Descended from the
2nd Foreign Parachute Battalion which served in Indochina, it fought in Algeria, and more recently in
Kolwezi (
Zaïre) during the
Battle of Kolwezi in 1978. Having participated in all French exterior operations since 1970, the regiment has operated in
Chad,
Lebanon, and the former Yugoslavia since 1992, at
Djibouti,
Rwanda, in Central Africa and even Gabon. In 1997, the regiment was engaged in the
Congo-Brazzaville during
Operation Pelican (). From 2002 to 2003, at the beginning of
Opération Licorne, the regiment was engaged in the
Ivory Coast. More recently in 2010, the regiment fought in Afghan theatre as part of the
Brigade La Fayette (or
Task Force La Fayette) as GTIA Surobi, code Battle Group Altor. The
Parachute Company of the 3rd Foreign Infantry Regiment was created on April 1, 1948. The command of the company was given to a 23-year-old Lieutenant,
Jacques Morin. He commanded the company from April 31, 1948, to May 31, 1949. The 7th combat company of paratrooper training of the 1st Foreign rejoined Sétif 7 months later, starting November 15, 1949, becoming officially the 3rd Foreign Parachute Battalion. On May 4, 1954, as the
Battle of Dien Bien Phu was underway, the battalion began travelling to Indochina. The combat companies of the 2e B.E.P were formed by the
4th Demi-Brigade of the Foreign Legion in
Morocco and the depot of the foreign regiments in Sidi-bel-Abbès, were assigned by the
25th Airborne Division Element. In November 1949, the battalion took base in Quan Thé. The first combat engagements of the 2e B.E.P. have for theatre of operations,
Cambodia, Cochinchine and Annam. The regiment served throughout the
Algerian War and suffered a total of 741 casualties. When the 2nd Foreign Parachute Battalion left the
Far East on November 1, 1955, the
fanion of the battalion included six palms and the
Fourragère with colors of the
Légion d'honneur. The battalion had lost 1500
Officers,
Sous-Officiers and Legionnaires including a battalion commander. On December 1 the 2e BEP became the 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment (2e REP). During their first combat engagement, on January 5, the regiment lost its first fatality, while their opponents lost 22 of theirs. Regrouping at
Philippeville, the companies covered appropriate sectors. From March to June, two units operated in the
Aurès Mountains. April 30 was marked with hard combat engagements. The regimental colors were received on June 5. In November, the regiment changed sectors. The command post set camp at
Tébessa. In operational reserve, the regiment had for mission to run surveillance of the
Algeria-Tunisia border. The year of 1956 ended with 900 rebels killed, 500 prisoners and significant war material recuperated. The foreign regiment had endured the loss of 38 men
killed in combat. In April 1957, the regiment returned to Philippeville. On May 30, the regiment left garrison and made way to
El Milia () in order to ensure the security of the almost island looking
Collo and the region of
Jijel (). In August, the regiment returned to Tébessa for a series of operations on the border where 35 rebels where placed out of combat at the expense of the lives of six Legionnaires. On December 18, the foreign regiment destroyed an opposing battalion size in the Hamimat Guerra. The rebels deplored 45 fatalities. In 1960, the regiment was spread in different garrisons : Chekfa, Tleta, Chahna, Siar and Philipeville at camp Pehau. During the 1st trimester, « Opération Turquoise » occupied the regiment which deplored four fatalities, eight
wounded, however, the enemy left 24 outlaws (), 2 prisoners, 5 defeated escapees, and 17 arrested suspects. One type 20 mm cannon recuperated, 1 PM, 10 war rifles and numerous munitions were destroyed. A couple of secondary operations were mounted such as « Saxophone » on January 26 and 27, "Clarinette" (3 HLL killed and one prisoner), « Basson I » on February 20 and 21, « Basson II » on March 8 and 9, (six HLL killed and 24 suspects arrested), « Zacharie » (1 leading figure died committing suicide and 2 defeated escapes) from March 15 to 17, « Victorien » (four defeated escapees), then in the 2nd trimester, « Turquoise » with secondary operations « Poisson » (two HLL killed, eight suspects arrested) on April 1 and 2, « Basson III » (three HLL killed and defeated escapees, on April 19, one
Officer and two
Legionnaires were killed in an ambush). After « Turquoise », followed « Opaline » in June. In the first days of 1958, the regiment saw accelerated combat. On April 26 and 27, the foreign regiment placed out of combat 209 HLL (outlaws) in the region of Sbihi, seizing a strong arsenal including three machine-guns. On the 30, during the celebration of
Camarón, a series of locations seals were placed into effect in order to intercept a band of rebels making way towards Ahras. 84 of them were killed. In January 1959, the foreign regiment made way towards Guelma, as operational reserve for the zone East Constantine. On March 1, the foreign regiment annihilated a battalion size force at Gambetta. On June 23, another battalion size rebel force was dismantled. 29 HLL were killed and 10 were made prisoners. During the 3rd trimester, the operations "Pierres précieuses" were launched. West Constantine was racked. The casualty results were heavy: 229 HLL killed, 99 prisoners, and the foreign regiment endured the loss of 11 Legionnaires. In January 1960, the 2e REP, now part of the
