PSA BPOL


The special unit Polizeiliche Schutzaufgaben Ausland der Bundespolizei is a specialized unit of the German Federal Police tasked with providing personal security for German diplomatic missions in conflict regions.

Background

The protection of German diplomatic missions is one of the tasks of the German Federal Police. In conflict, the diplomatic protection was carried out by the GSG9 with support of the Federal Criminal Police Office. In 2008, the Federal Ministry of the Interior tasked the Federal Police with reorganizing this form of protection in order to reduce the workload of the GSG9.

Organization

Due to the positive responses of the newly established ASSIK, the Federal Police decided to continue the unit as section 44.
In June 2012, section 44 was dissolved and the unit was attached under the command of the GSG9.
Due to the continuously deteriorating security in various regions, PSA BPOL was tasked with an increasing number of deployments which include the embassies in Yemen, Libya or short-term missions such as in Egypt during the revolution of 2011 and Haiti during the 2010 earthquake.
In August 1, 2017 the Department 11 was formed as an umbrella organization for all specialized units of the Federal Police which also included PSA.

Selection and Training

Any officer of the Federal German Police with at least 8 years of service may apply for the selection process. The selection process is followed by three months of specialized training which includes:
Upon completion of the first sections of training a stronger emphasis is placed on missions in hazardous regions.

Deployments and cooperations

PSA officers deploy in rhythms of three months which are followed by periods of six months in Germany. The periods in Germany are used to train other PSA officers which are currently in pre-deployment training.
One PSA officer was killed during his deployment in Sanaa in October 2013.
PSA cooperates closely with other units with similar tasks. An a result of the cooperation with the Dutch BSB, the EU-funded project Black Griffin was established which enables several special units tasked with close protection duties to cross-train and to cooperate. Other participants include EKO Cobra from Austria or the Mobile Security Deployment units from the United States.

Equipment