during Emerald Warrior 2013,
Hurlburt Field, Florida The unit traces its roots to the
First Special Service Force (FSSF), the joint Canadian–American special forces unit that was stood up in 1942 and earned the "Devil's Brigade" moniker for daring night raids on German forces at the
Anzio beachhead. However, the individuals need prior military experience, in order to apply. High levels of motivation and physical fitness are required to complete the CSOR Assessment Centre, which is a crucial phase of the selection. Personnel can join as either Special Forces Operator or Special Operations Supporter. In the first case, the individuals are specialists directly employed in the tactical aspects of the missions. In the latter, the role consists of support personnel to the staff officer and other positions within the unit. On 13 August 2006, an official stand-up ceremony for CSOR took place at the unit's home station,
Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Petawawa, with approximately 250 soldiers participating. The ceremony included a skills demonstration including rappelling from helicopters, and both static and freefall parachuting. It was also announced that the second training serial of CSOR recruits would take place in early 2007. The first commanding officer and
regimental sergeant-major of CSOR were Lieutenant-Colonel (LCol) Jamie Hammond and Chief Warrant Officer (CWO) Gerald Scheidl. The regiment suffered its first casualty on 24 June 2011:
Master-Corporal Francis Roy died in a non-combat incident while deployed in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan. In 2013, the unit competed in an international special forces competition held in Jordan, coming in third place after Chinese Special Police teams took first and second place. In March 2015, Sgt Andrew Joseph Doiron was killed by friendly fire while serving on
Operation Impact in Iraq. During the
Battle of Mosul, the CSOR engaged
ISIS forces while also protecting and evacuating civilians. On December 5, 2024, the unit received the first regimental standard flag during a ceremony led by Governor General Mary Simon.
Operations and exercises The main goal of the CSOR is to execute missions abroad or in Canada on behalf of the Canadian government. Under the auspices of the Anti-Crime Capacity Building Program of
Global Affairs Canada, CSOR conducted training with both the
Jamaica Defence Force and the
Belize Defence Force from 2008, with CSOR participating in Exercise Tropical Dagger in 2016. In 2012, CSOR operators trained the Malian Army's Autonomous Special Forces Battalion, which participated in failed anti-coup operations in the
2012 Malian coup d'état. CSOR participates in Exercise Flintlock, a special operations forces–focused exercise planned, coordinated and executed by African partner nations and sponsored by
United States Africa Command. CSOR participates in the CANSOFCOM commitment to
Operation Impact, the Canadian Armed Forces' support to the
international military intervention against ISIL in Iraq and Syria. Due to the Taliban offensive in 2021, CSOR operators were deployed to Afghanistan to assist Canadian embassy staff to leave and destroy anything sensitive. == Selection process ==