25th Parachute Division operated in the sector of Djidjelli. It's operation "Turquoise" again, secondary operation of operation "Pierres précieuses". On September 23, the foreign regiment returned to its rear base in Philipeville before rejoining Hammama where operation "Ariège" was commencing and which concerned the regions of Biskra and Kenchela. Before leaving the Aurès, the 2e REP inflicted another defeat on the rebels in Chelia, finishing with 53 HLL killed. On December 28, the foreign regiment made movement towards Oran then Tlemcen where the regiment arrived on December 30. On May 1, 1961, following the dissolution of their brother regiment,
1st Foreign Parachute Regiment, the 2e REP remained the only heir of all Foreign Legion parachute units created since 1948. Coming under the orders of the Western Oran Zone to reinforce the Algerian-Moroccan Barrage, the regiment remained until January 28, date where the later was found in the rear base. The operations, police rounds and presence rounds followed each other in the regions of Calle, Milia, Philipeville until March 18, 1962, date of the ceasefire which the foreign regiment learned of at Telergma. In less than seven years, more than 4000 rebels were placed out of combat and nearly 4000 individual arms and more than 200 collective arms were ceased. The foreign regiment left Constantine, on August 30, 1962, after a continuous quasi presence for 6 years in the same region. On September 16, the foreign regiment regrouped at Bou-Sfer in the enclave of the Strategic Base of
Mers El Kébir.
2nd Foreign Paratrooper Regiment The transition (1962–1967) Starting 1962 and at the signature of the
Évian Accords, the
French Armed Forces progressively left
Algeria for metropolitan France. For the first time in Legion history, Legion regiments would be garrisoned in mainland France. For the 2e REP, this move would be made progressively between 1965 and 1967. From the former garrison at
Bou-Sfer, the last French Base on Algerian territory, the Regiment sent units to start preparing the new garrison, situated in
Calvi, in
Corsica. This garrison was the former garrison of the 1st Parachute Choc Battalion of the 11th Parachute Choc Demi-Brigade, dissolved in 1963. The complete move would be effective in June 1967 and the regiment joined the
11th Parachute Division. That period, the first period of peace in the history of the regiment after 14 years in existence, was accompanied with various challenges, significant for the legionnaires. The legionnaires had to face political decisions which were hard to comprehend. The dissolution of their "brother regiment", the
1st Foreign Parachute Regiment following the
generals putsch left the regiment in significant disarray. In addition, the foreign regiment was in a null phase of operations activity. The Regiment was garrisoned in camp, and stuck with no permission to move out of the designated area while being encircled by the local Algerian army, with whom the foreign regiment had been fighting against for eight years. Accordingly, the training and routine affected deeply the esprit de corps of the legionnaires. It was during this périod, under Colonel Caillaud, that the companies started to specialize in a particular task: Anti-tank combat (1st company), Mountain combat (2nd company), Amphibious combat (3rd company) and Destruction explosive activities (4th company). This regrouping reformed the R.E.P into an elite para-commando force. In June 1967 the regiment was moved to its current base at
Camp Raffalli, Calvi on the island of
Corsica. Colonel Plessy was the first commandant of the designated defense base, while being the regimental commander of the 2e REP. 2e REP continued to be deployed on short duration missions: in Djibouti until the departure of the
13th Demi-Brigade of Foreign Legion in 2011; to
Gabon; to
New Caledonia; and as of 2012, in the
United Arab Emirates as a deployed company of the 13e DBLE, alternating with Legion infantry units from metropolitan France. In 2012, a subunit from the
United Arab Emirates deployment protected the French Military Hospital in
Jordan during Operation Tamour (
:fr:opération Tamour). During the night of January 27 and 28, 2013, a company of the 2e REP was parachuted into the city of
Timbuktu as part of
Operation Serval in
Mali. This was the regiment's first parachute drop since Kolwezi in 1978. In 2015, a fifth combat company was formed, specialized in desert warfare.
Global war on terror from 2015 until present Operation Serval in
Mali having been replaced by
Operation Barkhane in the Saharan Sahel in August 2014, 3 combat sections of the regiment parachuted in the north of Niger between April 7 and April 13, 2015. The
war on terror in France and
Opération Sentinelle means the regiment operates in mainland France. ==Selection==