and
Troupes de marine.
World War II • September 15, 1940, the 1st Air Infantry Company (
Free French) (1e ''Compagnie d'Infanterie de l'Air'': 1e C.I.A) was created in the
United Kingdom by Captain
Georges Bergé. • March 15, 1941:
Operation Savanna, the first operation of the
Special Operations Executive (SOE) in France, an ambush in Brittany. • On April 10, 1941 the 1st Air Infantry Company (1e C.I.A) was reattached to the
Free French forces and renamed
1er Compagnie Parachutiste (1st Parachute Company). • May 1941:
Operation Josephine B (destruction of six transformers at the electric plant in
Pessac). • Divided into one section assigned to the
BCRA intelligence unit, and two other sections sent to the Middle East. • July 21, 1941: embarked for the Mideast, garrisoned in
Beirut, then
Damascus. • On September 25, 1941 the 1st Parachute Company became the
Peloton Parachutiste du Levant (Parachute Platoon of the Levant) and was attached to the
French Air Force. • On October 15, 1941 the unit's name changed again, to the
1er Compagnie de Chasseurs Parachutistes, (1er C.C.P) (1st Parachute
Chasseur Company). • On January 1, 1942 the unit became the French Squadron of the
Special Air Service under Major
David Stirling, a
special forces unit garrisoned at
Kibrit Air Base on the
Suez Canal. • June 1942: the French SAS destroyed 20 German airplanes in
Crete, then attacked the airports in Matouba-Derna,
Benina,
Barce and
Benghazi on the
Libyan front. • July 1942: operations in
Cyrenaica. • January 1943: harassed the German rear-guard in
Tunisia. • Spring 1943: rest and training at
Camberley (England). • On July 1, 1943 the unit became the ''1er Bataillon d'Infanterie de l'Air'', (1er B.I.A) (1st Air Infantry Battalion). • In November 1943 the 1st Battalion was renamed ''4e Bataillon d'Infanterie de l'Air'', (4e B.I.A) (4th Air Infantry Battalion) • Beginning 1944: training of French SAS in Scotland. The battalion was assigned to the
Special Air Service. • Night of June 5–6: parachuted into
Brittany, 36 paratroopers of the FFL in four groups (two over
Plumelec, two over
Duault). The sole battle casualty in Plumelec (on June 6 at 0 h 40), caporal
Emile Bouétard, was probably the first casualty of the
Normandy Landing. • June 1944: combined forces with the
French Forces of the Interior (FFI) and the
2nd U.S. Division. • June 1944: fighting along with the
maquis de Saint-Marcel,
Morbihan and maquis of
Duault in
Côtes-d'Armor; a battalion (450 men) parachuted in with the
French Forces of the Interior (FFI) 3000 total, tied up 85000 Germans in Brittany, preventing them from reaching
Normandy, and joined two divisions of
George Patton's army on August 6. • On July 1, 1944 the 4th Battalion was renamed
2e R.C.P S.A.S (2nd SAS Parachute Chasseur Regiment) of the
4th SAS Regiment. • August 1944: operations and SAS participation in the
Liberation of Paris. • September 11, 1944: one company took 3000 Germans prisoner. • Autumn: rest leave in Champagne. • November 11, 1944: the two regiments of the French SAS marched up the
Champs-Élysées in Paris before General
Charles de Gaulle and British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill after the 2e RCP was awarded the
Compagnon de la Libération designation (Companion of the Liberation). • December 23, 1944: provided reinforcement in the
Ardennes. • February 1945: regrouped in England. • Night of April 7–8, 1945:
Operation Amherst, parachuted into the Netherlands. Fighting until the 18th. • On August 1, 1945 the Parachute Chasseur Regiments merged completely into the
French Army. The
3rd Parachute Chasseur Regiment (3e R.C.P) or
3rd SAS Regiment was dissolved and its components transferred to the
2e R.C.P.
Indochina war The colonial battalions • On February 1, 1946 the 1er Bataillon de Choc S.A.S, (1e B.C-S.A.S) (1st SAS
Shock Battalion) was created from elements of the
1st Parachute Chasseur Regiment (1e R.C.P ) and the
2nd Parachute Chasseur Regiment (2e R.C.P). • On February 23, 1946 the battalion became the 1er Bataillon Parachutiste S.A.S, (1e B.P-S.A.S) (1st S.A.S Parachute Battalion). • On March 1, 1946 the 2e Bataillon de Choc S.A.S, (2e B.C-S.A.S) (2nd S.A.S shock battalion) was created from elements of the 1st Parachute Chasseur Regiment (1e R.C.P) and the 1st Shock Parachute Infantry Regiment (1e R.I.C.A.P). • On September 25, 1947 the two S.A.S para battalions regrouped and became the 1er Bataillon Parachutiste SAS, (1e B.P-S.A.S) (1st S.A.S Parachute Battalion). • On January 1, 1948 the battalion became the 1er Bataillon Colonial de Commandos Parachutistes, (1e B.C.C.P) (1st Colonial Parachute Commando Battalion). • On July 4, 1948 the 1e B.C.C.P was dissolved. • On December 7, 1949 another 1st Colonial Parachute Commando Battalion (1e B.C.C.P) was created. • On October 1, 1950 the colonial parachute commandos became the 1er Groupe Colonial de Commandos Parachutistes, (1e G.C.C.P) (1st Colonial Parachute Commando Group). • On March 1, 1951 the parachute commando group became the 1er Bataillon de Parachutiste Coloniaux, (1e B.P.C) (1st Colonial Parachute Battalion). • On January 19, 1952 the 1st Colonial Parachute Battalion, (1e B.P.C) was dissolved. • On June 20, 1953 another 1st Colonial Parachute Battalion, (1er B.P.C) was created.
The colonial brigades • On July 1, 1946 the
1er Demi-Brigade de Parachutistes SAS, 1er D-B.P.SAS (1st SAS Parachute Demi-Brigade) was created in
Indochina from the 1st and 2nd SAS Parachute Battalions. • On October 1, 1947 the Demi-Brigade Coloniale de Commandos Parachutistes D-B.C.C.P (Colonial Parachute Commando Demi-Brigade) was created in Brittany. • On October 23, 1947 the SAS Demi-Brigade became the Demi-Brigade Coloniale de Commandos Parachutistes SAS, D-B.C.C.P-S.A.S, (SAS Colonial Parachute Commando Demi-Brigade). • In June 1948 the two demi-Brigades became: in Brittany, the 1e D-B.C.C.P and the 2e D-B.C.C.P in Indochina. • On February 1, 1955: the 1e D-B.CCP became the Colonial Parachute Brigade ( BPC ). File:Filiation du 1er RPIMa 1940-1946.jpg|1940 to 1946 File:1er RPIMa période 1946-55.jpg|1946 to 1955 File:1er RPIMa période 1955 - 2009.jpg|1955 to 2009
Post-Indochina The brigade • On February 25, 1958 the B.P.C became the Brigade école des Parachutistes Coloniaux, (B.E.P.C) (Colonial Parachute Brigade Instruction Center). • On December 1, 1958 the B.E.P.C became the Brigade de Parachutistes d'Outre-Mer, (B.P.OM) (Overseas Parachute Brigade). • On November 1, 1960 the B.P.OM became the Brigade Parachutiste d'Infanterie de Marine, B.P.I.Ma (Marine Infantry Parachute Brigade). • On December 31, 1961 the B.P.I.Ma was dissolved.
The regiment • On November 1, 1960 the Center of Instruction of the 1st Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment was created at
Bayonne. • On January 1, 1973 the 1st Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment, 1er (R.P.I.Ma) was assigned and tasked with special operations. == History, garrisons, campaigns and battles ==